Seeking
Permanence in an Impermanent World
by Marshall Govindan
The horrific destruction of the World Trade
Center and the Pentagon on September 11, 2001 has created a
dramatic world-wide crisis. Surveys have indicated that even
weeks after the event more than 50 percent of Americans are
very depressed or disturbed. Most feel insecure, fearing that
terrorists within America may unleash a wave of attacks which
involve biological agents, public transportation or recreational
or work related facilities. People are asking: where can I
be safe? People continue to see the destruction of the WTC
over and over again in daily replays on the televsion. The
newspapers have fanned the flames of fear with headlines which
speculate about where the next attack will occur, and photographs
of crowds of Muslims burning American flags. The President
of the USA has declared war on terrorism, but cannot identify
targets, and the American military appears unsuited to deal
with a nearly invisible enemy, who may be lurking anywhere.
So, most have cancelled their travel plans and have become
obsessed with watching CNN for the next report which will either
stimulate or appease our fears of terrorism.
So it is not business, or even life as usual.
Our most basic assumptions, involving our security and maintenance
of a materialistic culture are greatly in doubt. Our technological
civilization can no longer be relied upon to support us. We
have in short, become fearful.
But what is fear? It is essentially imagination
of suffering, without evaluating the probability of its occurrence.
Our ability to evaluate the probability of another terrorist
attack makes it all that more difficult to control such feelings.
So that leaves us with having to deal with the control of our
imagination. As students of Yoga we have, more than most, an
appreciation of our power to create our world. We must now
use that power, not only for ourselves but for the millions
of persons around us who fear the worst. We must not only detach
from the fears which invade us from the minds of our neighbors,
but, we must create positive thought forms which will calm
and reassure them. Our words and actions must also follow reflection,
and not be reactions to old habits. It is a time for us to
bring our Yoga into all those situations of daily life where
we find ourselves and others getting "edgy." It is
time for us to cultivate inner and outer Peace and to radiate
it. It is time for us to call down a great power of light,
consciousness, stillness and love into this troubled world.
It is time for us to reach out to others, to share our love,
and not a time to hide away.
We would also be wise to remember the words
of Patanjali, who tells us in Sutra II.3 that "Ignorance,
egoism, attachment, aversion and clinging to life are the five
afflictions" which cause us to suffer. He goes on to tell
us in II.4 that "Ignorance is the field from which the
other afflictions arise," in Sutras II.5 that "Ignorance
is seeing the impermanent as permanent, the painful as pleasurable
and the non-Self as the Self." This ignorance is the root
cause of the fear and suffering which now plagues so many in
the wake of the event of September 11, 2001. As long as we
continue believe that all of the objects which make up our
world are somehow going to last, and ignore the existence of
That, the essential being which we all are, we are bound to
suffer. The recent events are a wake-up call for everyone,
to realize this. To the extent that we can get beyond the drama
of change or destruction, and see the ONE SHINING ABSOLUTE
REALITY, the LIGHT OF CONSCIOUSNESS, ETERNALLY PRESENT, such
events will have served us well. Patanjali has reassured us
that "the Seen exists only for the sake of the Self" in
verse II.21. The Seen includes everything which can be experienced
by us. It is Nature, both actual and potential. The Self, or
the Seer is consciousness, the Witness. Nature (which includes
human nature, our bodies, mind and emotions) provides us with
experiences and ultimately liberates our consciousness from
its bondage of false identification: the confusion that we
are the Seen, not the Seer. Until then, the Seen gives experience
and by such experience we gradually wake up from the dream
that we are the Seen. Eventually, we feel we have had enough
suffering in the hands of Nature and seek a way out of egoistic
confusion ("I am the body-mind," etc). With detachment
and discernment we learn to go beyond it.
So, if you find yourself turning on CNN or
reaching for the newspaper, do discern what is permanent, the
eternal Witness of your own Self-consciousness, and do not
allow the drama of Nature to absorb your consciousness in ephemeral
fear and fantasy. Change the channel, and tune into that Divine
Broadcasting Station, "Kriya Babaji Nagaraj." Do
own your Divinity, and help create a new world, where fear
and want will no longer exist.
Copyright 2001 by M.Govindan. All
rights reserved.
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