So much of life is like the monkey bars we used to travel
across as children. We loved the monkey
bars – swinging from one bar to the next.
One of the first things we had to learn was to let go of the previous
bar – or we could never fully get to the next bar – or the next – or the next.
Now I am considering this analogy of the monkey bars in
relationship to emotions.
On my living room wall there is a quip:
PEACE
To bring peace to
The Earth
Strive to make
Your own life
peaceful
*****
Countless people talk about wanting more peace in their
lives.
How many actually take
the steps to create peace?
To have true and lasting peace here is the short list of
what needs to be released as we travel the monkey bars of the inner landscape:
Wrath
Greed
Sloth
Pride
Lust
Envy
Gluttony
Fear
Looking at this list the releasing and letting go is a daunting
task. It would appear this crossing to
peace has countless start points. There is
a sense of overwhelm with even this short list.
Paramahansa Yogananda* has said, “Everything else can wait,
but your search for God cannot wait.”
Yogananda recognized this turning in with prayer and meditation is the
start point for changing and moving forward. This means prayer and meditation
is a must if we want to free ourselves from the suffering inherent in the
desires of this world. The start to any
real and lasting change, the kind that can bring lasting peace, the kind that
can mean freedom from Wrath, Greed, Sloth, Pride, Lust, Envy, Gluttony, or Fear
is prayer and meditation. I cannot teach
these things as I do not have these things fully. Like you I am a work in progress. Herein I just point the way to those who can
help us out . . .
I had thought that I had outgrown the need or desire to play
on the monkey bars. Guess not. Seems I am still crossing the monkey
bars. I have just switched to the monkey
bars of the inner landscape.
Lahiri Mahasaya** often said - ‘BANAT BANAT BAN JAI’. Literally it means “making, making, one day made” … or in monkey bar lingo …. letting go of the past and making a life of peace moment by moment by moment through the act of “seek first the kingdom of God and all else will be added unto you.”
* http://www.yogananda-srf.org/tmp/py_notitle.aspx?id=44&ekmensel=568fab5c_6_13_btnlink#.VCFr3t90zIU
**Lahiri Mahasaya was born on September 30, 1828, in the village of Ghurni in Bengal, India. As Lahiri Mahasaya exemplified the highest ideals of Yoga, union of the little self with God, he is reverenced as a Yogavatar, or incarnation of Yoga.
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