
Date: 12/27/2025 12/28/2025
Location: Star Lake Meditation Center
Teacher: Shilin Long
Sitting Meditation
The Relationship Between Mind and External Reality
Zen teaches: “The mind shapes the world” and “Outside the mind, no phenomena exist.”
This does not deny the existence of the external world.
Rather, it means that our experience of the world—our reactions, emotions, and judgments—comes from the mind itself.
External conditions are neutral; meaning is created by thought.
Understanding this relationship is essential for reducing suffering and cultivating clarity.
1. External Reality Is Neutral
1. Different people interpret the same event differently
Meaning is projected by the mind.
2. External objects do not carry emotion
Emotion comes from perception.
3. External reality is like a mirror
Reflecting the inner state.
2. How the Mind Shapes External Reality
1. The mind creates stories
It interprets what happens.
2. The mind labels events
“Good,” “bad,” “unfair,” “hurtful.”
3. The mind shapes the quality of experience
Growth or suffering depends on interpretation.
3. Why the Mind Influences External Experience
1. Mental reactions are faster than external events
Judgment appears instantly.
2. The mind is more powerful than circumstances
Distress comes from perception, not the event.
3. Clinging arises from the mind
Not from external objects.
4. How Meditation Separates Mind from External Reality
1. Observe thoughts without following them
This stops distortion.
2. Feel sensations without judging
Experience becomes direct and unfiltered.
3. Let the world be the world, and the mind be the mind
No confusion between the two.
5. When the Mind Is Disturbed, the World Appears Distorted
1. Anger makes everything look hostile
The world didn’t change—your mind did.
2. Fear makes the world seem dangerous
The danger is in the emotion, not the environment.
3. Desire makes objects appear more attractive
The attraction is generated by craving.
6. When Awareness Increases, the World Appears Clearer
1. A calm mind sees accurately
Clarity replaces distortion.
2. Less storytelling, more seeing
Facts replace mental narratives.
3. External reality becomes a field for insight
Every event reflects the mind.
7. The Ultimate Relationship: Both Mind and World Arise from Conditions
1. External reality depends on causes and conditions
Nothing is fixed or permanent.
2. Thoughts arise due to conditions
They come and go without a self.
3. Seeing both as conditioned dissolves attachment
Clarity leads to freedom.
Conclusion
External reality does not create suffering—mental interpretation does.
Happiness, clarity, and peace arise not from controlling the world but from understanding the mind.
When we stop confusing our projections with reality,
we begin to see both the world and the mind as they truly are—
impermanent, conditioned, and empty of fixed nature.
This insight marks a major step toward awakening.