Do you
sometimes wonder if you are actually making real progress in your spiritual
growth and development? I certainly have
my doubts at times and I’m guessing you’ve had moments when you doubted your
own progress. For me, the moments when I am most likely to question my
spiritual advancement are when I’ve burst forth with some raw emotional
reaction. Like getting really frustrated, or ticked off, impatient, judgmental,
insisting on winning a petty argument….shall I go on? You get the picture.
Even
when we are assiduous in spiritual practice, it can happen. I can come out of a beautiful meditation with
such a spacious, generous view of life and in a moment of unconsciousness, I’m
tripped up by an old resentment, upended by reaction, or fully hooked by some
nagging fear. When I find myself in
these uncomfortable states of mind and heart, my initial reaction can be more
frustration, resistance and battle readiness.
I impulsively take up arms against these invaders, like a spiritual
warrior defending a castle of consciousness.
Wanting to get back to that place of peace, I assume that vigilant
protection is what I need most. When I judge, rather than embrace the
challenges of life, I never find the peace that I’m after. My efforts to hold back the unwelcome guests
are actually counterproductive to my goal.
Wisdom reverses logic and reveals that what I try to control, controls
me, what I resist, persists.
“Of
course”, you say, “I knew that!” Well so do I.
I authored our slogan that extols the virtue of embracing the human. But
alas, I do forget! So in the rotating awareness in which I remember and forget,
I must reclaim the ground of this truth and face life’s challenges with an
embracing and spacious heart.
Love
leaves nobody behind; excludes nothing from its compassionate embrace. Since
it's all an expression of the One, it all belongs. What we push away, distances us from God, and
what we embrace brings us closer. Being present
with whatever is in front of us is a prerequisite of authentic spiritual
practice. If I cannot worship at the
altar of this moment, regardless of what is here, then I have taken myself
offline from the Divine.
Perhaps
Rumi in his inimitable compelling poem will say it best for you:
The
Guest House
This
being human is a guest house.
Every
morning a new arrival.
A joy,
a depression, a meanness,
some
momentary awareness comes
as an
unexpected visitor.
Welcome
and entertain them all!
Even if
they're a crowd of sorrows,
who
violently sweep your house
empty
of its furniture,
still,
treat each guest honorably.
He may
be clearing you out
for
some new delight.
The
dark thought, the shame, the malice,
meet
them at the door laughing,
and
invite them in.
Be
grateful for whoever comes,
because
each has been sent
as a
guide from beyond.
~ Rumi
~
Rumi
alludes to the secret of transformation. By embracing life challenges, even the
adversarial stuff, welcoming them as great teachers, we might awaken to a
deeper sense of who we are and enlarge our capacity to become conscious human
beings. There is such great spiritual power hidden in difficulty when rightly
seen. As Jesus told the disciples about the reason a man was born blind – not
as a punishment, but so that God might be glorified through him.
May you
find the capacity to embrace all of the guests in your household this week
until they reveal the gifts they have brought you.
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