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THE MYSTERY OF
THE SPIRITUAL PATH |
Question:
Serge, please tell me what most turns you on about being on a
spiritual path?
What a question. What turns me on? Well, being on a spiritual path
is about the process of trying to turn on our humanity, isn’t it -
trying to ignite the spiritual light or the divine spark inside us
so we can become more fully human. This whole process excites me.
But I think what
especially touches me at this moment – probably because I have just
taught a retreat on this topic – is the idea of engaging with life
as a mystery, that is, trying to be open to the core ‘is-ness’
lying at the heart of all things or coming to sense the many deeper
meanings that lie hidden inside what is simple and ordinary. If we
can reach into the heart of life or be a space to enable life’s
heart to reach deeply into us, there is so much richness to be
gleaned from every moment. And if we allow this richness to enter
us, we will feel fulfilled and it may be that we will feel less
motivated to engage in many of the activities that we used to do in
the past to try and fill us. From this place, it becomes easier to
live in a simpler and less complicated way.
For life is a
huge mystery. We must accept that we know very little about it,
and perhaps we need to think what it might also mean to live more
out of a space of asking deeper questions, such as: who are we
really, and what is our purpose for being here? Have we had other
lives? How are we to best live this life? Who or what is God and
what is our relationship to God? What happens before we are born
and after we die?
If we can engage
with these mysteries, not so much with our intellects (as the great
questions of life can never be understood rationally), but more with
our hearts and souls, this will gradually allow little intimations
of the truth to trickle through to us.
I recognise,
however, that doing this can be difficult. Many of us are scared of
what we don’t know. We want certainty and don’t like to be in the
dark about things. So instead of engaging with the depths of life,
we can tend to turn away from it by trying to reduce it to
superficialities, endeavouring to fit our experiences into neat
little boxes and compartments in the illusion that it will make us
feel safe. Actually, it doesn’t. It just reduces us as well!
This
inclination can also prevail in our spiritual lives. Some of us
don’t want to inquire. We want to have it all set in stone; we want
to have man and God all tied up in a neat, safe package. And so we
become a Fundamentalist where we are not required to use our
imagination or question anything - only obey. If Jesus or Mohammed
or any other ‘great Master’ was supposed (we can never prove it, of
course) to have made certain pronouncements as to how we should live
and be, then that must be it! No questions asked. Anyone who
disagrees with us must be wrong!
This for me is
also a limited way to live, for it means we are closed off to
anything and everything that doesn’t concur with ‘ the truth as we
believe it to be.’ I think once we stop asking questions, and
succumb to the illusion that ‘we know’, that we stop evolving. We
become the proverbial ‘grown-up’: the person who has stopped
growing!
In actuality, we
are rather like icebergs. Tiny little pieces of us bob visibly on
the surface – this being the part of ourselves we are conscious of
- while the vaster part of us, the part we don’t know or the mystery
part – lies hidden and submerged. And for me the fun is getting to
know more of this submerged us, discovering how to bring more of
what is unconscious in us up into the light of day. For Joseph
Campbell, the great Mythologist, this constituted the core of the
‘Hero’s Journey’. And what is hidden, we remind ourselves, is not
only what I’ll call our ‘dark shadow’ – comprising the parts of
ourselves we don’t want to know that we possess, that is, the
unacceptable parts (which we often like to project onto others and
scapegoat them for possessing), but also our ‘light shadow’,
our wonderful, loving, fantastic spiritual sides that have also not
yet emerged into consciousness. |
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One of the
reasons, then, why life may not have enough meaning for some of us,
is because we turn away from the mystery of our dark side. Like
Nazruddin, the Sufi trickster, searching on his hands and knees for
his lost front-door key under the street-lamp just because there
happened to be light there (although it was a mile away from his
home that had no lamp outside it), we omit to look in the place
where the real keys to the mystery of our lives are to be found,
namely, in the parts of our psyche that are, as yet, unlit! Put
another way, we only deem it necessary to earn our outer living and
so we neglect our inner life and close off to it, preferring to
identify with certain external, visible images of who we believe we
are: husband, wife, mother, brother, computer programmer, member of
a particular race or class, right or left wing, supporter of
Manchester United, etc. We live through concepts, not
symbolically. We are under the illusion that our ideas about who we
are are who we really are. In actuality, they are what cover over
the real mystery of who we are.
If, however, we
choose to live out of a space of greater awareness, we become much
more open to life as it essentially is. In becoming more conscious
of its deeper meaning, we are given new insights as to our true
nature. Indeed, the more we give ourselves space to explore our
inner worlds, the less we may need to travel the whole world in
order to know life, for we are becoming more able to recognise the
oneness of all things mirrored in every particular.
This expanded
space, however, can only open up in us if we desire it, if we work
at it, if we meditate regularly and commit to developing a quiet
mind and an open and loving heart. It is these factors that allow us
to reach more deeply into life and to begin unlocking its secrets.
I stress again:
the inquiry is never an intellectual process. It is always an issue
of allowing our own essence to communicate with life’s essence and
thus be receptive to the clues that life is always giving us. When I
did my Shamanic training, for example, I was taught to be silent and
to allow the cloud formations to speak to me and tell me about
myself. In my analytic training, I learned to listen with the
intelligence in my heart to the symbols in my dreams. Because over
the years I have tried to be open to the magic and mystery of life,
I no longer believe that things just happen randomly and without
meaning. So if something painful takes place – say we have some kind
of crisis - a serious illness, a financial loss, the death of
someone dear to us – it is important that we be receptive to what
life may be trying to say to us.
I try to bring
this approach into my private practice. Clients sometimes come to me
asking me to fix their marriage or fix their depression. I reply
that I am not in the fixing business. Instead of trying to get rid
of their unpleasant symptoms, I suggest that they try to engage with
them and find out what they may be trying to communicate. I remember
a very sensitive man once came to see me who had had continual back
pain for six years and very little energy. Nothing he did helped.
He was desperate. ’I used to be such an alive person’, he told me. I
asked him what his profession was. He said he was a stockbroker and
hated it. He had been an artist but then had met his wife to be.
’She wanted me to earn more money’, he told me, ‘So I gave up that
side of my life’.
‘Perhaps deep
down, your soul is very unhappy about that decision,’ I said, ‘and
may be trying to tell you something. Perhaps, it is very natural
that you are experiencing those symptoms because you are not
listening to the wisdom of your body!’ His eyes filled with tears.
‘Yes. Yes. I hate my life in the city. It’s not me’.
I didn’t see him
any more. A year later, he rang me and said ‘I’ve done it. I am
back to being an artist again. My wife is understanding and the
moment I made the decision, my back pain left me and I have all my
old energy back.’
Another client
came to see me who had recently become impotent. He was an
intelligent and not unspiritual man. I asked him to listen to what
his ‘softness’ was trying to tell him and not to pathologise it. In
desperation he did what I asked and at our next session, he came up
with this interesting explanation. ‘I see my life is totally out of
balance. Everything I do is hard. I am a hard-nosed business man. I
play tennis hard. I am hard on my family. Perhaps my impotence is
the voice of my repressed feminine side or of my soft side trying to
get through to me, in the only place that I will sit up and listen,
to tell me how much I am repressing it.’
‘Perhaps you are
right’ I said, ‘So what about if you gave more space for softness in
your life. Say, learn Tai Chi. Meditate. Be gentler with those you
love. Give yourself space to dream. Read poetry!’ He began to do
this and gradually his so-called affliction (which was really the
voice of his soul) left him.
If we make the
choice to live life more symbolically and less literally, it becomes
more possible to move beyond such concepts as success/failure or
right/wrong, that often lead to what is now termed ‘Status Anxiety’
and can be such a source of unhappiness. Let me give an example from
my own life. Some years ago, I went through a period when
everything began to go wrong for me at every level. My good luck
deserted me. Girl-friends left. My work shrank. Publishers declined
me. No one seemed to want me. Even more painful, I experienced a
loss of connection with my spirituality. (And this happened after
many years of being pretty successful.)
A lot of friends
said: ‘Serge. You must work on your prosperity again. This is bad
what is happening for you!’
I didn’t
actually think so. If we engage with life as a mystery, all these
categories become irrelevant. I realised something deeper must be
going on and I tried to engage in recognising what this might be.
And what I saw to my horror was that I had been riding high for a
long time and that my success had gone to my head and actually I was
not progressing internally. Not only was I not walking my talk but
in no way was I actually being that loving person I was suggesting
other people be! My ego inflation was very subtly taking me over.
And my life was simply reflecting this, the whole withdrawal of
support allowing me to see that this stage needed to come to an end
and that a radical shift was required on my part. I saw I needed to
‘die’ much more to my egoic nature. So from a deeper perspective, it
was ‘good’ – although of course, painful - that all this was
happening for me, for it allowed me to go that much deeper and thus
be able to make the required shift.
More recently, I
became engaged in the mystery of Betrayal. A very dear friend did
something to me which I felt was unforgivable and I felt huge
resentment towards him, until I realised that the gift he was
offering me was the possibility of again stretching myself into
whole new realms so that I might ‘get off’ my attachment to my
self-righteousness and learn what it really meant to forgive! Again,
it was difficult but eventually I managed it. Just! After that
experience, I came a little closer to understanding what
Mephistopheles meant when he told Dr Faustus that ‘I am for ever
evil who does forever good!’
As all these
stories show, the soul part of us or our deeper spirituality wants
to shake up our ego and play games with the ways they like to ‘plot’
our lives for us. Our souls could not really care one iota for our
comfort.
Embracing the
mystery of life also involves us opening to the mystery of beauty
and love and joy and exploring how we can be a space for all the
many wonderful, sacred qualities inside our hearts to germinate.
Again, if we can discover how to participate in this process more
consciously, we can live with much more love and joy and with far
less rigidity. For example, in the arena of intimate relationships,
if we can be more compassionately aware of the mystery of our
partner (as opposed to holding them in a fixed sense of who we
conceive them to be) we give them much more space to be who they
really are and thus gradually to unfurl their truth for us. This in
turn allows more fresh air to enter the relationship and hence it is
far less likely to go stale. (Many relationships fail precisely
because this does not happen!)
The more we
choose to live with loving awareness, the easier it becomes to
embrace life’s mystery and to realise that we are not mere
skin-bound ego entities, but beautiful and wise, multi-dimensional
beings. As the psychologist Jean Huston once said. ‘We are all
Stradivariuses raised to believe we are plastic fiddles’. One of our
great challenges is to allow ourselves to experience the truth of
her words. |