Our Dual Nature 01/17/2011
I'm sure many of you have heard the adage "we are not human beings that can have spiritual experiences but spiritual beings having a human experience". This sentiment was always a little peculiar to me since I wondered what it meant to be a purely spiritual being (which would then be able to wiggle its way into a human embodiment). Would I be a big ball of light? But as I understand it light is both wave and particle, hence it is an entity of the physical realm. Would I have any form at all? Perhaps I would just be a thought, but, who's thought? The idea that I am a spiritual being having a human experience always seemed to elevate Spirit to the only real and valuable realm and left me feeling as if I needed to doggedly pursue some path to get me back to that sacred place. Often yoga is misperceived as a path to spiritual perfection where the body and manifest realm is transcended and one basks in eternal bliss. I can't even imagine what that would look like. It's not until I began engaging the non-dual practices of yoga nidra and the Enneagram (Gurdjieff) that I really began to understand that we are not either human beings or spiritual beings but both simultaneously. It's simply that in the hub-bub of manifest reality we often forget our spiritual nature. This is why people all over the world seek experiences that quiet the external noise so that we can begin to hear the call of Spirit. I've just begun re-reading BKS Iyengars book Light on Life which is basically describes the anatomy of our dual nature from the yogic perspective. In it he says: " the whole practice of yoga is concerned with exploring the relationship between .... Nature and Soul. It is about .... learning to live between the earth and the sky. That is the human predicament, our joy and our woe, our salvation and our downfall" (9). It is typical of our ego to wish to narrow our "predicament" down to being either human or spirit, to not hold the tension between these two forces but rather find a quick, easy (no-down-payment) way to Enlightenment. In the upcoming session that I am teaching we are focussing on the spine. The spine is a symbol that can be used to begin to make the notion of our dual nature more concrete. Once again, we seek to embody the profound concepts that guide our practice. The concepts are the what of our human/spiritual potential, yoga is the how. The spine's movement both toward the earth and toward the sky simultaneously tells us all we need to know. Feel, for a moment, this movement in your spine. Feel how it moves up and moves down at the same time. There is no division point where one movement starts and the other ends. A hint: You can't use your normal thinking mind to understand this in a felt way. You must feel, sense, See. Let this be a meditation this week, and watch how difficult it is to suspend the dual nature of the spine in your awareness. Watch how vehemently your ego reacts and resists. When we can begin to feel the true Unity of the dualisms in our body we will begin to touch on the ability to then experience our spiritual/human nature as a Whole. 2 Comments Through My Humanity I Am Graced. 04/13/2010
I just spent the weekend in an advanced Enneagram workshop with two of the most spiritually influential people in my life. The Enneagram, in brief, is a system of personality typing which helps us to become aware of our habits of thinking and acting. The premise in this system is that if we become consciously aware of our patterns then we do not unconsciously act them out over and over again. Instead, through awareness, we are able to choose our actions. In doing The Work, as it is called, we start to live more authentically and freer from our compulsivity. As a One on the Enneagram I am prone to perfectionism and judgement of self and others. Becoming aware of it through work in the Enneagram and yoga has allowed me moments of clarity, through which I am able to function consciously in the world. I become able to know that judgement may be functioning but it doesn't have to define my whole experience. Yesterday, I questioned one of the workshop facilitators, who also happens to be my long time yoga teacher, how the Enneagram fits with the philosophy of yoga. She commented that, as a non-dual system, the Enneagram asks us to honor the dualities of life (good and bad, sadness and joy, darkness and light etc) as part of our human, embodied experience. She explained that when dualities are in a useful relationship to one another a third force is revealed. This third force is Grace or Spirit and is the simple Isness of life. She commented that working in the non-dual practice of the Enneagram with the compulsion of the One toward judgement does not mean eliminating judgement. In a dualistic system which seems to be predominant in the self help culture of our time judgement would be seen as a negative quality to be eliminated through various techniques. In dualism, one might say, I would be seeking to purify myself of judgement. In the non-dual tradition judgement is simply seen as part of the human experience. I can notice judgement, know it, even honour what it has to offer. Then I would bring the opposite experience of non-judgement in to my awareness in order to nourish it. In holding both experiences I am lead to a deeper experience of the fullness of my humanity. Nothing repressed or denied, nothing aggrandized or overvalued. In this fullness is Grace, Spirit and the simple Isness of life. As I descended to my teachers basement to set up for my class with her I suddenly felt a wave of emotion come over me. I realized that at a very deep level I had associated Grace and Spirit with non-judgement and I also knew that I would never be completely free of judgement. What this meant is that I would never be in the light of Grace, that I would never know Spirit. Of course, at a cognitive level I knew this to be false. But yesterday, the knowing birthed in my heart and I wept in relief knowing that I could be who I am, and it is BECAUSE of who I am not DESPITE who I am that Spirit is available to me. I often ask my students to invite all of themselves onto the mat. I have a deeper understanding of what this means now. Today, whatever your spiritual practice might be, can you bring all of you to it? Can the practice be a way to honor your fullness rather than purify yourself of what you've labelled undesirable? Can you know, in the deepest part of yourself, that you are Loved in all of your humanity, and rest there, even for a moment? I'd love to hear about it.... | About the Author
I am many things. Some days I'm a mom and a wife. Some days I'm a philosopher and a sage. Some days I'm a lunatic. Today, I want to dialogue about yoga, spirit and the human condition. And, oddly enough, blogging is the way I've found to do it. About the BlogThis blog is dedicated to questioning, celebrating and evolving the great system of yoga. It is a critical reflection meant to engage teachers and students of all levels of practice. It is my hope that you will use my explorations to dig deeply into your own understanding of yoga, embodiment and Self-realization. I try to publish a new post every 7 days.
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