Who doesn't appreciate the genius of Leo Tolstoy? Through his beautiful writing the sagely author continues to inspire millions even after a century. Undoubtedly a great human being. But his wife had a diametrically opposite view of him. To her he was the same normal, almost oppressive, husband. Does it mean that all of us are essentially the very same poor humans after we enter the privacy of our room, shed the clothes and behavioural bearing? We don't just cover ourselves with clothes. We wear multiple layers of thoughts, attitude, behavior, calculating mind, scheming intellect and maneuvering to maintain an image. This is a subtle clothing. Hardly visible like the clothes we wear. But this is the primary steel armour that we carry with us. Maybe it's necessary to wear it to survive in the struggle as a human. We have our jobs, duties, responsibilities to fulfill. There we need this subtle steel armour. But we get habituated to keep it on us, always, day and night, even within our walls. Its weight crushes relationships. No wonder we feel tired even while lying on the bed. Its weight crushing the soft petals of relationships. It challenges our own essential faith. The armour is still sitting on our chest as we enter the domain of our intimate people where we are supposed to be open, free and light. So why not go for complete disarming at least within the privacy of our rooms, in our little intimate group, with our closest dear ones? Join them as a very light being, almost naked like a baby with all your vulnerabilities, flaws, fears, insecurities, anxieties. To feel very light, to be disarmed of the heavy battle shield, to almost float in your secure, personal bubble. Drift like a cloud with your vulnerabilities within the security of your cosy bubble. Lay bare your soul open. Lift the iron chains from it. And just be. Becoming something is a necessity I know. But put it on as you come out. But stay light, open, honest, frank, see-through among the people you trust. Share your pain. Talk your miseries. Shower your ecstasy. Offer your smile. Show your tears. Present your kindness. Drizzle your pure emotions. Then one can feel the soothing solitude within the safe bubble. Make your little capsule of solitude and peace among all this meaningless crowd and intimidating chaos. It can be done anywhere with faith, love, care and share among the chosen few. And float lightly in it, like a balloon drifting to the ceiling fan's wind within a safe room. If we make it with a Lightness of Being, it's possible. Do it with vulnerable gentility, disarming smile, openness and baby-type nakedness after shedding the steel armour of 'becoming something' that we need to wear once we come out of our cosy bubble. Then go out with your behavioural clothing and perform the essential tasks and come back, put off everything and enjoy the Lightness of Being. This is the little workshop in the art of the Lightness of Being. The enlightened sages are the ones to whom the entire existence becomes such a cosy bubble. The entire humanity becomes merely an intimate, cosy bubble. They float freely without the need to become something. They shed the steel armour forever and turn baby soft. No wonder they float so restfully. That is a high degree in the university of the Lightness of Being. We the common people are in the schooling stage of the same stream. We have to pass the higher and senior secondary school exam in the art of the Lightness of Being. It's a low grade exam. It doesn't require research scholarship. It's a tiny assignment--to enjoy the Lightness of Being within a carefully nurtured little bubble. But believe me it carries the taste of the cosmic bubble. Trainee fighter pilots learn and practice in simulated indoor environment and then fly freely in open skies. If we learn the art and craft of the Lightness of Being in our tiny intimate bubble, maybe one day we will be floating free among the vast expanses of this existence.
The posts on this blog deal with common people who try to stand proud in front of their own conscience. The rest of the life's tale naturally follows from this point. It's intended to be a joy-maker, helping the reader to see the beauty underlying everyone and everything. Copyright © Sandeep Dahiya. All Rights Reserved for all posts on this blog. No part of this blog may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without permission in writing from the author of this blog.
About Me
- Sufi
- Hi, this is somebody who has taken the quieter by-lane to be happy. The hustle and bustle of the big, booming main street was too intimidating. Passing through the quieter by-lane I intend to reach a solitary path, laid out just for me, to reach my destiny, to be happy primarily, and enjoy the fruits of being happy. (www.sandeepdahiya.com)
Sunday, October 29, 2023
The rainbow in a bubble
There is hardly any qualitative difference between what goes in the sky above and what happens on the ground below. The sky shifts. It moves, it sings, it moans, it sighs. Sometimes it's relaxing and pristine blue. The other time it's gloomy, dark and dreary. Sometimes it cries and sheds tears in a torrential rain. The other time it sheds gentle tears of joy by drizzling over desert sands. Sometimes it floods with a fury. There is light, darkness, shifting shades over clouds, clouds drifting and reshaping, clouds melting, clouds forming, clouds vanishing, winds, breeze...a flow. There is something of everything in it. The same happens below...as if it's merely a reflection of the sky in the pools of earth below. There is sadness, joy, victory, failure, meetings, partings, smiles, tears, making, unmaking, falling in love, falling out of it, birth, death...an endless shifting. The sky leaves a deep imprint of its ever-shifting shades on the earth below. See the clouds melting in the sky, watch them daily. It's such a big message written on the massive billboard for us to read and remember. But usually, we are seeking needles in the hayrack and hardly lift our eyes to read and remember the message. Don't the clouds bloom, get colors, travel and melt? They shower earth with their melted self, become flowers, perish and again become vapors. This bubble has to burst anyway to take another form. But before that it has to be. It has to live. It has to be tossed around by chance winds. It has to seek its way, its course. It has to do justice to its existence. And then it has to happily and lovingly give way to new shapes. But it can always remind itself that it was, is and will forever be in the shifting shades and shapes.
Saturday, October 28, 2023
A wooden touch or soft brace of life?
I remember a talk I had with an elderly American Buddhist woman at Mcleodganj many years ago. A very ardent follower of Buddhism she had spent decades in India. The outer bearing, including the religious clothes, was pretty impressive. But she looked very stiff, cautious, even stern. I felt it was like someone going on the fathomless path with lots of calculations; following the principleless path with lots of principles. She stiffened even more as we shook hands. I could feel it clearly. It was a wooden hand that I held. I tried to convince myself of the loftiness of her soul because she had been on the formal path of religion for so long. But I couldn’t feel the warmth, kindness and smile from her persona. Maybe these emanated and I was too coarse or not sensitive enough to feel that.
I can still clearly remember the
glint of pride in her eyes when she told me that she had spent years in sadhna
and had been a celibate since the age of forty-five. She had spent a few years
at Pune as well. The mention of Pune instantly brought great Osho to my mind. ‘So
did you stay at Osho commune at Pune?’ I asked innocently. She recoiled with
horror as if it was an insult to her hardcore, austere tapasya. She shook her
hands and head in a vehement ‘no’ as if staying at Osho’s place would have
meant a sin. O thou great Osho misinterpreted so much for all your elaboration
of the naked truth as a means to nail down the illusions! Before mentioning
Osho I should have remembered that she had been a celibate for at least two and
half decades. It was the crest jewel of her path of renunciation. But the great
Osho accepted the presence of sex in the human body and talked of its
transformation instead of suppression for everlasting joy. So no wonder the
celibate sadhak jumped like a rocket at the mention of Osho.
Well, sex or no sex, if you turn
wooden and suspicious even at the age of seventy by the touch of a man of the
age of your son it simply means you have missed a crucial link to liberation.
If the suppression of sex has stiffened you, made you austere, not given you a
genuine smile, sweetness of temperament or ease of being then one may need to
revise the fundamentals of one’s faith.
In contrast I remember a woman
from a neighboring village. A very beautiful peasant woman famed for her
illustrious beauty and untamed sense of freedom regarding the basic instincts.
The lore of her beauty and its exciting spin-offs had reached my ears. There
were far more happy and joyful men, and very few jealous ones, having shared
the unbridled sense of feminine charms flowing from her persona. There was a
joke that she would occupy the best chambers in heaven for having made so many
men happy.
Mother would usually won’t allow us
to go into the fields taking all the responsibilities on herself. We the
pampered ones had the easiest task in the world—studies. Mother must not have
been feeling well that day otherwise I won’t have been there in the fields to
get fodder. I was struggling to load the bale of fodder on my bike and failing
at it miserably with my bookish hands. The beautiful peasant woman knew me
because we shared fields across the village boundary. She walked quickly from a
distance. That was the first time I saw her from close quarters. Her famed
beauty was no exaggeration. She came smilingly and with a singular effort put
the heavy fodder bale on the bike and tied it firmly without even putting a
littlest strain on her face. What strength! She must have heard about my
bookish ways. ‘These soft hands aren’t for such rough work masterji!’ she took my hand in her rough, peasant woman hands. I
will never forget that touch. It was humane, strong, kind, palpable, supportive
and understanding. And that friendly smile. And that naughty glint in the eyes.
That color of mellowness and acceptance of life in its basic terms on her face.
That strength of character in her strong farming hands. ‘And this is the woman
the critics malign so much for her sexuality!’ I thought. Shyly I thanked her.
She laughed and walked away to continue with her work.
The wooden touch and a full of
life, sympathetic touch! The sum and summary is that beyond the debate of sex
or no sex, it’s the warmth of our touch, the kindness in our eyes, an accepting
smile on our lips that’s more important. If celibacy leaves you wooden and
stiff even in old age then I don’t think the Gods would love you for that. And
if full compliance with the basic instinct gives you a kind heart, genuine
smile and ease of being then Gods won’t hate you for that.
Since we are talking about the
touch of hands, it won’t be misplaced to mention His Holiness the Dalai Lama’s
touch. When you hold His hand it seems the softest like a new-born baby. You
don’t feel the slightest rigidity, tension, dis-ease or stiffness. It’s almost like
a soft brush that a gentle breeze has with a rose petal. You feel divinity in
that soft touch. Long live His Holiness!
Friday, October 27, 2023
The full game of life
I don't exactly remember the name of that plant. But when we chew its leaves during childhood they tasted very bitter. But the bitter taste was just half part of the game. The other half presented sweetness when we drank water after chewing the bitter leaves. It was good fun. At the end only sweetness would linger in the mouth. Bitterness transformed into sweetness by water.
Bitter situations are simply half part of the game. If we keep ourselves limited to the bitter part of the game, we would turn a grumpy, cynical and cranky person. It means we have lived just one half of life. Like a passive stone mutely weathering due to environmental elements. But if we take some steps to be a part of the other half and drink the water of patience, gratitude and understanding then sweetness follows. Then bitterness becomes a prelude to sweetness. It then becomes a full life expected of a human being. Then we are a flower blossoming by absorbing heat, rain, storms and dust and transform these into a sweet smile.
Life will keep throwing its bitter situations. That's its nature. If we just react to these situations we become a sour, unhappy person. But if we respond by taking cool sips of patience and gratitude then sweetness defines our persona despite all the bitter experiences.
Dancing parrots and sulking crows
Have you seen beautiful, colorful birds courting their lady love? They dance, spread their amazing wings and tails in fabulous patterns and let out the best of vocals to attract and woo their lady love. With a negligible exception it’s the males who go into a great eye-catching show in courting the female. There is a thrower of charms and there is a receiver of those charms. So much for the scheme of this polarity!
That amazing range of play-acted maneuvers
(under the impulse of hormonal throw of energy) is not what the male persona is
under ordinary circumstances. They are an exception; just an ecstatic throw of
mood and attitude to catch the female’s attention. These are momentary sprouts.
They don’t define the normal traits of a common bird in its day-to-day life.
For the rest of the time they are simple birds, doing normal things just like
any other bird of the species. And I don’t think the female birds mind that.
They are lucky that they don’t have memory like women to remember all this
dancing.
The restless male energy is
always looking for rest in the silent pools of receptive female energy. She too
is looking for the wearied runner to walk home and rest in her receptive folds.
It gives a meaning to her life. It fulfills her. It saves her from the restless
void, the procreative emptiness brimming with the potential to manifest and
create new life forms.
There is hardly any difference
between a colorful bird pirouetting in dandy mode using the tail and wings and
singing best songs and a man wooing a woman. At the peak of hormonal storm he
jumps to fulfill all the columns of female expectations. That’s natural. But
that’s not what he is in normal state. He is a normal guy otherwise.
Under the patriarchal system the
man has convinced himself to be far superior to the woman. It’s factually
very-very incorrect. There is a deep-seated acceptance of his inferiority and
to cover that the system of patriarchy was built up. And to justify his
patriarchy construct, he is trying his best to fit in the chauvinistic slot
from as many angles as possible. When he covets a woman and goes into the
process of wooing her, he adopts an emergency ploy to appear the best in all
slots. He is helpless and it’s all about bright colors, bright dance, bright
song, best attitude, best look, best behavior, best hobbies and much-much more.
Truth and genuineness take a backseat. Falsehoods creep in long before we even
realize. And where falsehoods creep in, miseries entail in good measure.
O thou poor dancing bird and the still
poorer man! But a lady bird can be duped. The dandy can afford to be normal
after the deed is done. But not so with a woman. She has a brain and a nice
memory. She remembers the entire range of colorful somersaults that you have
been doing to get her hand. And that becomes her benchmark to assess you. Now
how long you will maintain the crest of your best version? Of course you will
come down to a normal self as the fever comes down. Then you appear such a poor
guy, almost a cheater who pretended to be what he isn’t usually. I think a
woman can be more forgiving if she accepts that the poor guy was simply doing a
wooing dance like a bird in the Amazon forest. He is simply throwing his
message to have a partner. The content of the message isn’t what he is in
reality. It’s just a catchy title to draw attention, like an eye-catching book title
and its cover. The title might appear attractive but the story is usually
mundane, very-very common.
The bird cannot be dancing
forever at the best of its colors and the best of songs. Naturally it will
become a common bird after the energetic storm is over. The beautiful parrot
turns a boring crow. But brother, why did you try to be what you are not. You
gave your best in wooing her and that raised the bar of her expectations. And
expectations breed disappointments. She expects you to be the very same
beautifully cooing and majestically dancing parrot. She is right in sulking
over the dull crow cawing boringly by her side.
The irony is that we get
habituated to take the wooing dance as the primary characteristics in an
individual, i.e., we take the catchy title as the story itself. Isn’t that a
mistake? The excitement and thrill that one gets out of the bird dance is
addictive in nature. We need to learn to be comfortable with normal people
around us. We need to give respect and love to the ordinary humanity. Sadly we
hold high expectations from people. To fulfill those heavy expectations he is all
valor, grace, dignity, bravery, stability, unqualified giving and masculine
handsomeness; and she is all receptivity, feminine grace, support, acceptance,
care and share. Both sides trying at their best. Effort beyond a limit breeds
artificiality. This artificiality then ends up in stumping each other. After
all, how long will one keep jumping at his/her best? Ultimately we have to get
grounded. The boring normalcy sets in. The dreams vanish. The colors fade. The
songs turn to ugly croakings. Angels turn to dark angels. Then both sides part
ways. Look for new partners, expecting the thrill of wooing exception to be the
everlasting normal. No wonder most of us are a series of broken relationships.
That’s why it’s advisable to be
just normal, the real self, even during the phase of courting a partner. Stay
as you normally are. Honesty is a highly undervalued trait in the modern
society. But primarily it’s the sole trait that decides whether we are carried
as a miserable junk into the cemetery or a peaceful corpse looking at whom not
many people get scared. I remember the face my mother after she had left her
body. She looked angelic and so beautiful in her eternal sleep.
If someone accepts you with your
dull colors, weird dancing and hoarsy songs that relationship has a better
chance of survival for a longer time. Truth always serves well in the long
term. It may appear to let us down in the short term, giving us little-little
disappointments and let downs. But it saves us from major collapses in the long
term.
One may wonder why this guy is
preaching about relationships. Yours truly tries to speak from his own
experiences. Experiential knowledge is very near to truth. I did my own set of
fabulous dancing for seven ears—just once in life and with one person only. I
can feel myself almost boasting about the fact. It simply means I have to clear
more webs from around my eyes to see more clearly. It’s wise to learn from
one’s experience.
Using my creativity I built up a
grandiose avatar, almost like a shining angel, and became the crowning prince
in her big eyes. In flying too high I burnt my wings. So couldn’t afford to fly
anymore after seven years. When I landed on the plain of normalcy she felt
cheated on witnessing my normal colors and mundane songs; her dreams broken,
her shining angel merely a common person like anyone around, no longer able to
maintain her beautiful dream. There was a normal crow cawing around her. But
I’m happy that these are the days of women empowerment. Confident,
self-standing, glamorous, with a smile to kill and eyes that could intoxicate a
dozen men with a single glance, I saw her flying away with a beautiful swan who
was flying on seventh heaven to fill up the slots of her expectations. ‘You
idiot, you too will fall one day!’ I cawed from the ground. Even as a
pretending spiritualist I am happy that he too fell within a couple of years. I
take it as mark of victory for having flown more than him. I’m not bothered
about other men but at least I viewed him as a rival.
Normal cawing has its own
benefits. It taught me poetry. There were emotional storms in the tea-cup which
I amply cashed by forcibly trying to be philosophical in nature. Lost love, or
for that matter any type of loss, is invisibly preparing you for many other
gains in many forms. There comes a day when you actually feel gratitude for
those losses for what you late became. You realize that those losses were meant
to make you what you are today. So I respect the past without any grudges, but
I’m far happier with my present and give due credit to all the experiences I
went through.
I also realized that maybe I had
punched far-far above my weight in wooing and actually winning her. But how
long you will keep the arena clear of rivals if the girl is such a head turner
that there are at least a dozen men dancing to her tunes with their tongues
out? To match her big aura I too had acquired larger dimensions like a
porcupine spreading its thorns to look more imposing. All said, as a man I take
full responsibility for creating those expectations. And as Buddha said
expectations breed sufferings—at one end at least, if not both. Most
importantly, I’m happy for her. Why should men have all the fun? The women have
been subjugated for too long and they have lots to cover up in enjoyment and
normal fun which we the men have enjoyed so far.
Thankfully, I seem to have spent
all the wooing fuel in one go. Wise people don’t need to repeat the same
experience to get the same lesson again and again. As far as beautiful girls
are concerned, I am able to impersonally appreciate them like a flower, with a
pleasant detachment. I connect more to old women with their motherly aura and saintly
faces carrying the majestic wrinkles of age. Maybe losing my mother is a far bigger
weight on my soul than losing the woman I loved.
These days, while watching the colorful
birds dancing and singing in the documentaries to woo their ladies I become
very conscious, even embarrassed. I cannot blame them. All of us are birds in
the same way. But I always wag my admonishing finger and mutter, ‘Son, take
care! You will have to pay for this!’
And now on a serious note. Retain
your simple colors, ordinary steps and normal songs while wooing a partner. If
he or she accepts you with your normal stuff that’s well and good. If not, give
it a damn and laugh at all the artificially jumping lover-birds—ranging from
birds in documentaries to the people around you—and go giggling about this
funny game.