Peace for the Soul

A common space for harmonic peacemakers

Chapter 2, Verse 30

 

“The Self that dwells in the body

Is indestructible, forever.

Therefore, do not mourn, Arjuna.”

 

Eckhart Tolle:

 

“When you step into the Now, you step out of the mind’s content.  Thoughts don’t absorb all of your attention anymore.  They don’t draw you in totally.  Gaps arise between the thoughts… spaciousness, still awareness.  You begin to realize how much vaster and deeper you are than your thoughts.

 

Most people confuse the Now with what happens in the Now, but that’s not what it is.  The Now is deeper than what happens in it.  It is the space in which it happens.  So do not confuse the content of this moment with the Now.  The Now is deeper than any content that arises in it.  The more you live in the Now, the more you sense the simple yet profound joy of Being.”

 

Srila Prabhupada:

 

“Krishna now concludes the section of instruction on the immutable spirit soul.  In describing the immortal soul in various ways, Krishna establishes that the soul is immortal and the body is temporary.  Therefore, Arjuna as a Kshatriya should not abandon duty out of fear that his relatives will die in the battle.  On the authority of Krishna, Arjuna now understands that there is a soul different from the material body.”

 

[The other day I’m pedaling home from work and come across a woman wandering.  She jumps in front of me so I stop.  It doesn’t take long to realize she’s drunk.  I feel responsible for guiding her to safety.  We walk along the highway together.  She tells me, among other things, that she works for a roofing company.  I try to keep myself between her and the highway as she’s unsteady and unpredictable in her movements, but she makes a game out of it and insists on being between me and the highway, so I move off into the grass, trying to coax her towards me and away from the traffic, with only limited success.  We walk about a half a mile and then a pickup pulls off the road a little ways ahead.  It’s her boss.  He’s been out looking for her.  We reach the pick-up and boss has to struggle with her to get her into the cab.  Meanwhile, down the embankment and over the fence is a Target store and in the parking lot, the lawn maintenance crew has just finished cutting, edging, and blowing; they look up and see the drama next to the highway and think a kidnapping is in progress.  So they get all agitated and I try to quiet them down from a distance…not easy, but at least they don’t call the cops, or if they do, they don’t arrive till it’s over.  Finally, boss gets her into the cab and they drive off and I breathe a sigh.  The whole time I was with her, we were on the edge of catastrophe had she shambled out into traffic.

 

The teaching for me is that though I was sharply aware for that half hour or so about the potential for imminent catastrophe, the fact is that all of us are always on the edge.  Be it be via disease, accident, crime, war, starvation, natural disaster or fill-in-the-blank, humans all over the world, each of us without exception, are fragile…it can all be snatched away in a twinkling.  So we need to be ready.  I’ve pedaled a lot of miles in my life but what’s different since this experience with the wanderer is that I’m more aware now of the precariousness of it all.  A careless driver reaching down for a CD, someone texting on the fly, a day dreamer, a sleepy person who is nodding…a drift over the white line marking the boundary between car traffic and bike traffic coinciding with an “unlucky” biker in the wrong spot at the wrong time…well, you get the idea.

 

What keeps me from being afraid is the inner conviction that luck has nothing to do with it.  The Hindu sages say that we come into this life with a certain number of allotted breaths to take and when that number is up, our number is up whether we’re in the bathroom, on the highway or at the beach.  There are many who would say that this kind of thinking is morbid preoccupation, but I think of it as being on friendly terms with death for when death becomes our friend what else is there to fear?  Some might say being disabled or dying painfully for a couple for instances, but those are hypothetical situations and it serves no purpose to dwell on hypotheticals.  Death is not a hypothetical. 

 

As we get used to death’s presence, we become more attuned to That which is deathless within and without.]

 

Eckhart Tolle: 

 

“A moment of danger can bring about a temporary cessation of the stream of thinking and thus give you a taste of what it means to be present, alert, aware.”

 

Eknath Easwaran:

 

“In my village where death was not uncommon, most people on their death bed would send for my grandmother just to have her sit by their side.  They would hold her hand or look into her eyes which said, ‘there is no death.’  For her, the dissolution of the body was not death at all.  In Samadhi, this is the realization the lovers of God attain.  When they become united with the Lord in their hearts, they go beyond identification with the body/mind complex.  When this union becomes uninterrupted, though they look after the body very carefully, they know the body and the mind to be only instruments to be used to convey the truth of immortality to all those ready to receive it.”

 

Baha’u’llah:

 

"Were you to attain to

but a dewdrop

of the crystal waters

of divine knowledge,

you would realize

that true life

is not the life of the flesh

but the life of the spirit

for the life of the flesh

is common to both

humans and animals,

whereas the life of the spirit

is possessed by the pure in heart,

a life which knows no death,

an existence crowned

by immortality."

Views: 9

Quote of the moment:

"PEACE
NOT WAR
GENEROSITY
NOT GREED
EMPATHY
NOT HATE
CREATIVITY
NOT DESTRUCTION
EVERYBODY
NOT JUST US"

* * *

Connect With Us!




We light a candle for all our friends and members that have passed to the other side.

Gone from our life and forever moved into our heart. ~ ❤️ ~


Grant us peace
#Ukraine

Two beautiful graphics for anyone to use, donated and created by Shannon Wamsely

Shannon Wamsley

Designed by Michelle Yd Frost

Windy Willow (Salix Tree)
Artist Silvia Hoefnagels
Ireland NOV 2020
(image copyright Silvia Hoefnagels)

She writes,
"Love, acceptance and inclusion. Grant us peace."

Birthdays

Badge

Loading…

© 2024   Created by Eva Libre.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service