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Bestselling author, leading exponent of Indian spirituality
in the West and a pioneer of mind-body health, Dr Deepak Chopra is the most easily
recognised New Age ideologue
There's
a traffic jam outside Delhi's Talkatora Stadium, the venue for a talk
by Deepak Chopra, one evening in early summer. After an inordinately
long waitthe discomfort compounded by the enervating heatthe
traffic clears up, and it's possible to proceed and find parking space.
Outside the venue, a throng of believers, socialites and admirers of the
New Age guru is being guided by uniformed security personnel towards the
entrance. At a makeshift stall are displayed copies of Chopra's
books, including his latest, How to Know God. The line-up of parked
cars extends half-a-kilometre on Shankar Road, running over the ridge.
Inside, the air is pungent with the odour of perfumes and colognes, as obviously
well-heeled ladies and gents, often accompanied by their hip-hop teenage wards,
move through the aisles looking for dwindling seating space in the already crowded
auditorium. Are they here for the teaching? Or because it's a social event?
Suddenly, Deepak Chopra, dressed in an immaculate grey suit, enters
from the front of the hall. He steps into the VIP gallery facing the podium,
and is immediately surrounded by fans. Soon, a television crew corners
him for an impromptu interview.
Somewhat imposingly built, with suspiciously black hair and bushy eyebrows,
Chopra looks the genial 'neighbour-next-door'. Yet, by the time
he takes the cordless microphone, the auditorium is packed to capacity,
and even the aisles are crowded with invitees unable to find seating-space.
"What
I'm going to share with you is part of our cultural and spiritual heritage. It's
nothing new. So what you've really done is brought me here to remind yourselves
of something that you already know." With this unexpected, but perspicacious,
comment, he begins. His voice, rising and falling like the ebb and flow of the
tide, resonates through the spacious hall as he recounts the contribution of India
to world civilisation through the ages, in different fields of knowledge and activity.
"India is the only country that, in 10,000 years, hasn't invaded another
country. Of course, it has invaded culturally. For centuries, it ruled South-East
Asia, China, Japan through its mind, culture, science, cosmology and philosophy.
Until the 17th century, India was the richest country in the world. There was
no confusion about spirituality and materialism going together, because our Vedic
tradition says that the four goals of life are artha (money), kama (desire),
dharma (duty) and moksha (enlightenment)."
Facts and figures
flow fast and furious at this stage. Some 6,000 years ago (he continues), when
the rest of the world was living as nomadic tribes in dense forests, we had the
Indus Valley civilizationwith architecture, music, navigation, irrigation,
and the art of government. The West talks of Machiavelli;
what about Kautilya
or Chanakya?
Aryabhata was the first to suggest in the 5th century AD that the earth moves
around the sun, not the other way round.
"The world calls it the Copernican revolution; it should be called the
Aryabhatan revolution," declares Chopra. And though the world calls
Marconi the discoverer of wireless communication, it's now recognised
by scientists that actually Jagdish Chandra Bose was the pioneer of wireless.
"India gave to the world the mother of all languages: Sanskrit. Recently,
Forbes magazine wrote that as we move from information technology
to the technology of artificial intelligence, Sanskrit will be the language
of the computer industry."
Having
struck an immediate rapport with his listeners, giving them a dose of
collective self-esteem, by the time Chopra concludes this part
of his address, the audience is sold on him.
A gift for oratory and flair for words, coupled with a thorough grounding
in the Indian tradition has helped him reach where he has. Chopra,
the elder of two sons, was born into an "extremely Westernised" family
in New Delhi in 1947.
"We didn't notice anything exceptional about him," his father, Dr (Col)
Krishan Chopra, a leading cardiologist, admits, "but Deepak was
a gifted child." Wisdom in hindsight, perhaps?
Once, while going out, his father, who had two cars parked outside, asked
three-year-old Deepak: "Which car would you like us to use this
evening?" Deepak replied: "These are your cars. Take the one you like.
When I grow up, earn a lot of money, I'll buy a big car." Precocious confidence?
In Pune, Chopra Sr decided to take his two sons, along with their friends,
to the circus. However, Deepak, then four, refused: "I'm watching
the birds and trees." His father told him that it would soon become dark.
Deepak replied: "Then I'll look at the stars." Intimations of immortality?
As a senior student in Delhi's St Columbus School, Deepak was a
good writer and an eloquent speaker. He wanted to be a journalist. However,
later he changed his mind, qualified and got admission to AIIMS. His is
a family of doctors, after all (uncle H.K. Chopra and brother Sanjiv are
also doctors). But Deepak, says his father, was never one to follow
the beaten track, not for long. While still at AIIMS, he saw the flaws
in mainstream medicine. Once, he said: "I thought that they would talk
about health, but they talk only about disease." It was probably the beginning
of his disenchantment with the traditional mould of modern medicine. And
a rediscovery of India.
"Today,
India is poised to contribute to the world in a way that, even with all its contribution
in the past, it has not done so far. With its emerging domination of information
technology, it will be an economic power in a world where economic, not military
power will prevail."
The biggest resources of wealth and power (says
Chopra) are not outside, but in the human mind. As we have evolved, the sources
of power and wealth have shifted. When we were hunter-gatherers, the only response
humans had was to run or fightwe survived, but became experts at the fight-flight
response. Seeking to protect ourselves against predators, we have become the predator.
Homo sapiens is the only animal that kills its own kind, and most often in the
name of God; that is ethnocentric, racist, bigoted and prejudiced; that goes to
war; and that is destroying the ecological balance, the nurturing that we receive
from Mother Earth. Yet, the human animal is the only one that asks himself questions
like: "Where did I come from? What am I doing here? Is there any meaning or purpose
to my existence? What happens to me after I die? Do I have a soul? Does God exist?
And if God exists, does He care about me?"
We
are indeed a paradoxical species. And now we are faced with a choice:
either we go the way of the predator, and risk our extinction like all
predators, or join hands with the harmonious elements and forces of the
universe, and chart a new evolutionary course. "All of classic science,"
declares Chopra, "even though it's been extremely successful, has
been based on a superstition: the superstition of materialism."
Removing his jacket, to reveal a Chinese-collared black
shirt beneath, he now cuts a striking, somewhat magician-like figure as he addresses
the audience. The worldview of Newtonian physics, he explains, says: "The essence
of reality is that it is material, we are part of the material world, the human
body is material, and consciousness is an epiphenomenon, a by-product. If you
think, feel, dream, imagine, have memories, desiresall this is a by-product
of matter. Understand how matter behaves, and you will understand the mysteries
of the universe." And today we are in the midst of the overthrow of the superstition
of materialism, not necessarily because the world is becoming more spiritual,
but because science itself is telling us that the essential nature of this material
world is that it's not material; that the essential nature of this physical world
is that it's not physical; that the essential stuff of the universe is non-stuff.
Today, you use e-mail or send messages on a fax machine or converse on
a cellular phoneall these technologies
are based on a fundamental premise of science, that the basic unit of
matter called an atom is not a solid entity, it's a hierarchy of states
of information and energy in a huge void. Seen through the eyes of a physicist,
the human body and everything that you experience as the material world
is proportionately as void as intergalactic space. Krishna says to Arjuna
in the Gita: "Let me give you divine eyes, and then you will see things
as they really are." If you could see things as they really are, look
through the eyes of quantum mechanics, everything is spinning out of nothingness
at the speed of light.
The 13th century Sufi poet Jalaluddin
Rumi said: "We come spinning out of nothingness, scattering stars like dust."
Go beyond the appearance of molecules, you enter the subatomic cloud; go beyond
the cloud, you end up with a handful of nothingness. And the crucial question
arises, what is this nothingness from which we all come? Is it just a void, or
could it be the womb of creation? What is the essential nature of reality? The
great Vedic seers studied this question, and said: "Reality is different at different
levels of awareness." Science is recognising this today. "I'm walking this road,
not necessarily because I want to get somewhere, but because I enjoy walking this
road."
Having
graduated from AIIMS in 1969, Chopra migrated to the USA with his
newly-wedded wife, Rita. (His brother, Sanjiv, followed soon after with
wife Amita). After seven years of advanced training, which included positions
at prestigious hospitals, Chopra began a private practice in endocrinology
and internal medicine. The practice thrived; in addition, he became chief
of staff at New England Memorial Hospital in Stoneham, Massachusetts.
He and Rita started a family and bought a home in the quiet, woodsy Boston
suburb of Lincoln. By this point, Rita recalls, Deepak Chopra had
"done it all". "He's always worked twice as hard as anyone else," she
explains. "He puts his heart and soul into anything he does. And he's
always had a gift with people."
Yet Chopra was getting restless. He smoked cigarettes, drank alcohol,
and consumed plenty of coffee on his way through long workdays. He was
counselling his patients to change their self-destructive habits, but
began to recognize that he could not make such changes in his own life.
Then came that fateful day. Browsing in a used bookstore one Sunday afternoon
in 1980, Chopra stumbled upon a book on Transcendental Meditation.
Reading the book that evening, he told Rita: "This looks fantastic!"
The following day they enrolled
for a TM class and, two months later, they took the advanced TM-Siddhi programme.
"At first I did TM mainly to relax, but it changed my whole lifemy diet,
my work, my relationships with patients and other people," he says. "I became
10 times more efficient in my work."
He soon lost his taste for alcohol, and other self-impairing habits spontaneously
fell away. His worldview began to change. "There are three ways of
understanding reality," says Chopra. "The least reliable
is through the eye of the flesh, or seeing through our five senses. Till
recently, science was an extension of the eye of the flesh. The second
way, which is a little deeper, is through the eye of the mind. If I want
to understand the Pythagoras theorem, quantum physics or the theory of
relativity, I have to know the principles of Euclidean geometry or mathematics,
that exist only in the mind. That takes me a little deeper into the heart
of nature's secrets. And the third way is through the eye of the soul.
That takes us really into the heart and soul of reality. The visionary
poet William Blake wrote: "We are led to believe a lie when we see with
and not through the eye, that was born in the night to perish in the night,
while the soul slept in beams of light."
He was saying what's becoming obvious to scientists
today, that is, do not trust your senses. The great seers said: "The senses give
us a partial view of realitymaya." It means creating something as a perceptual
experience, which isn't realthat you cannot trust. Chopra explains: "My
senses tell me the earth is flat, it's not true; my senses tell me that the ground
I'm standing on is stationary, and I know it's spinning at a tremendous speed
and hurtling into space. My senses tell me that when I look at you, I see a three-dimensional
body, an anatomical structure fixed in space and time, and that's not true. It's
an illusion." The Vedic seers said: "Look at the human body as a river, and just
as you cannot step into the same river twice, because new water is flowing in,
the real you cannot step into the same flesh-and-bones twice."
"Because
every moment you're actually changing your body, reshuffling, exchanging
its atoms and molecules with the rest of the universe, and you're doing
it faster than you can change your clothes. In fact the bodies, which
you're using right now to sit on the chairs, are not the bodies that you
came in with a little while ago." Walt Whitman wrote: "Every atom
that belongs to you as well belongs to me." And this is not a poetic metaphor,
it's a fact. So if you think you are your material body, you certainly
have a bit of a problem: Which one are you speaking of?
The defining moment arrived in Dr Chopra's life in 1985, when he
met Maharishi
Mahesh Yogi, founder of the TM movement, who had come to Washington
DC for the inauguration of Maharishi Vedic University. Chopra
and Rita were emerging from a dining room when they saw Maharishi, who
walked straight up to them and asked them to come to his room. The Chopras
were somewhat taken aback; they were scheduled to catch a plane in 15
minutes, and tried to beg off. But at Maharishi's insistence they went
upstairs, forgot all about their flight, and spent an hour talking with
him. "I was impressed by his and my total comfort and the lack of formality.
There was no pretentiousness, a lot of jokes and laughter. It was a light-hearted
meeting," Chopra recalls.
"And I was completely taken in by his sincerity, his almost childish enthusiasm...
for lack of a better word, his bliss." Rita says: "Maharishi was the sweetest,
easiest person in the world to talk to, so warm and friendly, so loving
and happy. It was the most joyful experience." Maharishi spoke to Chopra
about ayurveda,
the 7,000-year-old Indian 'science of life', which Maharishi was reviving
and purifying as an approach to perfecting health in the modern world.
He told Chopra that he should study ayurveda, understand it, and
explain it in scientific terms. In essence, he was suggesting that Chopra
change the direction of his career, an idea that made Rita momentarily
uneasy. She told Maharishi that it was not too practical for Deepak
to devote himself to ayurveda; he had to make a living. Maharishi simply
laughed and, eyes twinkling, assured them both that Deepak would
be very successful with ayurveda.
Prophetic words, indeed. Dr Chopra is, today, the leading exponent
of holistic health,
New Age spirituality and human potential. His 25 books, including Ageless
Body, Timeless Mind; Creating Affluence; The Seven Spiritual
Laws of Success, The Return of Merlin and The Path to Love
have sold more than 10 million copies worldwide. His latest work, How
to Know God is also slated to be a bestseller. His website, like his
television serials, enjoys top popularity ratings; his celebrity clients
include Demi Moore, George Harrison, Michael Jackson and Oprah Winfrey;
his Chopra Centre for Well Being at La Jolla, California is a pioneer
in mind-body health; his lectures are hugely attended worldwide. His teaching
blends physics and philosophy, ayurveda and modern medicine, timeless
wisdom and personal insight with dynamic results.
His story echoes his words: "Life is a field of infinite possibilities."
But growth is an ongoing process; in time it took him away from Maharishi.
On Guru Purnima in 1990, Maharishi indicated he was uncomfortable with
Chopra, who he felt was too eclectic. Chopra moved away
to chart his own course. "I am too free a person to belong to an organization,"
he says. "I also wished to explore my creativity."
"There's
a deeper level of reality," says Chopra. Science calls it
quantum reality. Quantum in physics defines the smallest indivisible unit
of information and energy. So a quantum of light is a photon, a quantum
of gravity is a graviton. Our thoughts are also units of information and
energy. When energy has a pattern, it becomes information." To improve
on Einstein, "energy and matter and information are interchangeable."
In the quantum world we are inseparable, interconnected. Gautam Buddha
said: "We are inter-beings that inter-arise in the inter-isness." We had
known for thousands of years that at another level, the quantum level,
we are inseparably connected. We are fields of energy and information
in the universe of energy and information, where everything is happening
at the speed of light. Your body, which appears to be physical is actually
flickering in out of the infinite void at the speed of light. So here
everything is indivisible, oscillating, has a wavelike frequency, and
is spatially extended.
But the crucial question
arises: where is this information and energy coming from? Quantum physics is giving
us an insight. There are some fundamental premises of the quantum world: there
are no objects, there are only superpositions of waves of possibility. things
happen even faster than the speed of light. It's called non-local action--one
subatomic particle can communicate with another subatomic particle without sending
it an energy or information signal. there are quantum leaps, which means a subatomic
particle can be in one location, and then it can be at another location, without
it having to go through the space in between. before you observe, nothing exists;
the observer is necessary for the observation to collapse. In other words, those
who understand this world say that at the most fundamental level of nature, one
undivided consciousness collapses upon itself to create both the subject and the
object of experience. In reality, the subject and the object, the seer and the
scenery, the observer and the observed are the same being.
Recalling an insight of Vedanta,
Chopra says that when one experiences samadhi, the seer and the
scenery become one. This is the experience of unity consciousness, which
is the ultimate truth at the heart of creation. And this is what really
love is. Love is not a mere sentiment, an emotion, but the ultimate truth
at the heart of creation. That truth is that the seer and the scenery,
the observer and the observed, the knower and the known, the lover and
the beloved are the same consciousness collapsing upon itself and experiencing
itself as the observer and the object of perception. J. Krishnamurti often
said: "The observer and the observed are one." If we can understand this
fundamental truth, we will, to quote Krishnamurti, have a "mutation in
consciousness". And once that happens, nothing will ever be the same again.
Your perceptual and cognitive mechanisms will change. You'll not experience
the same world ever again. That's what we needto go beyond the eye
of the flesh, to go beyond the eye of the mind, and experience the world
through the eye of the soul.
Yoga
Vashishta said: "Let us understand, not just intellectually but experientially."
And once we do that, the world will transform.
Chopra's brother, Sanjiv is professor of medicine at the Harvard University
School of Medicine. Amita is a paediatrician at the university's hospital.
Chopra's wife, Rita, is primarily a housewife. Their daughter, Mallika,
who married an NRI in Delhi two years ago, is working with Chopra's
website. Her brother, Gautam, who published a novella, Child of
the Dawn sometime ago, is working with a news-based children's television
channel, which brings him to Asia quite often. Chopra's parents
reside in Delhi. Dr Krishan Chopra is consultant emeritus and member of
the board of trustees of the Moolchand Khairati Ram Hospital.
Chopra's success has led to the inevitable backlash. A report in
the conservative political magazine, The Weekly Standard in 1996
alleged that there was "strong evidence that the guru to the stars has
hired a prostitute." Chopra filed a $35 million libel suit against
the magazine and reporter Matt Labash, which resulted in a retraction
a year later and a settlement for an undisclosed amount. Chopra,
in an unusual move, made a written appeal asking for public forgiveness
for President Clinton, while the latter was embroiled in the controversy
involving Monica Lewinsky. The letter entitled "Let him be: Clinton, sex
and the courage of mercy" was distributed by the Los Angeles Times Syndicate.
Interestingly, Clinton, at a state dinner during his recent visit to India,
said: "My country has been enriched by the contributions of more than
a million Indian Americans, which includes Dr Deepak Chopra, the
pioneer of alternative medicine." Talk of reciprocity!
Chopra, during his visit to India, also went to Mumbai, where he
addressed a select gathering at a dinner hosted by the electronics giant,
BPL, and gave an interview for the company's website. He had a private
session with Indian filmstar Amitabh Bachchan, who's beset with problems
on the business and career fronts. Shekhar Malhotra, Full Circle, says:
"We are publishing a book of poems, Once When I Was a Child, the
first by Chopra. He says he composed the poems in an unprecedented
phase of inspiration. We're also releasing audiotapes of The Seven
Spiritual Laws of Success and Sacred Verses, Chopra's
commentary on the Bhagavad Gita."
Poonam Malhotra of Full Circle says: "Chopra's success can be attributed
to his single-minded focus on spreading ancient Vedantic wisdom in a contemporary
idiom and style. He draws from a variety of sources. People like you and
me cannot read the original scriptures; he conveys their content to us.
He appeals to the modern, logical mind; his path is of gyan yoga." She
adds: "He is a warm and humble individual, without false airs. One senses
a quietness within him. What he says, he practises."
What is the great mystery of time? The universe, says Chopra, is
cyclical. For instance, the earth spins on its axis and revolves around
the sun: everything is inherently rhythmic. We create the experience of
linear time because we cannot see the whole. It's like standing on a circle,
looking at distant places on the circle and thinking, "It's a straight
line." So the flow of linear time is actually a psychological event. For
example, if you are in a hurry, you have deadlines to meet, you say, "I'm
running out of time." And that makes your biological clock speed up--faster
heart rate, high levels of adrenalin and stress hormones. And such a person,
whose internal dialogue is constantly saying, "I'm running out of time,"
one day he'll suddenly drop dead of a premature heart attack, he'll have
run out of time.
On the other hand, if your internal dialogue says,
"I have all the time in the world," your biological clock will mirror that. Sometime
we've all had the experience, when we were children and were playing, or perhaps
we were in love, or listening to some great music, or in the stillness of samadhiwe
slipped out of time altogether. When someone says: "The beauty of the mountain
was breathtaking. Time stood still," that experience, where there is no time is,
according to the great wisdom tradition of India, the experience of unity consciousness.
That's when the observer and the observed, you and the mountain have
become one. Stephen Hawking in A Brief History Of Time says: "We live in
a universe that has no beginning in time. We live in a universe that has no ending
in time. We live in a universe that has no edges in space." Try to visualise that.
Your mind will reel in bewilderment. How do you imagine something that never began?
And the moment you try and compromise, and say, "Perhaps there was a beginning,"
your immediate dilemma is, if there was a beginning, what was there before the
beginning? If there is an ending, what is there after the ending?
If
there are edges in space, what is there after the outermost edge? Our new physics
is not only stranger than we think it is, it's stranger than we can think. Yet
all this was outlined subjectively in the Vedantic tradition. Lord Krishna, when
he speaks to Arjuna about the essential nature of reality, says: "It has no beginning
in time, it has no ending in time. Water cannot wet it, wind cannot dry it, fire
cannot burn it, and weapons cannot shatter it. Unborn, it cannot die." He is talking
a few thousand years before Stephen Hawking and Einstein. And he's not only saying
this is the essential nature of reality, he's saying this is your essential nature.
"There are five reasons why human beings suffer, according to Vedanta.
These are the five kleshas on which Buddhism drew for the Four Noble Truths,"
Chopra explains. First, they do not know who they are. Second,
they grasp, hold on, cling to that which is impermanent, transient, intangible,
ephemeral, dreamlike, which has no real existence. Third, they are afraid
of, run from that which is transient, intangible, insubstantial, dreamlike,
ephemeral, which has no real existence. Fourth, they identify with the
false self, a moment-by-moment fabrication, which is a figment of the
imagination, they sacrifice their souls, their spirits for a false identity.
Fifth, they are afraid of death, of the unknown. And then Vedanta says,
all those five reasons are contained in the first. So find out who you
are, and the other four dissipate, disappear as if it was a dream. So
find out who you are, and the truth will set you free: Satyamev Jayate.
Vedanta says, beyond the secret passages, beyond the dark alleys of the
mind, there's a domain of awareness, atman, and that atman is one with
Brahman. Today, science calls it (Brahman) the virtual domain, from where
the quantum and the physical arise. This virtual domain is immortal and
eternal, is a field of infinite correlations, has infinite organising
power, infinite dynamism, and is the source of energy, space, time, matter
and information. It is simultaneously infinity-time. It is here that we
will find the meaning of choice, freedom, insight, intention, imagination,
intuition, creativity, knowingness, understanding, and spirit.
Our tradition
has already provided the solution to the problem. It's time to become navigators
of the inner dimension, and to recognise that the outer dimension is actually
a projection of that inner dimension. That no matter what we're experiencing,
its roots lie in the inner world. And that inner world is essentially one with
the outer world. It actually manifests as the outer world. In the Bhagavad Gita,
Lord Krishna says: 'Curving back within myself, I create again and again and again.'
Not a metaphor of poetry, a fact of physics, of science.
10
WAYS TO REVERSE THE AGEING PROCESS
After
his Seven Spiritual Laws of Success, people expect Deepak
Chopra to dole out lists and ways and tips. He had one ready
at the Delhi talk.
1.
Change your perception of your physical body. Your body is a field of information
and energy. This field is constantly influenced by breathing, eating, digestion,
metabolism, elimination, and how we experience the world through our five senses.
Also, how we metabolise that through our inner world of thought, feeling, emotion
and desire. 2. Change your perception of time. If you can do that, you can
accomplish much morebecause you are creative, not stressed. You can do a
lot more if you can sit back, become non-reactive, and see the world as if for
the first time. Lord Shiva, the first yogi, said: "If you want to create a new
body, step out of the river of memory and conditioning, and see the world as if
for the first time." He said: "I use memory, but I do not allow memory to use
me." Now change your perception of time, you have all the time in the world. Time
is the movement of consciousnessput your attention on that, it's timeless.
And what is timeless? Not the human body, not the human mind, but the soul.
3. Change your perception of ageing itself. To grow old is to be wiser. To grow
old is to have more responsibility. To grow old is to change your inner dialogue
from 'me, mine' to 'What can I do? How can I help?' And as you change your perception
of ageing, your biology will change. Those are the three most important things.
4. Keep active, exercise. 5. Improve mind-body coordination through
yoga, breathing techniques, martial arts. 6. Get rid of the toxicity in your
lifetoxic emotions, relationships, habits. 7. Pay attention to literatureon
nutritional supplements, ayurveda and all these great rasayanas, which are some
of the great anti-oxidants known that directly affect the ageing process.
8. Learn to be flexible. Vedanta says: "Infinite flexibility is the secret of
immortality." Studies show that the primary thing that distinguishes healthy older
people from those less healthy, is the ability to be flexible. 9. Make love
the most important thing in life. To understand our 'inter-beingness in the inter-isness',
to understand love not as a mere emotion or sentiment, but as the ultimate truth
at the heart of creation. 10. Be aware of your mortality, because in the
awareness of mortality is the glimpse of immortality. Be aware that death is stalking
you in every moment of your existence. And once one becomes aware of that, one's
life becomes magical. Because now one's priorities are not the same.