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>>
Positive thinking is
not a new concept, but in recent decades it has been increasingly gaining
currency among the global populace. There is almost a consensus on the
value of consciously cultivating positive thinking for individual health,
happiness and
success
A friend
is undergoing surgery as I write this, but she chose not to let any
of us know about it. When the news inadvertently reached a mutual friend
who called her to commiserate, she was not enthusiastic. She agreed
to disclose it only on the condition that we do not call her. She wanted
some peace and quiet, she said. This might seem an attempt to bury her
head in the sand. But I know my friend's quiet courage and self-awareness
too much to suspect this to be the motive. I figure that she wants to
spare herself the concern, anxiety and false bonhomie all of us are
bound to express. No matter how well meaning, such gestures are invariably
fuelled by fear and dread, emotions that she could well do without.
It made me
think of the negativity we load our lives with and how counter-productive
it is. Take the US-Taliban confrontation. Whether we feel anger at the
Americans or at Osama bin Laden, or sorrow at the meaningless deaths,
first of the Americans and now of the helpless Afghans, we flood the situation
with negativity. What is needed instead is a dispassionate acceptance
of the situation and a single-minded intention to resolve it. The single-mindedness
is the key. So one-pointed should our attention be that negativity simply
has no place in the scheme of things.
This state of positivity without an opposite is potent. Free of negating
doubts or fears, one's attention focuses unwaveringly on the subject of
our intention, knowing fully well that what we intend will happen. In
my friend's case, for instance, where I would once be consumed by fear
and call out to God in my helplessness, this state of positivity would
indicate a steadfast intention for her healing. It may be accompanied
by a prayer, but importantly, no longer in helplessness but with the calm
self-possession of love. God shifts into the role of a helper and beloved
friend rather than the omnipotent power He was earlier.
Surely this
is the ground of all creation? The Upanishads reiterate that the Realized
One can manifest anything he desires, simply by intending it. They also
assert that this power of instant manifestation can only arise in one
who has learnt to control his senses, overcome desire, fear and anger.
What is
it like, this state of positivity? What kind of life would we lead when
immersed in it? I think it is a state of concentrated energy, for we
will be freed of all the negative thoughts that steal away our energy
and dissipate our focus. It will be a quiet and still state of mind,
with no conflict, for the latter is the direct result of negative thoughts.
It would be a peaceful and happy state of mind, regardless of circumstances.
Most of all, it would be a highly effective state of the mind, for it
would zero in on what needs to be done and do it. It would also be a
tremendous force for good.
No matter
how hopeless or terrible the situation, the positive spirit will prevail,
seeing the opportunities inherent in the situation and providing a beacon
of hope for others around it. Serenely oblivious to the negative, it
does not occur to him/her to falter or doubt, forging ahead regardless,
confident in the ultimate good of things.
The corollary
is that the positive individual is also a black hole for the negativity
around him. In his presence, the negativity dissolves and dissipates,
never to appear again.
How is
it that negativity simply cannot touch such an individual? One could
say that his energy is at a higher frequency than that of negativity,
thereby shielding him from its influence. At the level of deconditioning,
s/he would have bored through all that came between him and his blissful
inner core. In other words, she would have transcended desire and freed
herself of fear and anger.
What is the
relationship such an individual has between her intention and surrender
to God's will? What if God does not want the peaceful resolution of the
Afghan situation? I can only hazard a guess. The positivist operates from
the stand that man proposes, God disposes. We never stop thinking positive,
but we leave the outcome strictly in the hand of God, retaining with ourselves
only the ability to see the positive in any outcome.