Is this Pema Chödrön?
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From Your One True Hime by Tich Nhat Hanh.
This feels like Thay. I feel like I recognise it.
So frustrating. You think you know someone, then they tell you they are a Buddhist and you have to meet them all over again.
How do you carry a conversation with someone who can't maintain a unified vision of self long enough for you to finish a sentence?
Have you never changed your mind 180° about some topic? Or have you never had a person voice an opinion that goes completely against prior beliefs? (It’s easier to spot it in others.)
Don’t be annoyed when that happens. You’re experiencing a different ‘them’ now.
I was just joking and messing with People who take themselves very seriously. Generally, I agree with most Buddhist philosophy. I just like messing with people who take themselves seriously.
And to answer your question I absolutely yes, of course and I recognize those thanks. People change and that's a good thing.
Your nature still exists even if it is temporary. You can still swim in a river even though it changes constantly. Accepting the impermanence of self and others doesn't create any of the difficulties you're imagining.
If I write you a letter, do I address it to the you who is upstream, or the one downstream?
I think the point is, not that we are completely different people, one moment to the next, but that we should embrace change rather than fight it. Life and the world around us is constantly changing and we are better off for changing with it.
Re your hypothetical letter, you can only address it to the persona you last knew, so to speak. Upon renewed communication, you'll learn how that person has changed, and maybe you will too a little or a lot.