To
be spiritual is to live each moment in intense communion with life, a
union that requires sloughing off layers of identity and conditioning
until you reach a void by attaining samadhi.
MEDITATION: THE NEW MANTRA
By Parveen Chopra
Meditation
is finally coming home after spreading its message all over the world.
Today, tens of techniques are available off-the-shelf. "Interest
in meditation has picked up in the past three to four years," agrees
Swami Chaitanya Keerti, former editor of Osho Times, published
by the Osho commune, Pune.
What
is also new is that the latest converts are the urban educated. Surprisingly
too, most converts to the contemplative practices of Buddhism, a melancholic
religion to the nonbeliever, are the elite and the intellectual.
Meditation is even studded with glamour. Shabana Azmi, Kavita Lalitaji'
Chowdhry and Bishen Singh Bedi have all done the grueling 10-day vipassana
meditation course. Says Bedi: "Out of the world! Absolutely fantastic!"
Stress management is influencing the corporate sector's receptivity to
meditation. Companies that have institutionalized meditation include the
Godrej group, Lupin Laboratories, Ayodhya Paper Mills and the Nagarjuna
and Alacrity groups. At Himachal Futuristic Communications Ltd, Delhi,
regular sessions of the Jain system of preksha dhyan are held.
An in-house study revealed that 75 per cent of the practitioners reported
a reduction in anxiety, improvement in relationships and enhanced enthusiasm
for work and life.
Meditation is also finding use as a therapeutic tool in medicine. A growing
number of up market hospitals are using it as a complementary therapy.
In Delhi, Dr Bimal Chhajer has started the Saaol heart program to reverse
heart disease through meditation (preksha dhyan), diet and lifestyle
choices.
Meditation is also being used to treat behavioral and psychiatric problems.
In Mumbai, Dr Rajendra Chokani, a psychiatrist at the Sunflower Nursing
Home, uses vipassana for his patients and claims a success rate of 80
per cent.
The wide acceptance of meditation is due to its proven benefits. Deep
relaxation releases stress, unblocking energy and creativity. Longtime
practitioners show increased productivity at work and score better on
personality development and self-actualization scales. Did you say 'yes'
to meditation?
Chances are everyone around you is.
An aghori lives in a cremation ground and cooks his food
on the funeral pyre, before which he also meditates. His begging bowl is a male
human skull. He eats and drinks anything, even his own urine and faeces and human
flesh. The loincloth is his only garment, he smears his body and matted locks
with ashes from the funeral pyre. He uses dead men's shrouds for bedding. He is
a devotee of Shiva, also known as Aghora ('not terrible'). He turns dharma
on its head; if all life is Brahman, all is divine.
After being ceremonially
initiated with liquor, food collected from the lower castes and a secret mantra,
the initiate does maun sadhana (silent meditation) for 41 days in a cremation
ground. After this, he awakens his inner light through the ritual of alakha
jagana. As his inner energy focuses, he spontaneously calls 'alakha'
even as his body shudders uncontrollably.
Generally
nomadic, aghoris rarely frequent one cremation ground for more than six
months. Along with their skull bowl, they often carry a bell that they ring while
chanting Lord Shiva's names.
This
path of walking the razor's edge is not for everyone. What is it that leads some
to live lives of such severe penance, of such bizarre practices when more moderate
paths are at hand? They say there are as many paths as there are seekers. Even
in this mystical land of India, few choose this arduous way to the divine.
There are some eternal lessons to be learned from aghoris. Surely
death, decay and decomposition are as integral to existence as love, life and
laughter. To feel this deeply, to transcend fear and disgust as much as greed
and anger, to feel that all that lives is holy, as does the aghori, must
be truly ennobling.
THE JOURNEY INWARD
By
Suma Varughese
Transformation, most thinkers agree, begins with restlessness. If this
restlessness converts into a quest, it can lead to a revelation-that split-second
parting of the mind's veil that flashes a vision of the sought-after goal.
Transformation is the slow, steady infusion of that vision into reality.
It means moving from seeing anew to being anew.
The tools of transformation are awareness and acceptance. We can only
change what we are aware of, and we can only change when we accept it.
Once acceptance is won, awareness can effect a change, in much the same
way as the sun dissolves the morning mist.
As we move beyond the conditioning that determined our thoughts, words
and actions, we become increasingly aware of being whole and perfect.
Freed of the need for fronts, we become who we are.
In time, fear dissolves, helped by our growing sense of self, and above
all, by an increasing trust in the universe. Freedom from conditioning
frees us to see life as it is.
As we take responsibility for our actions and spin away from the orbit
of others' control, we taste the freedom of being our own master. Simultaneously,
this generates respect for the freedom of others, which we now see as
a fundamental right.
As we learn to leave behind selfish concerns, we begin to focus on the
larger world. A sure sign that our growth is maturing is an ability to
transcend dichotomies; we become childlike and mature, playful and serious,
loving and detached, flexible and firm.
We are now well into the transformation process. Expect change to speed
up, bringing us to the domain of surrender.
Here,
we let go of all personal concerns. Trusting and loving life and the universe
completely, we allow life to live us, rather than the reverse. Having
penetrated the layers of our own identity, we merge into the Universe.
This is samadhi, the region of Sat, Chit, Anandaexistence,
consciousness, blissattributes of the Creator. But even this is
not the end. That occurs when, letting go of even the Creator's identity,
we plumb the void of consciousness.
Deepa
Kodikal
A Journey Within The Self is the chronicle of Deepa Kodikal's astonishing
spiritual adventures. They range from a union with Krishna and Shiva,
a state she describes as 'divine intercourse', to witnessing Vishwarupa,
the nature of the universe. Kodikal didn't just see all this, she was
all this. "I saw in a tremendous flash thatmy God! I am the
Lord!"
"The
Lord," says she, "has perfect segmented awareness, as also
universal awareness. He is aware of what each being thinks, talks, knows,
tastes, hears and smells, individually and collectively."
The nature
of the Lord is the nature of man, affirms Mumbai-based Kodikal. She
describes her present state as 'beautiful'. "There's a constant
sense of worship of life."
"I moved into spirituality via maudlin and motherhood," says
Sharon Clarke Sequeira, a Miss India runner up in 1985.
Sharon has
been a seeker since age 14, when Jesus Christ appeared to her and told
her to move within. This was the beginning of a path that synthesized
Christian thought and Indian spiritual practice. Her guide is Dr Jayant
Balaji Athawale, an auto-hypnotist and founder of the Sanatana Bharatiya
Sanskriti Sanstha, which approaches spirituality scientifically.
Chanting 'Hail Mary' for two years (members are encouraged to chant the
name of the deity they believe in) yielded dramatic dividends. Few events
or people upset her now, anger seldom arises and she has transcended her
extended love affair with food that had sent her weight soaring.
Mahadev
Mangela
Mahadev Mangela once settled all disputes with his fist. Today, he says:
"From wanting to hurt, I've turned to healing. Now I realize the
other is not the other, he is my brother." The vehicle for his transformation
is the Swadhyaya philosophy, which preaches the concept of the
God within as the source of kinship between all mankind.
Through this noble philosophy, Mahadevbhai has flowered into an orator,
poet, administrator and leader. He is also a key lieutenant of Swadhyaya.
However, the most revolutionary change for this son of illiterate fisher
folk has been his conversion to a priest, well versed with the Vedic rites
for marriage, birth and death.
On the threshold of his first bhakti pheri (devotional tour) to
South Africa, he says: "Dadaji (founder Pandurang S. Athawale) made
me export quality."
EVERYDAY
SPIRITUALITY
By Eugene Davis
To be healthy, happy and in the flow of good
fortune we need to be spiritually awake and in harmony with life. This can happen
only when we choose lifestyle routines that enable us to have the support of nature's
life-enhancing influences, including practices that illumine the mind and allow
innate qualities to unfold.
We can help ourselves by our actions. The
Cosmic Mind, in which the universe resides, provides us with circumstances, events,
relationships, and resources to support our constructive endeavors and make fortunate
outcomes possible.
Exercise your creative imagination. Envision yourself
to be physically and psychologically healthy, happy, creatively functional, prosperous
and spiritually enlightened.
Think about the possibilities available.
If you were enlightened, how would you feel? What kind of relationships would
you have? With these insights, begin to live like an enlightened person.
Self-care routines can include activity, rest and exercise and a natural, wholesome
diet that is preferably vegetarian. Exercise routines may include hatha yoga or
tai chi.
Meditate for physical and psychological health and progressive spiritual
growth. Schedule 15 to 20 minutes once or twice a day to meditate. Your
thoughts will be more orderly, emotions will be calmed and the body's
immune system will be strengthened. You will be more alert and will have
energy to live effectively.
Choose a word or phrase as a mantra. 'God', 'Om', 'peace', 'joy' are suitable.
Sit upright with spine and neck erect. With closed eyes, look slightly upwards,
through the place between your eyebrows and be aware. Then do the following:
Pause for a few minutes to be centered and relaxed. When inhaling
or exhaling, mentally listen to your chosen word. Continue listening
to your chosen word until it ceases to manifest and you are established in a thoughtless,
tranquil state. When concluding, open your eyes and be still for a
few moments.
Immediately after meditation is an ideal time to write in a journal. You
may also want to devote a few minutes to pray for others or find solutions
to problems.
To experience higher consciousness states, meditate longer and more deeply.
After a few months, extend your daily session to 30 minutes or an hour.
When the intellect is purified, exceptional powers can be demonstrated.
When intuition is unveiled, the truth can be directly known. When awareness
of our true nature is no longer obscured, we are Self-realized. When we
are permanently established in Self-realizationand impervious
to external influences, we are liberated.
Spirituality
connects many different realities, like a bridge. As I allow spiritual
currents to enter my life, I find myself stretching, embracing opposites.
I feel a sense of personal growth, and deep gratitude.
For women, typically, spirituality is not only otherworldly. It is as
much about the body, relationships and work, as it is about soul and spirit.
Janet Chawla, a specialist in women's health and religio-cultural traditions,
talks about her unease when a Buddhist teacher referred appreciatively
to people who had left their families in response to the inner call. "This
is very objectionable in a world where children are being abandoned for
all sorts of reasons," she says.
During 1993-94, I was part of the Delhi-based Forum for Women and Religion.
Here, we explored spirituality from women's perspective. These discussions
became the starting point for a re-evaluation of my own skepticism. I
saw that my rejection of religion was essentially a reaction to dogmas,
arrogance and distortions that have crept into organized religions.
I also noticed tremendous arrogance in the modern view of the human being
as all-powerful in a way that pits him against nature, against other human
beings, and against the humane, emotional, intuitive and spiritual parts
of his own self. I began to understand that empowerment comes from an
acceptance of the boundless potential of the human self.
Madhu Khanna, a scholar of tantric traditions, says: "Feminine
energy is central to tantric understanding. This energy has many
aspects, benign as well as fierce. In tantra, the yoni (vagina)
is energized and worshipped."
Female power here denotes balance. In her book Passionate Enlightenment
Women in Tantric Buddhism, Miranda Shaw writes that a large
number of women like Dombiyogini, Sahajayogicinta, Lakshminkara, Mekhala,
Kankhala Gangadhara, Siddharajni, and others, were respected yoginis
(female yoga exponents) and advanced seekers on the path to enlightenment.
According to anthropologists, it was women who adapted plants for daily
nutrition, medicine and agriculture and made the first homes. Ancient
goddess-worshipping cultures gave way, in different parts of the world,
to belief systems in which God, or the godhead, reigns supreme. In her
book Devi and the Spouse Goddess, historian Lynn A. Gatwood shows
that when female status declined characteristics of goddesses also changed.
Documentary filmmaker Saba Dewan comments on some Banda women she
met: "Shanti had been beaten by her husband and in-laws. Yet, by
her own definition, Shanti is not a victim; she is 'the chosen one' who
has stood by her beliefs and accepted the consequences of doing so. Coming
from a privileged class, we are arrogant because we can negotiate the
world. But here was another world, which I lacked the skills to understand.
For me, spirituality became a bond with something bigger than one's self."
Ritika, one of four women who started the Gnostic Center in New Delhi
that is consecrated to the vision of Sri Aurobindo and the Mother, says:
"Spirituality deals with One Reality, the Divine, which is genderless."
Yet,
organized religions often privilege the male persona. Ma Jnanananda, a
well-known guru, dismisses traditions that regard women as unsuitable
for spiritual initiation. Says she: "When the male and female completely
complement each other in the same individual, the soul is fully realized."
Spirituality, then,
is one way for a woman to celebrate her femininity and yet go beyond it.
Free to be a woman and simultaneously free of it too.
Satya Narayan Goenka, responsible for bringing vipassana, a 2,500-year-old
technique, back to its land of origin, defines it as "the development
of insight ('vipassana' is insight in Pali) into one's own nature by which
one may recognize and eliminate suffering."
Taught by the Buddha, vipassana disappeared from India 500 years after
his death, but was preserved by masters in Burma. Goenka's program is
rigorous to say the least. No participant is allowed to leave until the
end of the 10- day course. All stimuli in the form of reading, writing
and talking are forbidden. After a delicious vegetarian lunch at 11:30
a.m., there is nothing but tea and fruits at 5 p.m. The meditation is
grueling-almost 10 hours daily.
The first three days are spent in anapana-sati, watching one's
breathing patterns by concentrating on the triangular space between the
upper lip and the nostrils. On the fourth day, the tethered mind is harnessed
upon the task of studying the subtle sensations within the body-heat,
cold, pain, itching, throbbing. This is the heart of the meditation. After
three days of anapana-sati, meditators are asked to move their
attention systematically through every part of the body without unduly
dwelling upon any sensation, pleasant or otherwise. Finally, you stand
at the edge of a breakthrough, the region where the body and mind are
seen as vibration arising and disappearing ceaselessly.
Thus, you experience the impermanence of matter, leading to an understanding
of the futility of attachment.
Elaborates Goenka: "There is no sectarianism in the technique from
beginning to end. We can't say that respiration (or sensation) is Hindu
or Muslim, Christian or Buddhist. The whole path of dhamma is a path to
make us good human beings. It is a way of life, an art of living."
An important part of vipassana is Metta meditation where the meditator
bestows the merits of his effort upon the world. Most courses get rapturous
responses when they are over. But in the case of vipassana, about 35 per
cent repeat the course, testifying to its lasting impact. For householders
like you and me, vipassana offers a chance to keep on hold all distractions
of everyday life and keep an appointment with ourselves. Personally, I
can't wait to do it.
Transcendental
Meditation
It involves repeating the mantra selected by your TM teacher. The mantra
gets increasingly refined and acts as a vehicle for the inward journey
of the mind. Eventually, both mantra and thoughts are transcended, leaving
pure consciousness.
Dynamic
Meditation
Popularized by Osho,
it starts with 10 minutes of deep chaotic breathing. For the next ten
minutes, there is screaming, crying, jumping, dancing, whatever. The
next stage is jumping and shouting 'Hoo' loudly. Then STOP right there.
Be absolutely still for the next 10 minutes.
The
Sufi Way Murakabah is meditating under the master's guidance. In zikr
you repeat a mantra-like formula. Qawwali produces a state of
ecstasy through music. The dervish dance induces a loss of lower
self-consciousness.
Mindfulness
Popularized by the Vietnamese Buddhist monk Thich Nhat Hanh, mindfulness
means being aware from moment to moment.
Yoga
Nidra
Rediscovered by Swami Satyananda, founder of the Bihar School of Yoga,
Munger, you begin by rotating your consciousness through different parts
of your body, relaxing each. Follow this by feeling polar opposites
such as heaviness and lightness. The last segment is a set of visualizations.
Preksha
Dhyan
Rediscovered by Acharya Tulsi, Preksha awakens your discrimination, thereby
controlling passions and purifying emotions.