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Spiritwalk
Readings
Ram Dass
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- Being Love
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- The most
important aspect of love is not in giving or the receiving: it’s in the
being. When I need love from
others, or need to give love to others, I’m caught in an unstable
situation. Being in love, rather
than giving or taking love, is the only thing that provides stability. Being
in love means seeing the Beloved all around me.
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- I’m not
interested in being a “lover.” I’m interested in only being love. In
our culture we think of love as a relational thing: “ I love you” and
“you are my lover.” But
while the ego is built around relationship, the soul is not. It wants only
to be love. It’s a true joy, for example, to turn someone whom you
didn’t initially like into the Beloved. One way I practice doing so is by
placing a photograph of a politician with whom I intensely disagree on my puja
table- my altar. Each morning
when I wake up, I say good morning to the Buddha, to my guru, and to the
other holy beings there. But I find that it’s with a different spirit that
I say, “Hello Mr. Politician.” I know it sounds like a funny thing to
do, but it reminds me of how far I have to go to see the Beloved in
everybody. Mother Teresa has described this as “seeing Christ in all his
distressing disguises.” When I realized that Mother Teresa was actually
involved in an intimate love affair with each and every one of the poor and
the lepers she was picking up from the gutters in India, I thought to
myself, “ That’s the way to play the game of love.” And that is what I
have been training myself for the last past quarter century: to see and be
with the Beloved everywhere.
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- One of the
interesting aspects of seeing the Beloved in this way is that it doesn’t
require the other person to see him- or herself as the Beloved. All that’s
necessary is that I focus on my own consciousness properly. It’s
interesting to notice, though, how warmly people respond to being seen as
the Beloved, even if they don’t know what’s happening. (Of course, it
all assumes that all your feelings are genuine and that you aren’t
compelled to act on them or to lay any sort of trip on the other person. The
idea is simply to live and breathe among the Beloved.
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- The way I
work at seeing others (like the politician), as the beloved is to remind
myself, “ This is another soul, just like me, who has taken a complicated
incarnation, just as I have. I don’t want to be in this incarnation any
more than he wants to be in mine. But since I want to rest in my soul and
not in my ego, I would like to give everybody the opportunity to do the
same.”
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- If I can see
the soul that happens to have incarnated into a person that I don’t care
for, then my consciousness becomes an environment in which he or she is free
to come up from air if he or she wants to. That person can do so because
I’m nit trying to keep him or her locked into being the person that he or
she has become. It’s liberating to resist another person politically, yet
still see him or her as another soul. That’s what Krishna meant when he
said, “I’m not going to fight, because they are all my cousins on the
side.” We may disagree with one another in our current incarnation, but we
are all souls.
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- A story I
have told many times reinforces this point. Some years ago I put out I put
out a set of records called Love,
Serve, Remember. The records- which had music, readings from the Gospel
of John, and all kinds of neat things- came in an album with a beautiful
booklet with text and pictures. It was a wonderful package, and we sold we
sold it by mail order for about $4.50.
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- I showed the
album to my father. Dad was a wealthy Boston Lawyer- a conservative
Republican, a capitalist, and, at the time, the President of a railroad. HE
looked over the album and said, “Great job here! But, gee, you know- four
and a half dollars? You could probably sell this for ten dollars- fifteen
dollars, even!”
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- I
said, “Yeah, I know”
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- “Would
fewer people buy in if it were more expensive?,” he asked.
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- “No,”
I relied. “Probably the same number would buy it”
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- “Well I
don’t understand you,” he pressed on. “You would sell it for ten, and
your selling it for four- fifty? What’s wrong, are you against capitalism
or something?”
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- I tried to
figure out how to explain to him how our approaches are differed. I said,
“Dad didn’t you just try a law case for Uncle Henry?”
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- “ Yeah,”
he replied, “ and it was a damned tough case. I spent a lot of time in the
law library.”
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- I asked,
“Did you win the case?” And he answered, “Yeah”, I won it.
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- Now, my
father was a very successful attorney, and he charged fees that were
commensurate with his reputation. So I continued. “Well, I bet you charged
him a hand and a led for that one.”
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- Dad was
indignant at the suggestion. “What, are you out of your mind? That’s
uncle Henry- I couldn’t charge him.”
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- “ Well,
that’s my problem,” I said. “If you find anyone who isn’t Uncle
Henry, I’ll rip them off.”
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- The point I
was trying to make is that when you see the Beloved all around you, everyone
is family and everywhere is love. When I allow myself to really see the
beauty of another being, to see the inherent beauty of soul manifesting
itself, I feel the quality of love in that beings presence. It doesn’t
matter what we’re doing. We could be talking about our cats because we
happen to be picking out cat food in the supermarket, or we simply could be
passing each other on the sidewalk. When we a being love, we extend outward
an environment that allows to act in different, more loving and peaceful
ways than they are used in behaving. Not only does it allow them to be more
loving, it encourages them to be so.
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- In 1969 I
was giving a series of lectures in New York City. Every night, taking the
bus up Third Avenue, I got the same extraordinary bus driver. Every night it
was rush hour in one of the busiest cities in the world, but we had a warm
word and a caring presence for each person who got on the bus. He drove us
as if he were sculling a boat down a river, flowing through the traffic
rather than resisting it. Everyone who got on the bus was less likely to
kick the dog that evening or to be otherwise hostile and unloving, because
of the loving space that driver had created. Yet all he was doing was
driving the bus. He wasn’t a therapist or a great spiritual teacher. He
was simply being love.
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- Remember, we
are all affecting the world every moment, whether we mean to or not. Our
actions and states of mind matter, because we are so deeply interconnected
with one another. Working on our own consciousness is the most important
thing that we are doing at any moment, and being love is a supreme creative
act.
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