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| Photo by Doogan82 |
This
parable from the Chinese philosopher, Chuang Tzu, aptly captures the common
reality of our lives. So many of our experiences, particularly during the
impressionable years of childhood, are based on negative feedback on who we are
– supposedly incompetent at many things and incapable of brilliance on numerous
occasions and so on.
It’s not
difficult to imagine then why we grow up feeling incomplete and constantly
strive to become perfect – when we can finally convince ourselves, and others,
of how good and wonderful we are. This insecurity and sense of incompleteness
drives us to chase bigger goals. However, because of the lack of deeper
fulfillment, each summit we climb appears only like the bottom of the next
peak.
Further,
since the reference for determining our greatness is always others, the reality
that there’s always someone who’s stronger, richer, more beautiful or more
knowledgeable than us is hard to swallow – “we are disturbed by the sight of
our own shadow and weaknesses.” What do we do then, we try even harder – “but the
shadow, the footsteps and our sense of lack won’t go away.”
Till we
make the paradigm shift. Not by overcoming our weaknesses or negative emotions
of self-doubt; or by escaping or ignoring them; but by realizing our true
nature. It’s by developing a deeper understanding of who we are and how whole,
complete and perfect we are – even if our conditioned mind would have us
believe otherwise.
Once we
make that transition, we begin to distance ourselves from our mind and slowly
become a witness to the games our mind plays. The mind is a great servant but a
terrible master. Gaining greater self-awareness and becoming an observer of our
thoughts and feelings, we begin to see how all our negative emotions and the
sense of lack is nothing but the perceptions created by our mind.
This shift
is transformational. It allows us to leap frog from the world of duality (being
judgmental, seeing everything as good or bad, favorable or otherwise) to one
that is absolute; a realization of the only reality there is – that we are all
made of the same universal life energy and are part of same perfect whole. We
become open to the idea of peaceful coexistence of ‘good’ and ‘bad’ in such a
well-balanced whole.
This equips
us to become aware of any negative thoughts that arise in our mind, acknowledge
them and put them aside without delving on them or letting them grow. The
acceptance of these thoughts and the accompanying stillness allows us to
experience greater peace, and that in turn, empowers our true positives to get
strengthened – “if he merely stepped into the shade, his shadow would
vanish, and if he sat down and stayed still, there would be no more footsteps.”
(I had recently written this article for The Speaking Tree column of The Times of India)
(I had recently written this article for The Speaking Tree column of The Times of India)

3 comments:
Mind blowing. Amazing. No words to say how true, what you wrote is.....
Profound article, Rajiv. In this world, where accomplishment is being judged by possessions, this is an apt commentary on what is going on.
Thanks Harish...
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