Commitment to the truth isn't always easy, but
with practice, it's a great deal less complicated and ultimately less painful
than avoidance and self-deception.
Proper communication allows us to deal with
immediate concerns taking care of little matters before they become big
ones.
Probably the hardest form of this practice is
being true to our own heart and inner destiny. Confusion and mistrust of our
inner values can make it difficult to know the nature of our heart's desire, but
even when we become clear enough to recognize
what truth means for us, we may lack the courage and conviction to live our
truth. Following what we know to be essential for our growth may mean leaving
unhealthy relationships or jobs and taking risks that jeopardize our own
comfortable position. It may mean making choices that are not supported
by consensual reality or ratified by the outer
culture. The truth is rarely convenient. One way we can know we are living the
truth is that while our choices may not be easy, at the end of the day we feel
at peace with ourselves.
Asteya--Not Stealing
Asteya arises out of the understanding that all
misappropriation is an expression of a feeling of lack. And this feeling of lack
usually comes from a belief that our happiness is contingent on external
circumstances and material possessions. Within Western industrialized countries satisfaction can be
contingent upon so many improbable conditions and terms that it is not uncommon
to spend all of one's time hoping for some better life, and imagining that
others (who possess what we do not) have that better life. In constantly looking
outside of ourselves for satisfaction, we are less able to appreciate the
abundance that already exists. That is what really matters--our health and the riches of our inner life
and the joy and love we are able to give and receive from others. It becomes
difficult to appreciate that we have hot running water when all we can think
about is whether our towels are color-coordinated. How can we appreciate our
good fortune in having enough food to eat when we wish we could afford to eat
out more often?
The practice of asteya asks us to be
careful not to take anything that has not been freely given. This can be as
subtle as inquiring whether someone is free to speak with us on the phone before
we launch into a tirade about our problems. Or reserving our questions after a
class for another time, rather than hoarding a teacher's attention long after
the official class time has ended. In taking someone's time that may not have
been freely given, we are, in effect, stealing. The paradox of practicing
asteya is that when we relate to others from the vantage
point of abundance rather than neediness, we find that others are more generous
with us and that life's real treasures begin to flow our way.
This may seem unlikely, so let me share an
example. Paul was a medical student and past acquaintance who seemed always to
be helping others and sharing his seemingly limited resources. One evening when
it became too late for a commute home, I offered Paul my guest room for the
night. On awakening in the morning I discovered he had cleaned my refrigerator
("It looked like you'd been busy"). Paul had few financial resources but always
seemed to be having wonderful dinner feasts to share with his friends. Later, I
found out that he worked late at a local health-food restaurant, and, thankful
for the extra hours Paul spent helping out, the owner gave him many of the
leftover vegetables, breads, and prepared dishes to take home. When a number of
friends joined Paul at a holiday home for a week, Paul initiated a special
"clean-up and dust" party that lasted all day ("Just think how great it will be
for the owner when he comes back after his trip overseas . . !"). Paul rarely
asked for anything but was always surprising his friends with his new
acquisitions. People gave things to Paul all
the time--even large items like cars and washing machines--not because they felt
sorry for him but because his own sense of intrinsic abundance and his own
generosity tended to make you feel that, like him, you had a lot to give.
Not stealing demands that we cultivate a certain
level of self-sufficiency so that we do not
demand more of others, our family, or our community than we need. It means that
we don�t take any more than we need, because that would be taking from others. A
helpful way of practicing asteya when you find yourself dwelling on the
"not enoughs" of your life is to ask: "How is this attitude preventing me from
enjoying the things I already have?" Another way of fostering this sense of
abundance is to take a moment before going to sleep to dwell on at least one
gift in your life. This can be as simple as the gift of having a loving partner
or loyal pet, the grace of having good health, or the pleasure of having a
garden.
Brahmacharya--Merging with the
One
Of all the precepts, the call
to brahmacharya is the least understood and the most feared by Westerners. Commonly translated as celibacy, this
precept wreaks havoc in the minds and lives of
those who interpret brahmacharya as a necessary act of sexual suppression
or sublimation. All spiritual traditions and religions have wrestled with the
dilemma of how to use sexual energy wisely. Practicing brahmacharya means
that we use our sexual energy to regenerate our connection to our spiritual
self. It also means that we don't use this energy in any way that might harm
another. It doesn't take a genius to recognize that manipulating and using
others sexually creates a host of bad feelings, with the top contenders being
pain, jealousy, attachment, resentment, and blinding hatred. This is one realm
of human experience that is guaranteed to bring out the best and worst in
people, so the ancient Yogis went to great lengths to observe and experiment
with this particular form of energy. It may be easier to understand
brahmacharya if we remove the sexual designation and look at it purely as
energy. Brahmacharya means merging one's energy with God. While the
communion we may experience through making love with another gives us one of the clearest experiences of this
meshing of energies, this experience is meant to be extended beyond discrete
events into a way of life--a kind of omnidimensional celebration of Eros in all
its forms. Whether we achieve this through feeling our breath as it caresses our
lungs, through orgasm, or through celibacy is
not important.
Given the pragmatism of the ancient yogis, it is
hard to believe that Patanjali would have put forth a precept that would be so
undeniably unsuccessful as selfwined denial. The fall from grace of countless
gurus who, while admonishing their devotees to practice celibacy, have wantonly
misused their own sexual power gives cause to consider more deeply the
appropriateness of such an interpretation. When any energy is sublimated or
suppressed, it has the tendency to backfire, expressing itself in life-negating
ways. This is not to say that celibacy in and of itself is an unsound practice.
When embraced joyfully the containment of sexual energy can be enormously
self-nourishing and vitalizing and, at the very least, can provide an
opportunity to learn how to use this energy wisely. When celibacy is practiced
in this way, there is no sense of stopping
oneself from doing or having what one really wants. Ultimately it is not a
matter of whether we use our sexual energy but how we use
it.
In looking at your own relationship to sexual
energy, consider whether the ways you express that energy bring you closer to or
farther away from your spiritual self.
Aparigraha--Not
Grasping
Holding on to things and
being free are two mutually exclusive states. The ordinary mind is constantly
manipulating reality to get ground underneath it, building more and more
concretized images of how things are and how others are, as a way of generating
confidence and security. We build self-images and construct concepts and
paradigms that feed our sense of certainty, and we then defend this edifice by
bending every situation to reinforce our certainty. This would be fine if life
were indeed a homogeneous event in which nothing ever changed; but life does
change, and it demands that we adapt and change with it. The resistance to
change, and tenaciously holding on to things, causes great suffering and
prevents us from growing and living life in a more vital and pleasurable way.
What yoga philosophy and all the great
Buddhist teachings tells us is that solidity is a creation of the ordinary mind
and that there never was anything permanent to begin with that we could hold on
to. Life would be much easier and substantially less painful if we lived with
the knowledge of impermanence as the only constant. As we all have discovered at
some time in our lives, whenever we have tried to hold on too tightly to
anything, whether it be possessiveness of our partner or our youthful identity,
this has only led to the destruction of those very things we most value. Our
best security lies in taking down our fences and barricades and allowing
ourselves to grow, and through that growth
becoming stronger and yet more resilient.
The practice of aparigraha also requires
that we look at the way we use things to reinforce our sense of identity. The
executive ego loves to believe in its own power but unfortunately requires a
retinue of foot soldiers in the way of external objects such as the right
clothes, car, house, job, or image to maintain this illusion. Because this
executive ego is but an illusion created by our sense of separateness, it
requires ever greater and more elaborate strategies to keep it clothed. Although
the practice of not grasping may first begin as consciously withdrawing our hand
from reaching for external things, eventually the need to reach outward at all
diminishes until there is a recognition that
that which is essential to us is already at hand.
Niyamas-Codes for Living Soulfully
Shaucha--Purity
Shaucha, or
living purely, involves maintaining a cleanliness in body, mind, and
environment so that we can experience ourselves at a higher resolution. The word
pure comes from the Latin purus, which means clean and unadulterated.
When we take in healthy food, untainted by pesticides and unnatural additives,
the body starts to function more smoothly. When we read books that elevate our
consciousness, see movies that inspire, and
associate with gentle people, we are feeding the mind in a way that nourishes
our own peacefulness. Creating a home environment that is elegant, simple, and
uncluttered generates an atmosphere where we are not constantly distracted by
the paraphernalia of yesterday's projects and last year's knickknacks.
Shaucha is a testament to the positive power of association.