And I'm looking
for space
And to find out
who I am
And I'm looking
to know and understand
It's a sweet,
sweet dream
Sometimes I'm
almost there
Sometimes I fly
like an eagle
And sometimes I'm
deep in despair
Looking
For Space, by John Denver
Many of us are
acquainted with the grace that comes from perspective. Most of our human
challenges do not maintain their grip on us against the diminishing effect of
time and space. As we put space between our problem and us, or allow the
passage of time to separate us from the immediacy of our challenge, we'll
likely find our problem reduced in significance and effect.
Of course, there
are exceptions. Diseases that progress with time, money that runs down like
sand through an hourglass and other progressive conditions may not be
outdistanced in a space-time continuum. Such are the most vexing of
life's problems that often bring us to edge of our human capacity to understand
and cope with what seems hopeless. It is frequently in these kinds of desperate
situations that many of us realize the limitations of the physical world's
remedies. Such anxious moments can be a defining moment in our lives, when
we stand at the edge of the cliff of appearances, having exhausted reason and
human resource. With nothing viable to fall back on, and an intense
yearning to move into a hopeful future, we reach a level of receptivity to a
deeper understanding and realization of perspective.
This often is the
vital first step of an inner journey into the uncharted terrain that the slings
and arrows of life have seemingly led us to discover. What seemed to be a
dead end, the end of the road of hope, becomes a vast and spacious field where
definitive answers give way to limitless capacities for unconditional
well-being. Many of us stumbled into this realm after falling down, and
despite our wits or wily ways, could not get ourselves on our feet, let alone
find our way. You could say it is through a fault of our own that
we discover this inner kingdom; where a crack in awareness allows the light to
enter.
When Jesus
advised against "judging by appearances" and encouraged us to use
"righteous judgment," it came from understanding how frustrating and
hopeless is life when lived from the surface perspective, from
outside-in.. He knew how slim are our chances of finding the real answers to
life's most vexing conundrums within the limited purview of the mortal mind.
He spoke of an inner realm where we coexist with the Divine in
unity and love. He described this realm as an expansive dimension like yeast in
dough; like the robust growth of a tiny mustard seed into an enormous plant. It
is in this dimension of Life that we are to place our big problems, for it is
in the context of this vast and ever expanding realm of Love and Peace that we
are graced with Divine perspective.
As we expand our
awareness of this greater dimension in which we "live, and move and have
our very being," our challenges and our suffering become proportionately
smaller. With practice and faith, we come to realize that we are so much more than our
problems, and we cease to identify with them. We may have cancer in our
experience, but a condition of the body does not define or limit a spiritual
being. It is in consistently opening our awareness to the greater spiritual
reality in which "stuff happens" that we can manage to find the
"peace that passeth human understanding." This is the realm where we
can find respite from life's great challenges, where as the Psalmist wrote, we
no longer "fear the terror of the night, nor the arrow that flies by
day," for we have been lifted up on the wings of Truth, where we are
lovingly held and eternally safe.
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