Even Buddhists want to live passionate lives, in spite
of their equanimity. Passion is life force itself, the very energy whose
intensity, love, and enthusiasm for beauty and creativity produced this
infinitely exquisite universe, whose mystery is beyond measure.
If we are to honor the ancient stardust within our DNA, we must become
passionate, we must allow the pulse and power of universal forces free reign in
our lives. For each, this will look different, and yet something in our eyes,
something that is friends with wildness and sudden shifting plates of earth and
collisions in deep space, will look similar and always familiar, as if when we
meet each other, we meet ourselves.
We tend to grow into passion little by little, though we may sometimes take big
leaps, because we are not able to take it in all at once. One day at a time, we
grow into our truly passionate, authentic self and life. One day at a time, we
shed old and useless selves, skins, patterns, fears, and ideas.
Growing into full possession of our passion and authenticity can be supported
by certain principles. Here are some I've found to be useful:
1. Growth is an archeological dig into and through the deepest layers of self.
We must develop patience and persistence, because we are tunneling towards a
direct experience of the conscious, creative source of cosmic manifestation.
This source is our source, our passion, our true self. We need to fall in love
with the process, because we may need to dig and dig, haul tons of dirt, sleep
in dusty tents for a long time. We should not be put off from deeper digging
just because we find a shard of valuable pottery.
2. Growth toward passion is a law unto itself. We cannot apply conventional
standards of measurement. Neither success nor failure; neither good nor bad;
neither right nor wrong exist in the context of growth. If we are on a journey
without end, how can we know of our success, of our achievement, of our
attainment? We can notice our escalating freedom and joy, and how much
happiness we inspire in others. But this is not a goal; we just notice this
happening as a consequence of the process of continuous growth. When we apply
rigid achievement criteria, we immediately condition the process--we create tension
and fear from the beginning. Our path is one of learning, applying, practicing.
The more we grow, the more we are able to grow.
3. You are responsible for your own life. We often develop the habit of blaming
someone for our unhappiness or frustrations; likewise, we hold the hope that
someone will come along and rescue us from what doesn't work in our life. Both
attitudes are false: they do not correspond to reality. The simple fact is:
each one of us has to do our own work. We must create our happiness, our
fulfillment, our joy, our passion.
4. The point of power is now. The past lives within you as the present. Yes, we
are conditioned by the innumerable experiences and decisions that have occurred
in the "past." But where is the past now? It is within us as the
present. Even if we know why everything happened, we would still have to change
what does not work for us in the present. We still have to see clearly into our
life as it is now. We must become conscious of those factors within our psyche
that drive and motivate us. We must become aware of our fears, insecurities,
hopes, and wishes. We must become very conscious and aware of all that happens
now, both within us and around us.
5. No one is to blame. As we liberate ourselves from past conditioning and
patterns of self-suppression, as we discover new reserves of strength and
courage, we might be tempted to blame someone for having obstructed our freedom
in the past. We might want to confront someone for a past hurt and speak a
truth that we had been unwilling to speak. We ought to be careful as we do
this. It is not appropriate to blame someone for our lack of freedom in the
past. No one deserves to be abused just because, from our new vantage point of
clarity and power, we want a different kind of interaction.
6. As we change, our understanding of the past will change. We often feel the
need to come to terms with the past in a definitive way. This is
difficult, and perhaps not necessary. It is important to learn from the past,
and sometimes we will need to resolve or heal something that occurred in the
past so we are not carrying heavy ghosts. Still, how we see and understand what
happened, and who did what to whom, is a function of how we see ourselves now.
As we continue to grow and evolve, our interpretation and understanding of the
past will always reflect new growth and the perspective of higher altitude.
7. We are always free to change our experience of what happens. No one is in
the way. We do not need anyone's permission, nor do we need a certain
configuration of conditions in order to experience life in a free and joyful
way. This may seem untrue, because we associate experience with external
conditions, even with our internal states of mind and emotions. Through
meditation and growth, we discover a place of equanimity, of clarity, and of
happiness that is not a function of external conditions or internal states of
mind and emotions. It is like climbing to the highest point on the highest
mountain, still on the planet but high above everything. We would be wise to
learn how to create the experience of freedom and joy, regardless of external
conditions or internal states.
8. What we discover, we must express, or it is not real. It is not only good,
but necessary, to fully and honestly express one's passion and truth.
Expressing the truth helps us stay free from self-deceit and hypocrisy.
Expressing our truth implies that our deep flows and swirls of motivation, the
creative urges of our soul, penetrate the vital essence of each thought, word, and
action. We are like artists, or dancers, who give themselves to powers of magic
and mystery, and who bring into the world what no one has seen, but when they
do, they recognize what no one has ever seen as being eternal and mundane,
personal and impersonal, real and unreal, stunning and glorious, and on and on
and on.
9. We should try to be fluid and flexible, because nothing stays the same. It
is okay to change our beliefs, attitudes, values, priorities, commitments, and
patterns of reaction and behavior. Life is growth: growth implies learning,
learning implies change. This does not mean we are without a center or core, or
that we are irresponsible and superficial. We can have a solid set of values
and commitments from which we act. We can have goals and intentions. It is just
that we will need to regularly visit these to see if they are accurate and if
they reflect who we are becoming as we grow toward passion and truth. In a
sense, our life is a series of transitions, with each moment being both a self-contained
lifetime and a bridge to new life. We will need to learn how to live gracefully
with change, how to negotiate transitions, how to incorporate our new
discoveries into the arch of our life, spanning unknowable distances.
10. It is important to respect your limits; however, most limits are
self-imposed. It is important that we proceed at our own pace. Since personal
growth is continuous, we need not be in a crushing hurry. We may need to rest,
to take a break, to allow time for the integration of what has been recently
discovered. We might not be ready to see something or deal with something. This
is fine. There are no requirements, no final tests, no punishments. Life is
growth; it is continuous. We need to respect how we need to proceed: the manner,
the pace, the intensity. We should respect our limits. At the same time, let us
not forget that limits are self-imposed. In terms of consciousness and
awareness, we are essentially without limit. But we cannot drink the whole
ocean all at once. The limitations that we encounter and go beyond in the
process of self-discovery are self-created and maintained within us. Still,
let's be kind and gentle with ourselves, and with each other, even as we know
the most important thing in life is to grow towards passion and truth, towards
life, towards full freedom.
You will no doubt create your own set of principles, which will nourish your
growth and which may be of help and support to others. The main thing in life
is to realize that before words filled our heads with seeming reality, there
was, and is, reality itself. The Hindus refer to the qualities of reality, or
consciousness, as Sat-Chit-Ananda: Being-Consciousness-Bliss. I prefer
Walt Whitman's phrase: passion, pulse, and power.
When passion, pulse, and power breach the sea-walls of our language-based
seeming reality and our petty patterns of self-imaging and all our concessions
and self-betrayals and excuses, we hear within us the roar of the cosmos, the
cosmic roar. That's when life begins.
Robert Rabbin is a San
Francisco-based writer and speaker. He is the author of numerous books and
articles, and the founder of Radical Sages, an online hub of global spiritual
activism. For more information,.