Understanding the
Spiritual Unity in Creation
*Saumitra
Mohan
The
duality and dichotomy that we habitually see in every aspect of the Creation
creates an artificial split in our consciousness. And it is this split which mechanically
implants a binary vision to the way we visualise things around us. We start
noticing a Self-induced separateness in everything around us. For us, it is
always ‘Me’ versus the world. Anyone or anything which is not ‘Me’ is often
deemed to be against the Self, thereby generating a perennial conflict.
Such
compartmentalised approach to life gives birth to a penchant to exploit and
manipulate others to use them as a springboard to wangle what we want. The
deeply-grafted division in our consciousness opens a wound that seldom heals
and starts a whole chain-reaction which is not only pernicious, but also hobbles
our spiritual growth. The resulting negativity engulfs our personal and social
life, thereby insidiously reflecting on the overall quality of life around us.
It is this negativity which is on display in all the problems facing the
humanity today.
The
‘cut’ in our consciousness causes an insecurity which makes us feel alienated
and isolated from the rest of Creation and ourselves. This spawns an
internecine conflict further inflamed by antipathetic emotions and behaviour
which proceed from the feeling of alienation and estrangement from other
animate and inanimate expressions of life. The ensuing disharmony and friction
between the ‘selfish and the selfless’ may, however, be resolved through a
carefully nurtured synthesis between a ‘thesis’ and ‘antithesis’ a la
historical materialism.
This
tension between our higher and lower Self is actually a reflection of a
struggle between our wise and nescient real nature. The strain in our consciousness, though, is also indicative of
an insatiable urge for full realisation of our immanent human potential.
According to ‘The Geeta’, a war
always rages between our higher and baser ‘Self’ where the former drives us
upward to grow in humanity day by day, while the latter pulls us downward to
remain stuck in a never-ending conflict. This happens because of the perceived
division of life between ‘ourselves’ as creatures separated from rest of the
Creation.
We
don’t see other creatures or people as an extension of the same indivisible
whole as is the reality proved scientifically and spiritually. Our selfish
desires and actions always boomerang on us to threaten us in this or next life.
The internecine violence, climatic destruction, societal aggression and civilisational
annihilation unleashed by humans because of a garbled understanding have
created all the chaos in our midst which is hurting us no end. Just as a fire
is screened by smoke or the sun by the rainclouds, similarly our inveterate egotistic
desires screen our innate urges for knowledge and spiritual growth.
It
is, therefore, sensible not to continue clinging to a parochial self-image when
our real nature is so loftier. We need to learn to restrain our animal desires
and selfish senses. The Geeta advises
that we ought to slowly bestow more value to our higher nature, away from a synthetic
dichotomy and conditioned behaviour. Each of us shall remain incomplete as long
as we consider ourselves separate from our fellow human beings and other
creatures. Anything and everything being nothing, but different permutations
and combinations of energy, we are all somehow related at a very basic level.
And if we are all inter-related, where is the need for the discordance and
divisions amongst us that we see all around.
However,
this is also true that there is no incentive to grow without conflict. It is
the perennially raging conflict and human urges to excel vis a vis others which
have seen the human civilisation grow to the level we see today. But human urges
and drives for growth by itself is not as bad as the desire to grow at the
expense and to the exclusion of others. The fact that we can all grow together
without compromising anyone’s ‘just deserts’ is a fact. As we are all born with
varied capacities and destinies, there is enough space and scope for everyone’s
growth. Peaceful coexistence without dominance of our beastly instincts for one-upmanship
can take human civilisation farther than we visualise.
When
we master the capacities to see through the unity and uniformity in the divine
Creation, we stop feeling alienated and separated from each other. And the
moment that happens, we mature to be a more advanced society than we are. And
what’s the need to spar over something which is so transient and mythical.
After all, our life is nothing but a mirage. This is borne by the fact that
everything around us is changeable. And anything that keeps on changing can
never be the same and hence, can’t be real as is the case with the world around
us.
The
world around us keeps changing thick and fast without most of us even noticing
it. The living beings keep disappearing at regular intervals, the physical structures
keep transforming, the landscapes keep changing as do our attitudes and thoughts.
As per Quantum Physics, the reality is relative to the observer. The
observation and observed get influenced by the presence of the observer. So,
everything which keeps changing can’t be true. To be real, it should be
constant and unchanging. Only that could be said to be real which never
changes.
And
it is our eternal consciousness, as inalienable part of the Supreme Self, which
is said to be constant and real. If we realise that we are all part of the same
whole and spiritually related, we shall cease to have a reason for conflicting
with one another. Universal love ensues when we see ‘all in ourselves and
ourselves in all’ around us. The problem arises when we get detached from the
rest and attached to the evanescent experiences stemming from the senses and
sensory objects. It is this disarray and disorder which keeps us mired in ‘Maya’ and keeps our selfish desires in
command of our senses thereby creating all the trouble and conflicts around us.
One
sure way to keep our selfish desires and urges in check is to indulge in
regular meditative practices as also in ‘selfless action’. The ‘Meditation’ is
defined as the withdrawal of oneself from the sensory world by focussing within
one’s consciousness. Forgetting the outside world, one should get completely
engrossed in a world within. One easy way of attaining the state is to watch
and concentrate on one’s breathing, thereby peeling oneself away from the
sensory world. This inner world is as real and infinite as the world of senses
appear to us. In these dark depths, flaming anger can be easily transformed
into soothing compassion, ill-will into a sublime goodwill and hatred into all-pervasive
love.
Our
eyes don’t see, the ears don’t hear, the mind doesn’t think and the sensory
world is left behind when all consciousness, desires and thoughts are evacuated
from the senses during the meditation. With corporal and sensory awareness lost,
the consciousness is no longer confined in space. For all practical purposes,
one becomes aware that one is not a creature separate from others. An
understanding, thus, dawns upon one that the world is one, indivisible and
infinite. The observer and observed become one in pure consciousness and energy.
The same energy flows through the entire life.
One
just hopes that as we realise the fundamental unity and harmony in all aspects
of the Creation, we shall become more capable of realising our true human
potential, thereby bringing more sanity and sense in our world which is presently
marred by constant conflicts and chaos.
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