|
Conflict
appears to be a part of many lives. It seems to be all around
us. It is prevalent in the Ayurvedic and Yogic communities, in
the family and on the World stage. To be alive as a separate entity
on this planet sometimes means bumping into other peoples separate
identities.
We
identify our selves with many things: our bodies, our clothing,
our personality, our work and our history are only a few. Most
people also identify themselves with their beliefs and perceptions.
We tend to believe that how we see the world is the right view
of reality.
People
of pitta nature are most challenged by overly identifying with
their perceptions. The fire in the mind is capable of burning
away false illusion and revealing truth. This occurs when the
mind is perfectly clear and the individual is purely sattvic.
As most people are not purely sattvic, there is some distortion
to what a person of pitta nature perceives.
Taking
their perceptions as real, leads a person of pitta nature toward
intense feelings. When a person of pitta nature's perceptions
conflict with another person, the feeling that arises is anger.
Anger generates the actions of conflict. In the bar, it creates
a brawl, in the family an argument; in political organizations
it generates angry letters and counter letters to the membership.
Much of society deals with anger in the ìcivilizedî fashion of
law suits. There must be a lot of anger as there are a lot of
lawsuits. In the macrocosm of a country's collective consciousness,
nations deal with anger in the form of war. In the microcosm of
our own lives all harmful actions (physical or otherwise) taken
out of anger and frustration is an expression of our war ñ like
nature. Pitta is the warrior. Always right, the war becomes a
passionate, self righteous conflict.
George
Bush is a warrior. Ariel Sharron is a warrior. Sadam Hussein is
a warrior. Bin Laden is a warrior. Some members of CAAM are warriors,
some students are warriors and some teachers are warriors. Warriors
live for the righteous fight. Warriors live to be right. Warriors
destroy to be right. That is, until they awaken.
As
the person of pitta natures becomes more sattvic, the mind becomes
clear and the pitta person perceives the higher truth. There comes
the realization that each soul is growing, learning and evolving
and taking the best actions they can based on where they are on
their journey. I really don't believe that anyone wakes up in
the morning as says to themselves, ìOK, I'm a bad guy, how can
I do some really bad things today.î Rather, most people rationalize
their actions in a manner that makes them feel good about themselves
and look good to others. Ordinary people believe their own rhetoric
and believe they are right.
Having
pierced the illusion, the sattvic pitta person chooses to remain
above the maya (the play of consciousness) and does not engage
their enemy in battle. To do so only is to deny the Truth they
see so clearly. In Vedanta, ëTat Twam Asi' means ìthou art thatî.
When we engage others in righteous holy wars, we are our own enemy.
When we harm them, we harm ourselves and we remain bound to the
wheel of life, death and suffering.
In
the absence of anger there is both compassion and amusement. There
is compassion for the struggling soul and amusement when we find
ourselves being drawn into a conflict when we know better. Amusement
often acts as a windshield wiper as we drive down the highways
of life. Seeing clearly through a clean windshield (the mind)
we can exit the highway and take the road less traveled up to
the highest summit. From there it is all clear.
Want
to live in a peaceful world? We must first make peace with ourselves.
Then, we can make peace with our families and our communities.
When enough people live this way, we shall no longer express our
collective consciousness in the form of War. Peace begins with
each one of us. Peace begins with compassion.
Here...
|