When on their 1987
masterpiece Joshua Tree U2 sang “I
still haven’t found what I’m looking for” everyone knew exactly what they
meant. We seem hard-wired to search, a behavior we no doubt learned hunting and
gathering all around the world these last hundred thousand years. An
unquenchable longing pushes us toward ever new horizons. We can’t stop.
We’re
driven by the illusion that some new acquisition, some new lifestyle, some new
understanding, some new something
will transform our lives into shimmering palaces of wisdom and bliss. We’ll be
finally, completely happy, and we won’t have to search anymore. But there’s just
one problem: when we finally get what we want the restlessness lingers. We
carry our confusion and neurosis with us into every new situation. Wherever you
go, there you are. Different day, different job, different house, different
marriage, same old suffering.
Some
people even think that if they pack up and move to another town everything will
change. In the recovery world that’s called “doing a geographical,” the
desperate hope that we can shake loose our demons if we run fast and far enough.
But they all hitch a ride – every single one of them. Our demons don’t live in
the outer world – they’re within us. They are
us.
When
Dorothy awoke in her own bed after her mystical journey to Oz, she realized the
truth – “There’s no place like home.” And we are always home. Not only can we
not outrun our problems, turns out we also can’t outrun our solutions. We carry
them all within.
This
is why the paradigm of spiritual searching fails. How can we search for truth
when not one of our steps leads away from it? As we chase from one explanation
to the next, trading one ideology for another, we’re forever cast adrift on the
surface: all our doctrines, theologies, and philosophies exist only at the level
of thought. They are purely conceptual constructs. The unbreakable whole of
life eludes concepts, words, and explanations. Leaving here and going there
won’t make a difference. But slowing down, stopping, and opening up will.
There
are no real, lasting solutions at the level of conceptual, theoretical,
ideological thought. The menu is not the food. The map is not the place. To
search through thought-systems for real transformation is like wandering
through a market with no money to spend. You’re just looking around – you don’t
get to have any of it.
There
can never be real freedom or joy at the level of thought because thoughts are
always about the past or the future. Only in the eternal presence of the Now is
real freedom possible. And it is the work of all authentic spiritual practice
to draw us into the present moment and out of our thought-abstractions. That’s
what ritual is for. That’s what contemplative, centering prayer does. That’s
what luminous, sacred music does. That’s what solitude in nature does. That’s
what selfless, sacred service does. That’s what meditation does.
One
of the most powerful reasons present-minded consciousness is so liberating is
because fear withers in the bright light of the eternal present. Fear is by
definition future-thinking. It’s imaging harmful future outcomes that have not
and will not happen. Fear deals exclusively in the what if. What if I get cancer? What if I forget my lines? What if
this plane crashes? And yet, here and now, we’re cancer-free, we remembered our
lines, and the plane is still in the air. Coming into the present moment
eliminates fear – it simply can’t survive here. Truth won’t let it.
Freedom
from fear is found only in the now.
When you come fully into this present moment you awaken
into the realization that there is nothing you need, nothing you want, nothing
you resent, and nothing you fear – you are safe, you are loved, and you are
whole. The whole world could fall away and not even a ripple would cross the
pool of the bottomless stillness in which you rest like a lily pad.
And it is only from this stillness that you can return to
the field of action and do the significant work that needs to be done, not from
an egotistical stance (I’m here to save
you), but with the humble heart of a servant (How can I help?)
Of all the practices designed to bring us into the
liberating present, none does so much so fast as meditation. Meditation is the
art and science of slipping beneath the surface of the thought stream and
sinking down into the silent depths beneath the waves. Nothing else so
thoroughly and effectively liberates us from the grasp of our habitual
over-thinking. In meditation we simply practice shifting into what Krishna in the
Bhagavad Gita calls the Inner
Witness, that still, silent presence within us. As we learn how to witness our
thoughts instead of identifying with them a subtle shift occurs – we no longer
are our thoughts. Instead, we watch our thoughts drift across the sky like
clouds. We thought we were the clouds, but turns out we’re the sky – the
boundless, spacious awareness in which thoughts arise and fade. And when we
make this shift a subtle joyful peace washes over us. We go beyond the mere concepts
of peace, wellness, and wisdom – we become
peace, wellness, and wisdom.
In the world’s wisdom traditions this is called
embodiment, realization, awareness, or direct experience. It is not properly
“knowledge,” because knowledge is conceptual. Embodied wisdom has nothing to do
with knowledge, religion, theology, doctrine, ideology, beliefs, faith,
scripture, dogma, ritual, liturgy, or anything rooted in the realm of
conceptual thought.
This
is why searching for the truth always fails. The entire model of searching is
based on a false premise. Truth is not something over there. How can you go out
looking for something you already are? In his classic book I Am That Advaita Vedanta teacher Nisargadatta Maharaj put it this
way: “You are universal. You need not and you cannot become what you are
already. Having never left the house you are asking for the way home. Don’t
rely on your mind for liberation. It is the mind that brought you into bondage.
Go beyond it altogether. Enquire Who is
ignorant, and ignorance will dissolve like a dream. The source of
consciousness cannot be an object in consciousness. To know the source is to be
the source.”
Krishnamurti often warned his students about the perils
of attachment to ideology and doctrine, or even teachers. Be wary, he said, of
those who talk about the path. “Truth,” he said, “is a pathless land.” There is
nothing to seek, and nowhere to go. Instead of seeking, slow down, go within
and realize what you are and always
have been.
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