Spirituality is not religion. In spirituality there is no
God.
Spirituality
is about ‘knowing’ what’s going on and accepting it, without resistance. There
is only an awakening that results in a sustained awareness. There is no blame
possible in spirituality__neither on oneself nor on another. In fact, there's
none to take the blame. Spirituality is like a mirror: you look into it, you
find yourself. Spirituality is about oneness. The oneness that is visible all
around us, of which we are a part. If we care to L.I.S.T.E.N. Interestingly, for
that we need to be S.I.L.E.N.T. Both words are made up of the same alphabets.
When we listen to creation, while being silent, practicing mouna, we will see, feel and experience the oneness. In that
experience, you become awake and aware.
Legend
has it that Adi Shankara, the revered Indian Saint, on his way to the Kasi
Viswanath temple in Benares, came upon an 'untouchable' (given that Shankara
was born in a Namboodiri Brahmin family, he was deemed higher in the social
echelon) hunter accompanied by four dogs on the banks of the Ganges.
Overzealous disciples of Shankara tried to influence the hunter to make way for
the ‘superior’ Saint. The hunter responded with a query that ‘awakened’
Shankara to the truth of our (human) existence: “Do you wish that I move my
everlasting ‘atman’ (the Self, the Soul) or this body made of flesh?” While the
legend further talks of an ancillary outcome of Shankara composing five of his famous shlokas known as ‘Manisha Panchakam’ based on this experience with the hunter, the
bigger take-away for Shankara must have been__or to any of us reading this
story__that all Life is equal.
Spirituality is simply the flowering of this awareness from within.
Spirituality is at end of the finish line of the seeking race. When you reach
that line, you begin a new journey, of living. Up until
that moment, you were just there. Now, you are alive, awake and aware.
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