Knowing, accepting and celebrating the impermanence of everything
around us is a sure way to stay in a perpetual let-go!
Over
the last fortnight my phone crashed, our car suffered a break-down, and our TV
conked out. For various reasons all three cannot be either fixed or replaced immediately.
It was initially both disconcerting and frustrating to deal with this triple
disaster. These are things we depend on and, often, mindlessly, take for
granted. Their succumbing to wear and tear, which any piece of machinery is
prone to, was not, I realized, the cause for my frustration. My inability to
have them fixed immediately was.
That
is when I read this inspiring story about the 43-year-old California-based
beach artist, Andres Amador. Amador uses a rake to etch designs on to the beach
during low tides. This art form of beach exploration is called playa. Raking
exposes the wetter sand causing a color difference between the raked and the
unraked sand. Some of Amador’s designs are massive – 300 ft x 500 ft. What’s
remarkable – and amazing is – that while Amador pours his heart into each
design that he creates, he has no problem in watching the waves come back up,
when the tide returns, and wash away all his creations. He says, “For me it is
more about the process and less about the result. When it is finished, I let it
go. The only constant in this existence is impermanence. In the end our lives
are all about the experiences we have had. And not about the things we have
held on to.” Amador picks full moon nights to work on the beach, during low
tides, and he uses Google Earth to choose the beaches he wants to work at. Why
does he do what he does – knowing fully well that each of his creations will
not last for more than a couple of hours after he’s done? He says,
matter-of-factly: “It’s fun! I get to be at the beach!!”
I
found Amador’s attitude to his art and to Life very uplifting. I thought to
myself that here’s an artist, who “creates” works of beauty, of brilliance, (see
his pictures sampled here and on http://www.andresamadorarts.com/ ), only to
let them go. And here I was battling frustrations on things I have merely
gotten used to depending upon. It was a humbling learning, and awakening, that
helped me let go of those things I could not immediately fix or replace.
I
have often, through my experiences, realized that our frustrations come only
from our innate, subconscious desire, to be in control of everything. Technology
has only made us even more parasitic. There’s an insatiable need, each of us
experiences, for instant gratification. If something is broken, it needs a fix
immediately. If something is not working out, we agonize over getting it to
work. If we lose something, we grieve over that loss endlessly. All of these,
and more, contribute to our unhappiness. Happiness really is about getting rid
of – letting go – whatever we don’t have, isn’t there, can’t fix or have not
got. We are unhappy only as long as we cling on to something. This is as true
about our material assets as it is about relationships. When we get rid of the
thought, the expectation, that something, or someone for that matter, should always
be with us, we will be free. And happy.
Celebrating
impermanence is not all that complex. It’s downright simple. If you think about
everything – and everyone – in Life, including those people that you love
deeply, you will realize that sooner than later, the waves of time will wash
them all away. So, begin by stopping to think about anything that you have had
to let go or can’t retain. Life’s most well-kept
secret is this - as long as you are not clinging on to anything, even in your
thoughts, you will not suffer!
let go...
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