Saturday, November 22, 2008

I wander if human being was individual….

Yesterday Narain has commented “I wander if human being was individual?….” on my post "Double Edged Sword"

Deliberating on it Mind wanders…

Can a grain of Salt mixed with Sugar acquire the quality of sugar? Or vice a verse?

Is it possible to achieve the purity of the end result with a mixture of both? Can it be absolutely salty or sweet?

To achieve purity, the pollutant has to be removed….

Can an individual be called human without acquiring the quality of a human being ?

Can such mixture achieve the final goal of being a human or of the humanity? May it be Liberation, Nirvana or whatever one may call it.

To be a part of something one has to acquire the quality and characteristics of it. For which transformation is a pre-requisite?

And does not any transformation requires a discipline and process with patient and impartial observation?

To be human, it is essential that an individual transforms himself to be part of the Humanity.

Mind recalls H P Blavatsky….
“Thou shalt not separate thy being from BEING, and the rest, but merge the Ocean in the drop, the drop within the Ocean.”

Friday, November 21, 2008

Double-edged Sword:

Early days of my spiritual journey, in my 20s, I walked in to United Lodge of Theosophy in Bombay on one Wednesday evening session. The session was a Q&A session of the theosophical studies conducted by Late Madam Sophia Wadia, (wife of a well known theosophist Late Mr. B P Wadia). The lady had a remarkable glow on her face, which I have seen in very few great people like J Krishnamurti and others. The serenity on her face was equally impressive. Her punctuality and the manner of conducting her sessions by precise language was striking, not a word extra nor an incomplete explanation of a concept.

Students asked various questions and she answered them with strikingly effective words backed by her experience and subject knowledge. One of the answers to the question I have never forgotten. I am grateful to her for this answer and will remain always for making me understand the law of Karma and to look at things from various angles.

Someone asked her, “If I see a beggar on the road in a miserable condition, do I let go myself thinking that he is paying for his Karma?” Her answer was “Yes, he is paying for his Karma but what Karma you are generating at that moment?”

My theoretical spiritual journey continued for several year after that until I came in contact with Goenka and started practicing Vipassana meditation. Concepts turned in to experience and experience brought Wisdom.

Mind wonders… if concepts are not understood, do they stop there? Or are they necessarily misunderstood?

Responsive action to the beggar’s karma, makes me a better human being or a bigger beggar?

I remember Goenka saying “Dhamma (Law of Nature) is a double edged sword it will cut either way” ….