Many classical Buddhist texts on meditation say that the best place to meditate or to practice is a quiet place in the forest, free from distractions, pleasant and refreshing • but what if you’re a busy mother? what if you’re struggling to pay the bills by taking on three jobs? what if you’re dealing with a chronic illness? what then? • if we spend all of our time resenting the circumstances we’re in, we will be frozen and unable to do anything • at some point we simply have to surrender to the circumstances we are in • we might not have the time to go on retreat, or to practice, or even have a moment when we’re not dealing with our life as it is • but we can always practice kindness to ourselves and others; that takes no time • we can also apply mindfulness and awareness to whatever we are dealing with • and we always have the possibility of opening our mind out beyond our particular personal suffering, to place our suffering in the context of the countless things other beings are going through • when we notice our mind freezing or imploding, we can find little openings, little breaks in the momentum • we can glimpse little gaps in the solidity of what we’re experiencing, little rays of possibility • and from those little rays, we can reconnect ourselves over and over when we lose it in the harshness of the circumstances of our life.