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Have you ever
wondered why you sometimes wake up and sail through your day without any sense
of stress, frustration or angst - while on another day stress and angst seem to
be the themes of your existence? Is it in the water? Are we just the victim of
random events that propel us without choice into unhappiness and stress? Do we
have a choice in the matter?
Seekers, including the ancient yogis, have asked this question for
thousands of years. Why do some events bother me while others do
not? Why is it that the same event on one day seems to pass without
a thought, when on another day it seems to become the very source of
my entire life's suffering? And, most importantly, what, if
anything, can I do about this?
Where does stress come from?
Most of us perceive stress and anxiety as coming from an outside
source. You are stuck in traffic going 20 miles an hour on the
freeway, and all you can think about is how the traffic is driving
us crazy. Outside source to blame for our internal state. You step
on the scale and it tells you your weight is five pounds more than 2
days before-your mood plummets. Outside source to blame for internal
state. Your daughter announces that she will be moving back in with
you indefinitely. You have budgeted the entire year to a penny-for
yourself alone-and can finally afford that course you have been
longing to take. Well, not anymore. Outside source to blame for
internal state. We all have criteria for what we think will make us
happy. For some of us, it is losing weight, finding the perfect
partner, gaining the approval of our peers, or having lots of money.
But there is a hidden subtext to our criteria for happiness that is
often the root of the very suffering we are trying to avoid.
Implicit in the desire to have money is the fear of being poor.
Implicit in the desire to have a partner is the need to not be
alone. Implicit in the desire to be thin is the implication that if
I'm fat, I am not allowed to be happy.
By
becoming attached to the idea that life needs to be a certain way in
order for me to be happy, I sow the seeds of my own potential
unhappiness. If having money means being happy, not having money
means being unhappy. If I equate a partner with happiness, then
being alone means being unhappy.
We
are all programmed with a random set of criteria-conscious or
unconscious mostly programmed by our past experiences, our culture,
family-and even past lives-which determines the unconscious "rules"
by which I decide whether I can allow myself to be happy and
stress-free or not. If my "rules" are fulfilled - if I weigh 125, I
am within the parameters of being allowed to feel happy - so I do.
But if my "rules for happiness," which I myself have set, are not
met, if I should get on a scale and see the number 130, I will not
allow myself to be happy.
Do
you see how this works? It is each of us-not-life that determines
our level of happiness. How our life circumstances measure up to our
criteria determines our level of happiness. In essence, each of us
decides whether we can be happy or not. No life circumstance, no
person, no event determines our level of happiness - we decide for
ourselves.
This does not mean that we cannot have preferences. The trap is
becoming so attached to our preferences that we cannot let go and
allow life to show up as it will. Life has no allegiance to my
criteria or me. It will show up how it shows up - like the rain
does. The events of life have moved in their own rhythms and ways
long before I was born and will continue long after I die.
Things happen. They are not personal. But we take them personally.
We take the impersonal events of life-events that are much like the
rain - and personalize them. We say, "God, if you love me you will
not make it rain today." Then, if it rains, we decide we are mad at
God. How is that? God is in every moment as it is unfolding now. How
can I put any criteria on how God should show up? And who am I to
decide God loves me if one thing happens and that God hates me if
something else happens? This is all pure fabrication - another
example of how we set up criteria for how life is to show up and
then suffer when our criteria go unmet.
Rain will rain when it rains. It will happen when the meteorological
conditions are present. We are the ones who put conditions on the
rain and say, "If it rains, I will be unhappy." Okay, now I am
unhappy - it rained. Whose fault is that? Is it the rain's fault or
is it my fault? It's mine. I am the one who decided that reality
should be different than it is.
The Reality Management Program
Yogis saw that our "rules" about how life needs to be in order for
us to be happy are the root of all suffering. From the point of view
of yoga, we have two choices. Choice number one is what I call the
Reality Management Program. We spend our life energy trying to get
all the people around us to fit our criteria do, say, act, just how
we want so that we can feel happy. We train people around us-our
close friends and our loved ones. We let them know, verbally or
non-verbally, how they need to act in order to get our love. We do
it at work as well. We put our entire sense of self into the success
we achieve. We try to make reality fit our idea of success-more
money, better title, recognition. People spend their whole lives
just working on getting reality to fit this picture of "success" so
that they can be happy.
Realizing that the Reality Management Program is an uncertain
strategy for lasting happiness is something that each of us has to
recognize for ourselves. After many years, lifetimes even, of
struggling to find contentment in this way, some fortunate people
start to realize that for the amount of energy they are putting into
the Reality Management Program, it is not producing lasting
happiness. It is a dead end. Only when the individual realizes this,
can the spiritual journey begin.
If
Reality Management doesn't work, why do all of us do it?
Take a look at some of the criteria that regularly operate in your
life. The ones that you say, "If only _ then, I would be happy." Now
imagine that you have that thing that you so yearn for. Imagine how
you would feel. Happy? Content? My guess is that, for a moment at
least, you would experience a state of "not wanting anything more."
A state of contentment in which, for that moment at least, you feel
complete. Nothing needs to be different than it is and you can
completely be at rest. I would call this state the state of Being in
which we experience-everything is okay, nothing needs to be
different completion or wholeness.
I
suggest that the reason we all stick so fervently to Reality
Management is that in our own convoluted way, we are searching for
the state of Being. We are searching for the experience of
completeness, of not wanting anything more, of integration. We are
searching for that which is the purpose and meaning of
yoga-wholeness-could we but realize it.
With the Reality Management Plan, we are depending on outside
circumstances to create an inner state. Since outside circumstances
have a life of their own, this is a gamble. With choice number two,
the Way of the Yogi, we begin with the assumption that the state of
being we are looking for is already present. It is not a state that
can be added to or found by achieving anything outside since it
already is here.
Choice number two, the Way of the Yogi, comes down to this.
Be
free from the need for anything to show up differently than it is in
order to be happy.
If
anything you do has a subtext of "in order to," you are in reality
management. In the Way of the Yogi, we sincerely devote our lives to
letting go of any conditions we have about how life needs to show
up. We practice relaxing into the moment no matter what is taking
place. When we face situations that we normally would react to, we
catch ourselves and say, "Can I relax with this?" "What about this?"
It is not about perfection, it is like a game. Watch what catches
you can pull you back into reality management. By and by you will
notice that just by putting your attention on this intention you
will be able to relax with more and more things happening in your
life.
How does the physical practice of Hatha Yoga tie into this? The
physical practice of yoga is useful in two ways. First, the practice
is intended to put demands on the body and mind in laboratory
conditions so that we can see our habitual tendency to try to manage
reality. We try to escape from the discomfort, physical, mental or
emotional in the pose in much the same way we do in life. As we
learn to better allow for all sensations, emotions, thoughts to be
present without needing to comment, fix, judge, rationalize, or
change the experience in any way, we are in practice for life
circumstances where we are called on to do the same. Second, as we
progressively learn to bypass the tendencies of the mind to manage
reality, we drop into the state of being that is always present. In
the absence of striving to achieve anything or make anything happen
we experience the Being that we are. Yoga becomes the practice
ground for learning to live from choice number two-the Way of the
Yogi.
Courtesy:
http://www.healthandyoga.com.
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