At this point, his beloved
turned to him and said, “You know,Tulsidas, if you were to take all this passion
and devotion that you feel toward me and turn it toward God, you’d be
enlightened in no time.”
He thought about this, and
something began to shift in him. He began to take her advice, practicing turning
his heart toward the Divine, and it is said that he became one of the greatest
bhakti yogis (one who practices the yoga of devotion).
It has been said that
relationship is the hardest kind of yoga. Yoga means "union,", and there are
many different kinds, beyond what we typically think of as yoga—there’s Bhakti
Yoga (the practice of love and devotion), Karma Yoga (the yoga of selfless
service), Raja Yoga (the eight-limbed path that emphasizes states of
meditation), just to name a few. These are all seen as paths to union with the
Divine.
Many say that union with God
through loving another person (in any kind of relationship) is the most
difficult of all paths. Stories have been told about devoted spiritual seekers
who go to live in monasteries for several years. They become very masterful at
sitting with themselves. They achieve great states of concentration and bliss.
They experience great insights, expanded awareness, and deep peace. Then, when
it’s time to re-enter society, they go home to their family of origin, and it
all goes out the window at the dinner table.
Meditation teachers joke that
if you really want to test how spiritually evolved you are, go home to be with
your family for the weekend.
For one human being to
love another: that is perhaps
the most difficult of all our tasks, the ultimate, the
last test and proof, the work for which all other work
is but preparation. ~Rainer Maria Rilke
the most difficult of all our tasks, the ultimate, the
last test and proof, the work for which all other work
is but preparation. ~Rainer Maria Rilke
The challenge we face as
humans is that we have this heart that seeks union, but we also have this ego
that wants to protect, defend, hold on to its separateness. Through the workings
of the ego, we blame, go victim, are overcome with jealousy, attempt to
dominate and control, compare ourselves and our loved ones to everybody
else, and on and on.
The heart,
however, our wellspring of True Love, wants to surrender, to lose its
separateness, to merge. It is spacious and open and soft, whereas the ego is
hard and contractive.
The greatest longing that we
have in this life is known as the "Great Desire," it is the longing for union
with the Beloved, with that presence that is the Source of all Love. Our own
beloved, our partner, becomes a vessel into which this Love is poured, a channel
through which God’s love flows.
The most conscious love
relationships are ones in which both partners are “triangulating with God.”
Spirit becomes the focal and guiding point in the relationship. The love then
becomes less about your own individual desires and needs, and more about the big
picture. Something Loves through you. Something that is bigger than both of you
is loving through you. And the purpose of the relationship is to lift
one another’s hearts up to God, rather than the satisfaction of your desires and
my desires.
Eckhart Tolle, author of
The Power of Now, says that “The purpose of relationship is not to
make you happy, but to wake you up.”
So what about this experience
of falling in love? Ram Dass has a wonderful way of describing what really
happens when we fall in love. He explains that we go through
our lives like hungry ghosts, insatiable, needing and wanting to be filled up
with love. There’s a sense of desperation for that feeling, and we feel deprived
when we don’t have a partner. When we do feel adored by another person, we get
so high from it that we can get hooked on that kind of attention --so it is very
much like an addiction.
It’s as if the love inside of
us is all locked up, and we are like these human locks walking around looking
for a key. Then, one day we find the person who acts as our key, and boom! We
say that we’re in love. And that feeling of being in love makes us feel
expansive,as if we’re walking on air. Colors look brighter, we feel fully alive
and joyful. The experience of loving someone cracks us right
open.
But where we get confused is
that we say “I think I’m in love with him or with her” rather
than "I think I’m in love." Where we get fooled is that we believe we’re in love
with the other person, but what’s really happened is that that person has become
the key that has unlocked the vast reservoir of love that is our own true
nature. It was in us all along.
So, said rather
unromantically, “I love you” means: “You are the key stimulus that is opening me
to the place in myself where I am love, which I can’t get to except through
you.”
Now whether we touch into that
vast ocean of love within us through a romantic partner, through meditation,
through a guru, or taking psychedelic drugs, we get addicted to the method that
got us there. We want to hold on to that state so badly, because this person or
substance has worked to tune us to the place in ourselves that is the Awareness
of Love. So we end up becoming very addicted to the vehicle. So, if it is
another person that has opened us up to this love, we get very attached to being
in the presence of that other person, and then starts the fear, possessiveness,
jealousy, “I can’t live without you” “don’t ever leave me”, and all those other
states of mind and behavior that are really not love at all (just listen to pop
songs on the radio--it's all there!). We create a hell realm around the addiction
to the vehicle for coming to love.
In other words, we get so
caught in the relationship that we can’t ever arrive at the essence
of dwelling in Love.
The mind has veiled the heart
from its boundless merging with everything else in the universe. And when we
fall in love with somebody, that veil is lifted, at least temporarily, and we
come back into the place in ourselves where we feel whole and complete and
expansive.
In a spiritually-based
relationship, we move from the place of “I Love You” to “We are In Love
together.” We are meeting in the space of love. Once we can unhook from seeing
the other person as the vehicle to get us there, then we realize that this is
something arising from within us, and the neediness and desperation around being
in relationship starts to dissolve. We can move beyond needful relationship to
partnership as celebration. Loving is happening through us.
What about those of us who are
single? Not being partnered, whether by choice or not, provides us with an
opportunity to practice being one’s own beloved, to practice dipping into that
wellspring within. If loneliness arises, it can be a great gift that turns one's
heart toward Spirit. The great Sufi poet Hafiz has written:
Don't surrender your
loneliness so quickly.
Let it cut more
deep.
Let it ferment and season
you
As few human or even divine
ingredients can.
Something missing in my heart
tonight
Has made my eyes so soft, my
voice so tender,
My need of God absolutely
clear.
So we have this Longing, this
Great Desire, for union with Spirit, and essentially all other desires we have
are sublimations of this Great Desire. Even the desire for a loving relationship
is our longing for God. Because when we do connect with another human being at
the heart level, where we feel completely and fully loved and understood and
cherished, it is for many of us the closest we get to God in our lifetimes.
There are other avenues, but a loving partnership is for many of us the access
point, the portal, to that experience of oneness with God, of God loving us
completely. And the challenge we face is learning how to sustain that experience
of being in Love in our journey through all the pitfalls of the egoic mind the
landscape of the personality, and to eventually come to see this love as
originating in ourselves.
Once we can see Loving as
originating within us, and happening through us, then we can see Love
everywhere, and anything can become the stimulus. The curve of a branch covered
with new fallen snow. A fragrant blossom, the song of a bird, a trickling
stream… our own breath moving in and out…
If we see all of that as God’s
love for us, then everything we do becomes a dance with the
Beloved.
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