Memories of the past and expectations of
the future cause pain, anxiety, and fear. Expectations in life are bondage.
Don't expect anything from anybody and don't expect anything from yourself, but
just be what you are.
~ Swami Niranjanananda Saraswati
~ Swami Niranjanananda Saraswati
The ultimate state of Love is freedom,
absolute freedom and any relationship that destroys freedom is not worthwhile.
Love is a sacred art. To be in Love is to be in a holy relationship.
-Osho
-Osho
Suffering
in relationships arises from the same spiritual affliction that all suffering
does: attachment. Yesterday I was
talking with a young man who was in terrible suffering over his relationship
with his wife. He experienced severe
jealousy whenever she interacted with other men. At these times he would feel anxious and
desperate as if his world was falling apart.
Unfortunately these painful emotions were causing his wife to feel
alienated.
Because
he was on a spiritual path, he knew that the problem was within himself (unlike
some who insist that their partner is at fault and must change.) This recognition of personal responsibility
for one’s own feelings is a great step forward in one’s evolution. Unfortunately it doesn’t anesthetize the
pain. Instead we must face that pain,
allow it into awareness and accept that the fear of abandonment is a powerful
unconscious force within us. On that
primitive level abandonment equals death.
Most of our intimate personal relationships are based in trying to
ameliorate this primal fear.
Attachment/clinging
is part of our biology. It is hardwired
in our brains as a means of survival. Unfortunately
some of our primitive drives can interfere with our personal spiritual
evolution. In other words they can mess
with our bliss. Fear, jealousy, anger and
pride are all expressions of attachment.
Yogis, shamans and mystics throughout the ages have recognized the
necessity of solitude as a discipline for gaining some perspective on these
powerful emotions. Through solitude and
meditation it is possible for one to develop the strength of awareness to
overcome these primitive emotional drives.
The
great Tibetan yogi, Milarepa, is a role model for a serious yoga aspirant. He
was able to live apart from society in a frozen cave for untold years and not
only survive but experience great joy. In
The Songs of Milarepa he wrote:
“My
narrow bed gives me ease to stretch and bend; my thin clothing makes my body
warm; my scanty fare satisfies my belly. I am the goal of every great
meditator; I am the meeting place of the faithful; I am the coil of birth and
death and decay. I have no preference for any country; I have no home in any
place; I have no store of provisions for my livelihood. I have no fondness for
material things; I make no distinction between clean and unclean in food; I
have little torment of suffering. I have little desire for self-esteem; I have
little attachment or bias; I have found the freedom of Nirvana. I am the
comforter of the aged; I am the playmate of children; the sage, I wander
through the kingdoms of the world. I pray that ye men and gods may dwell at
ease.”
Of
course we might also recoil from this example.
It might seem too far of a stretch from where we are. It might seem inhumanely detached and
unfeeling. We are often attached to our
attachment. Awakening from attachment
reveals that our life has been a dream.
It is not so much that nothing is real as that we have been seeing it
through a fog of imagination. As long as
we continue to choose to live in that fog we continue to proliferate
suffering.
Another
Being is not one’s possession or territory.
She or he is another sacred being on a path that leads beyond this
world. We are here to loosen our
attachments not to intensify them.
Relationships are a way of helping us to awaken, if we pay attention
inwardly; if we are “mindful.” We must
learn to honor and respect ourselves and others as sacred beings.
Intimate relationships can help us rediscover our connection with life. If we get too fixated on one person or thing, we are limiting our connection with the whole of life that we are connected with.
ReplyDeleteAttachments, and relationships with others and life can serve as a learning and awakening process to greater connectivity and attunement with life if they are not too rigidly adhered to. Possessive attachments and fixations are likely to cause much suffering to self and others. We need to be mindful and aware of our feelings, needs and motivations in response to our relationships and interactions with life. In forming connections and relationships with 'others', we can learn and discover more about our individualised self (ego) and the self that exists in all life as one existential being.