Treat
everything that’s happening in Life as not happening “to” you, but around you,
and you will always be at peace! This is the witness state – Buddhahood, if you
like. This way you will be in a perpetual state of equanimity within you,
despite whatever turmoil that is going on in your external world. Just like the
way it is at the eye of a storm. The storm is raging with all fury, all around,
but at its eye, in the center, there is no turmoil. Through your witness-state
you too can attain this level of inner peace.
Consider
this: someone insults you. And you get drawn into that drama. This leads to an
ego-play. He says something. You retaliate. He hits back. And you attack again.
This goes on. And on. But what if you had let that insult pass? What if, like a
lotus flower, you had not let the water (the insult) stick to you? What if you
had continued to live in the muck (the dirty pond in which the lotus blooms,
metaphorically, the turmoil-ridden world) but chosen to rise above it,
untouched, unblemished?
This is
true of, and possible, in every situation. Be it a conflict or a temptation or
just a Life event__like a lay-off or a death or a break-up__happening to you! This
does not mean that Life is to be resisted. But means, in fact, that it has to be experienced
dispassionately. Without getting embroiled or entangled in it.
Here’s a
story from Buddhism. A bunch of drunk people picked up a prostitute and
stripped her naked. They wanted to rape her. But they were so drunk they fell
asleep – tired and exhausted by the high alcohol content in their blood. The
woman escaped from their clutches by the time they woke up. Shocked at their
loss, the men began to search for her. There was only one way out of the place
they were in and on that way they found the venerable Buddha meditating. They
did not know who this man was, but decided to ask him about the naked woman
because from where the Buddha was sitting, there’s no way anyone could have
gone past without him seeing her.
“Did you
see a naked woman pass by sometime ago,” asked one of the men roughly.
“You are
late. You should have come 10 years ago,” replied the Buddha, smiling, calmly.
The men
looked at each other. Totally shocked. Is this man mad, they wondered? One of
them even asked the Buddha to explain his “weird” reply.
The Buddha
explained patiently: “Well, 10 years ago, I would have been distracted by
someone walking in front of me. But now I have learned not to get involved. I
surely saw someone go past here. But whether it was a man or a woman, whether
naked or clothed, I did not notice, because I was looking for nothing.”
Buddhahood
is not something sacred or the exclusive prevail of those who get to sit under
a Bodhi tree. Buddhahood awaits you and me too. If only we can learn, through
continuous practice, the art of choosing to simply witness Life, without
getting embroiled in it, of learning to distinguish that events happen “around”
us and not “to” us!
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