...that there is always tomorrow. Most of the time we live our lives right up to our last
moment assuming that tomorrow we can be happy or at least happier
than we are right now. Meanwhile,
our bodies and minds fall apart.
This makes it ever more difficult to change our perspective and we end
up banging our heads against a wall. “It worked in the past, so why doesn’t it
work now?” or like the old man I found on the street after having experienced a
stroke who I helped home said, “Age creeps up on you fast!”
I find myself examining my life and actions now with
greater and greater frequency. Trying to move towards lightness, instead of darkness. Sometimes, I am lucky enough to be aware right
in the midst of engaging. Then I can fast forward to an outcome beneficial to
others and myself, and cut my reactive mind out of the equation. I do find that
most all conversation instigated by me is a kind of ego based expression. The equivalent of saying, "Wait, I am here and alive and I matter," rises up. If I remain quiet, I
seem to run up against the real fact that I don’t really exist. That this life could
very well be a dream, with only one or two important distinctions from the ones
experienced when I lay down. I can feel the weight of my body affected by
gravity, and tastes are usually more enhanced and detailed. I can usually exist in silence
for quite sometime with ease given my difficulty with speech.
Saturday, I went to a Satsang with Bentinho Massaro, and
was quiet except during lunch with my friend who accompanied me there. There
was one time when he spoke with one woman, guiding her into feeling her own
pain which she had mistakenly tied in with feelings for the sufferings of animals
…and I felt that what she really needed was a hug. Coming from the loneliness
and misplaced anger that was her vegan path. I almost spoke about this, but caught
myself. Also she was intelligent and aware enough to see the pain when Bentinho
pointed it out. Bentinho was clear and mature enough in awareness to feel her
pain but not get swept up in it. The whole exchange was so beautiful to watch
and made me appreciate our precious human existence that we often forget.
Before I went to see him, my friend did a brain/bone hearing
test from his Mozart Brain lab equipment, and found that my last Vipassana, it left my emotions open and we would have to work to close it back up enough in
therapy when his has time. ( it is charted based on frequencies) I do have emotional lability left over from my severe brain damage, that in a good way is
liberating, because I cannot keep emotions hidden in my gut, and when I feel
emotions I express them at the time the cause manifests. I rarely cry in out
bursts that is embarrassing or out of place now. This allows me to be more
compassionate and makes my path evolve naturally. I find that when I speak it ties me in to my
past ego demands and more old self faster. I find that friends that are more comfortable with my former
self, are now pulling away which is natural for them. They are scared of
silence, which seems like a mirror of their actions and way of being. The
people that are “on board” appreciate the move from my old ways.
Meanwhile, my partner has come to some maturity and
self-awareness of his being and the effects on others, just in the past 4
months that has brought him great clarity and joy. It was a natural evolution
from seeing where he was creating some of his misery. He has been rewarded at work, and everyone there comments about his change. He is one person that was
born into darkness and is moving towards lightness I can model on. And really
all he needs is my love and not my advice, so I can be quiet on this front. With one hand touching the earth.
Crying is one of the highest devotional songs. One who knows crying knows spiritual practice. If you can cry with a pure heart, nothing else compares to such prayer. Crying includes all the principles of yoga.
Crying is one of the highest devotional songs. One who knows crying knows spiritual practice. If you can cry with a pure heart, nothing else compares to such prayer. Crying includes all the principles of yoga.
— Swami Kripalvanandji
4 comments:
I struggle with being silent, at least when I'm with other people. (I have no problem with extended silence, so long as I'm by myself). Even with my patients I have to keep reminding myself not to rush to fill a period of silence with words.
I'm very impressed with your insightfullness. I can see it's as a result of a difficult journey, but God works in mysterious ways.`
Craig E said....
This column especially touched me. My father is 87 and becoming more and more frail. One of the things that seems to be important to him - and to many people, I think - is to have a hope for the future. (For him, it is to leave the senior living facility and return home.) Is a hope for the future merely an aspect of this life or is it connected to a greater truth?
Craig
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