Whatever you do, do it with total
immersion. Enjoy the process of doing what you are doing. That’s called
mindfulness. And that’s the key to inner peace.
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Doing the dishes, to me, is a meditative practice |
Yesterday my daughter, a psychology graduate,
caught me dusting a thin layer of dust on top of a cupboard in our kitchen. She
quipped, “Dad, cleaning around the house makes you happy, doesn’t it?” I smiled
at her. And confessed that indeed it does make me happy. In fact, to me,
house-keeping, is a meditative practice. It is not a chore. Yes, it does become
a challenge when you have to juggle with your other schedules and have to try
and fit in quality time for house-keeping. But I have realized that I am very
mindful when I am cleaning up around the house. I go about it calmly,
methodically and, however physically strenuous it may get at times, I enjoy the
process. I love doing the dishes or cleaning surfaces, I invest time to get the
toilets to be squeaky clean and generally love the idea of having a dust-free
home environment – something that’s so difficult in Indian conditions and so
requires being at it continuously, consistently!
I have discovered that when you are mindful of
whatever it is that you are doing there’s great inner peace and joy. And no
work or task is menial or burdensome as long as you don’t treat it as a chore.
In fact, immersion really means being completely involved in, engaged in, and
mindful of whatever it is that you are doing. Of course, it is possible that
you may not always like to do some things. But when you don’t have a choice –
and you have to also do what you dislike doing – if you choose to be mindful,
you will get through that task or activity even more efficiently than when you
are resisting it.
The Vietnamese Buddhist monk, Thich Nhat Hahn, a.k.a Thay, says it so beautifully: “In mindfulness one is not only restful and happy, but alert and
awake. Meditation is not evasion; it is a serene encounter with reality.” The
essence of what he has to say is contained in the last phrase – ‘it is a serene
encounter with reality’. Most of the time, almost all of us, resist
our reality. We don’t like what we are going through. Or we dislike what we
have to do. Or we are so engrossed in dealing with our ‘extended’ realities
that we miss the magic and beauty of everyday living. Thay recommends that we
must awaken to the reality in each moment. And not just to be stuck with our ‘extended’
reality. For instance, if you keep worrying about your fourth stage cancer and
the fact that you will soon die, how will you enjoy a sunrise? So, in this
context, your cancer is your ‘extended’ reality. But the more immediate one is
the sunrise. Enjoy it, says Thay, because soon it – the moment bearing the
sunrise – will be gone. Meditation is really what the art of living is all
about – the ability to value each moment, cherish it, be joyful in it and move
on to the next moment with undiluted enthusiasm. How can you enjoy a moment
when it is painful, you may wonder? What if someone is dead? What if someone’s
betrayed you? How will you cope with a moment when you are wishing it away? That’s
why Thay prescribes a ‘serene encounter with reality’ – he says, don’t
resist, don’t fight, instead accept, what is. Accepting what is, is the best
way to gain inner peace. When you accept your reality, you begin to experience joy
in the moment.
The
human mind is like the human body. It can be trained. I have trained my mind by
practicing both silence periods (mouna)
and mindfulness – immersing myself in what I do. Over time, I have learnt to
banish worry (despite the daunting circumstances my family and I are faced with
owing to our grave financial state) and just be in the moment. Often time,
cleaning around my house gives me that sense of equanimity. Through my own experience I know that if you immerse yourself
in whatever you do, enjoying the process of doing it, being always mindful, you
too can be happy, despite the circumstances!
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