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Spiritual Practice: Is It Worth The
Effort?
by Alan L. Pritz
A friend and her family just moved to Oregon.
She'd regularly attended my meditation, chanting and hatha yoga
sessions and found them beneficial, particularly during times of
personal turmoil. When she left town I, being a "good teacher",
loaded her with spiritual books to help sustain her during the tumult
of relocation adjustment. I would've packed a lunch too, but thought
that might be pushing things a wee bit.
After she'd been gone a week I had the pleasure
of running into her husband who was back in town a few days on business.
I was amused to hear that my friend (his wife) began experiencing
difficulty ingesting the supplemental materials I provided. Evidently
she was spinning around the issue of: "How do I know that this
is the lifetime to make a spiritual effort? After all, if we keep
reincarnating, why not just eat, drink, and be merry until I'm more
in the mood?" A classic dilemma, and one that's afflicted many
an earnest seeker. In fact it reminds me of the prayerful request
of St. Augustine who beseeched the Lord to make him holy, but not
just yet!
Struggles between body and soul mark a fundamental
push-pull dynamic related to being part flesh, part Spirit and requires
some wisdom to resolve. First, one must consider the subtle implications
of this quandary. When people initially investigate spiritual matters
they usually do so seeking an enigmatic something of value. They
want It, or think they do, but don't quite know why. Furthermore,
they don't know what It is, nor what to do once they get It. For
all intents and purposes this phase of spiritual pursuit is like
neophyte activity in the stock market. You hope something good will
happen but might not fully grasp the process nor how to manage a
successful portfolio.
Next envision an ordinary life. Most peoples'
energies are directed towards job, family, relationship, education,
and recreation. Why, because again, they want something of value.
In this case the something sought is more tangible than spiritual
enigmas but both pursuits reflect a shared desire for fulfillment.
This search represents an esoteric drive to eliminate pain and maximize
joy. Such a drive, whether mundane or otherwise, is the nexus where
spiritual and worldly activity meets. Here's why.
Nature has designed our bodies to engage the world
through the afferent and efferent nervous system. Spirit then enlivens
each body with a soul. The body is impermanent, an aggregate of
chemical compounds subject to the laws of relativity and creation.
It is a wonderful but temporary casing for the soul to use during
incarnate periods. The soul, on the other hand, is divine and knows
that time on Earth is only for entertainment and education; that
nothing finite can provide eternal fulfillment. After successful
completion of its lessons, the soul returns home to ever-blissful
Spirit. A problem arises however after prolonged instances of physical
embodiment. The soul begins to falsely identify itself with the
bodily casing; a condition called ego consciousness. This activates
a conflict between pure aspirations of the soul and deluded body-identified
desires of the ego. The former is based on Truth, the latter on
ignorance.
Since ego is body-identified and wired for external
interaction, the souls' innate quest for union with Spirit gets
filtered through a murky subconscious, misinterpreted by ego, and
mistakenly routed outward to the physical plane for sense-based
gratification. This ego-rooted "oops" is the source of
classic flesh versus soul struggles. Until wisdom or repeated disappointment
catalyzes spiritual awakening, most people spend incarnations chasing
a mirage of happiness via external caprice. Eventually the ego realizes
that sense pleasures, while alluring, are evanescent replications
of an underlying, eternal, and all-satisfying joy of Spirit. It
then seeks to sunder false pursuits by destroying attachments to
body and matter. This re-routing of consciousness is the sole basis
for spiritual practice. Once ego realizes it isn't the body but
soul, a superconscious awareness is re-awakened. Complete, lasting
union with the Infinite then bestows final liberation from all delusion.
Yet the question remains, is it worth it? It would
seem the answer would be a self-evident "Yes!" However,
the power of delusion is such that many people find anything that
hints at altering body pleasures as torturous. The reality is we
defer perfect joy for defective pleasure. Does this even make good
consumer sense? No! So again, is it worth it?
Ultimately this question is answered by faith,
timing, and receptivity to discipline:
Faith in those who've experienced spiritual
union and taught from such wisdom;
Timing or readiness to move beyond the illusion of lasting matter-based
happiness;
Receptivity to discipline requires incremental weaning oneself from
body demands to regain the finer joys of Spirit.
No one need subject himself or herself to
painful radical transformation. As anything too drastic evokes negative
reactions, so spiritual practice must be done in a balanced fashion
guided by wisdom. The key is to find a pace right for you and stick
with it. And while disciplined commitment is necessary for success,
baby steps can be gigantic strides. Degree of involvement is unique
for each individual. By making manageable efforts over time you'll
gradually cultivate a life enhanced by increased joy, peace, love,
vitality, and compassion. Do these sound disagreeable? So you decide
is
it worth it?
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