There
are many wondrous things to behold in this brief and brilliant life. But of all
the ways the infinite universe baffles our senses, defies our explanations, and
sustains our lives, these are the seven best things.
1. Freedom
Freedom is both a heartening gift
and a terrifying responsibility. It comes in many forms – freedom of movement,
freedom of conscience, freedom of speech. But behind every form of freedom is a
single guiding principle – as rational human beings, each of us possesses the
tools to best determine the course of our life. This optimistic assessment
stands up to close scrutiny, which is not to say that everyone always makes the
best decisions, whether for themselves or for the interests of the community.
Still, our humanism demands it. It is a profoundly loving act to grant another
their freedom. When we remove the hindrances to freedom we honor our highest
calling and facilitate the fullest possible expression of our inherent
greatness.
2. Love
In the game of life love trumps
every other hand. Nothing matters more than the sustenance love offers. What is
best in us grows strongest in its nurturing light. Each of us is called by our
natures to both receive and offer this eternal spring. Love takes many forms
and finds its way through innumerable channels, penetrating even the most
hardened barriers. Yet in the end, love is just a word, a word we’ve chosen to
signify the interconnective tissue of Being itself. Love is the name we’ve
given to the nurturing energy of life – a name for the fundamentally nameless. Love
informs our simple kindness and emboldens our struggle for justice. It is the
yearning of the sapling for the sun, and the longing of an infant for her
mother. We reach out for each other, sometimes skillfully, sometimes not,
knowing instinctually that love is the food that sustains all of our souls.
3. Truth
Truth is a word we use for that
which is ultimately real. Whenever the word “truth” is used the first question
that pops up is, “Whose truth?” But here we are not using the word in such a
pedestrian fashion, as if unlimited and transcendent Truth could be contained
in any single proposition. Truth statements, bound as they are by language and
thought, are necessarily partial and limited. This is not a debate. We are
simply using the word truth to point to the ground of Being itself, beyond all
thoughts and forms. In traditions willing to personify this ultimate reality we
hear the many names of God. In traditions less interested in personification
words like Brahman and Dao emerge. But beyond the names and forms lay a simple,
universal source. Because of the limitations of human perception and cognition,
we must make peace with the fact that our knowledge of truth remains a work in
progress, comprised of little more than fleeting insights, partial glimmers,
and a general sense of direction. A sailboat never moves in a straight line. It
moves to and fro zigzagging across the moving surface of the water. So too we
move dialectically across the landscape of our collective understandings,
trusting the overall direction more than the momentary tack. Truth is the
harbor calling us home.
4. Beauty
One of the great contributions of
the Renaissance was its assertion that Beauty is Truth, and that God reveals
His infinite perfection through the pleasing forms of this world, both natural
and created. This revolutionary declaration simultaneously elevated the role of
the artist in society and redeemed nature from the degraded state to which it
had been assigned by the medieval church. Artists were no longer seen as decorative
laborers or worse, liars, despite their crafty use of illusions and metaphors,
but as geniuses whose vision and expertise opened up the gates of heaven. And
celebrating natural beauty as a divine realm paved the way for the later
Romantic and environmental movements. Beauty is a language to be read with the
faculty of intuition. And intuition is that faculty of knowing best equipped to
apprehend truth. Our love of art and our awe before nature enlivens and
nourishes our moral sentiment, strengthening our courage to honor truth and
embody love. Beauty is our source and our soul. Without it we would whither
like flowers cut from the vine.
5. Grace
Grace is a word normally
associated with Christianity. But when we lift it off the platform of a single
faith-tradition we find a boundless, universal phenomenon that defies easy
explanation. In personified theologies like Christianity grace is God’s way of
supporting everything in creation. In the less centralized theology of India dharma
expresses the sacred sustenance that upholds the fabric of reality. Even
atheists and agnostics know that they live within a natural order whose
interconnected and mutually supportive structures do more for us than we could
ever do for ourselves. We do not make the air we breathe, the water we drink, the
food that sustains our life, or the sun that grows our food. In every way we
are supported by forces not of our own making, and by the work of thousands of
people around us, most of whom we’ll never meet. Grace is a simple word for a
beautiful and complicated thing. And without it, none of us would for one
moment continue to exist.
6. Life
On our worst days we forget, but
on our best days we remember. Life is a priceless gift. And like a birthday
gift, its bounty is only revealed when we tear off the pretty packaging and dig
deep into what’s inside. Being alive means feeling everything, the pain and the
glory. Despite all our setbacks and suffering we know it’s all worth it. We
would endure a thousand lonely, hollow days for that one golden moment, that
single breakthrough, that shattering illumination. And when we grow a little
older and settle down we learn to stop chasing those moments and realize that
they come unbidden to those who know how to wait, grow still, and see the world
anew with each breath. This is it. And we’re glad it is. A self-actualized life
informed by freedom, love, truth, beauty, and grace is the Holy Grail, nirvana,
and the Kingdom of Heaven. It is the treasure of the quest, the prize of the
sages, the rapture of the saints, and the birthright of every beating heart.
7. You
None of the first six best things
would have any power at all were it not for our ability to perceive and
experience them. As your gratitude for these priceless jewels rises and informs
your thoughts, your actions, your rituals, and your relationships, add yourself
to the list of miraculous wonders. For some reason the universe decided to
express itself as you, in this time and place, and imbue you with all its
consciousness and creative capacity. The worst offense is to waste your life.
Beginning now, vow to honor these seven gifts by removing for yourself and for
as many others as possible any and all impediments to self-actualization. It is
our birthright to be amazing. And it is our sacred responsibility to get out of
our own way.
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