A prolific writer, orator, educationist, thinker, and above all, spiritual preceptor to millions, Dada Vaswani, the head of the Pune-based Sadhu Vaswani Mission, turns 90 this month.We pay tribute to a life lived in service to God, guru and the world. More>>
By Suma Varughese
The secret of a successful life is to live each moment to the fullestdraining
your cup to the leesmoving a step ahead each time towards spiritual
success
Perhaps one of the most important tasks before all of us is how to succeed
in this great enterprise called life. How would God have liked us to live
so that, when in the end we return to God, he (she, itchoose your
pronounmy Judeo-Christian background will out) may tell us: "Well-lived."
Today,
I believe that the successful life is one that takes as much as possible
from each moment and gives as much to it; a life lived at the fullest
pitch of one's powers; a life that uses every moment to move a step
ahead into growth.
One wakes
up of a morn and takes a deep breath. And in that breath one greets the
day. That breath is also a bow to God, an acknowledgment of the gift of
life and recognition of one's body. As the long current of air goes deep
within, it awakens and vitalizes us and puts us in touch with the present
moment.
Taking the first step of the day is likewise an experience to savor,
as our feet touch the ground and our body begins to move. As to drinking
that first cup of coffee or teawhat a deep, sensuous experience
it can be when we put all of ourselves into it and draw as much as possible
out of it.
Lived at
such a pitch, no moment in life is ever ordinary, ever trivial. Each
is charged with its own rasa, its own flavor, which we draw within
ourselves and assimilate. Even moments of physical and emotional pain
have their beauty and poignancy when we give ourselves fully to it,
experiencing the discomfort fully, watching its play within our system,
and containing it within ourselves.
An encounter
with anyone or anything, even a bird or animal, is a celebration when
we pour ourselves fully into it, directing our fullest attention and respect
to the other and recognizing and appreciating their uniqueness completely.
In that space, the other has complete freedom to be who they are and like
a flower before the sun, they release their essence. Communication then
becomes joyful, almost a dance as it were, fully satisfying and replenishing
each.
Imagine living
that way. Imagine our most mundane exchanges in the local train and at
work being charged with that intensity of life. Only then can we realize
the potential of relationships. Far from being a source of conflict and
tension, relationships will then be what they are meant to beone
of the greatest sources of joy and enrichment in our lives, a way to savor
the other's uniqueness and to grow from it.
Work, when approached with
total intensity, becomes almost a sacred enterprise. Whether we are rolling
out a chapati, putting the baby to sleep, engaged in creating a
work of art or signing a deal, we give our all to it. In such an atmosphere
there is no space for indifference, sloppy work, or even thought. Everything
save the work is siphoned out of our consciousness and a new kind of dance
begins, a pas de deux in which we give of ourselves and the work gives
of itself, and what emerges is a seamless piece of self-expression.
A life lived
like this is its own reward. That it will also be externally successful,
who can doubt. But that will not be the point. The point will be the realization
of our own potential, the heightened awareness gained, the richness of
the experience itself and the precious insights into the nature of life
that come our way. It will be the seamless integration of every moment
within ourselves, so that our life, when we look back, is completely one,
without contradictions or incompletions to mar its perfection. No messy
relationships, no aspects of our lives or ourselves we have swept under
the carpet, no failure we have not come to terms with.
Such a definition
of success sweeps away all external tags such as wealth, status or title.
By this definition, the old gardener, weeding at his lawn patch with patience
and dedication, may be far more successful than the owner of the mansion,
be he the maharaja himself.
This kind of
success is open to no external evaluation. Only the individual and God will
know; though the rest of us, hammering and struggling at life, will always
suspect that they know something we don't.