Ten Ways to Nurture Your Spiritual Life
by Deepak Chopra
Intention
is the starting point of any spiritual path. Intention includes will and purpose,
aspiration and highest vision. If you set your intention toward material existence,
that will grow instead. Once you plant the seed of an intention, your soul’s journey
will unfold automatically. Here are several basic intentions that mark a spiritual
life.
I
want to feel god’s presence. This intention is rooted in the discomfort of being isolated and separate.
You can mask it by developing friendships and family ties. Ultimately, however,
each of us needs to feel a sense of inner fullness and peace.
I
want god to aid and support me. God’s presence brings with it the qualities of spirit. At the source,
every quality – love, intelligence, truth, organizing ability, creativity – becomes
infinite. The growth of these things in your life is a sign that you are getting
closer to your soul.
I
want to feel connected to the whole. The soul’s journey takes a person from a fragment state to
one of wholeness. Events start to weave into a pattern. Small details fit together
instead of being scattered and random.
I
want my life to have a meaning. Existence feels empty in separation. This gets healed only by moving
into unity with God. Instead of turning
outward to find your purpose, you feel that just being here, as you are, is the
highest purpose in creation.
I
want to be free of restrictions. Inner freedom is greatly compromised when fear exists, and fear is a
natural outcome of separation. As you come closer to your soul, the old boundaries
and defenses start to melt away. If these basic intentions are present inside
you, God takes the responsibility for carrying them out. Everything else that
you do is secondary. However, you can still exert a great deal of influence through
your everyday conduct. Here are the ground rules for
spiritual life that have proved effective for me personally and that I feel will
work for many people.
1.
Know your intentions.
Don’t
let your false intentions remain masked. Root them out and work on the danger
and fear that keep you attached to them. False intentions take the form of guilty
desires: I want someone else to fail, I want to get even, I want to see bad people
punished, I want to take away something not my own. False
intentions can be elusive; you will notice their existence by the feeling connected
with them – a feeling of fear, greed, rage, hopelessness and weakness. Sense the
feeling first, refuse to buy into it and then remain aware until you find the
intention lurking beneath.
2.
Set your intentions high.
Aim to be a saint and a miracle worker. Why not? If you know
that the goal of inner growth is to acquire mastery, then ask for that mastery
as soon as possible. Don’t strain to work wonders, but don’t deny them to yourself
either. The beginning of mastery is vision; see the miracles around you, and that
will make it easier for greater miracles to grow.
3. See yourself in the light.
The ego keeps its grip by making us feel needy and powerless.
From this sense of lack grows a hunger to acquire everything in sight. Money,
power, sex and pleasure are suppose to fill up the lack,
but they never do. You can escape this package of illusion if you see yourself
not in the shadow fighting to get to God but in the light from the first moment.
The only difference between you and a saint is that your light is small and a
saint’s is great. You are both of the light.
4. See everyone else in the light.
The cheapest way to feel good about yourself is by feeling superior to other people. From this small seed grows every manner
of judgment. A simple formula may help here. When you are tempted to judge another
human being, no matter how obviously he or she deserves it, remind yourself that
everyone is doing the best he or she can from his or her own level of consciousness.
5. Reinforce your intentions every day.
Everyday life is a kind of swirling chaos, and the ego is entrenched
in its demands. You need to remind yourself, day in and day out, of your spiritual
purpose. For some people it helps to write down their intentions; for others,
periods of regular meditation and prayer are useful. Find your center, look closely
at yourself and do not let go of your intention until it feels centered inside
yourself.
6. Learn to forgive yourself.
We all fall into traps of selfishness and delusions when we
least expect it. The chance remark that wounds someone else, the careless lie, the irresistible urge to cheat are universal. Forgive yourself
for being where you are. Apply to yourself the same dictum as to others: you are
doing the best you can from your own level of consciousness. ( I like to remember one master’s definition of the perfect
disciple “One who is always stumbling but never falls”)
7. Learn to let go.
The paradox of being spiritual is that you are always wrong
and always right at the same time. Life is change; you must be prepared to let
go of today’s beliefs, thoughts and actions no matter how spiritual they make
you feel. Every stage of inner growth is good. Each is nurtured by God.
8. Revere what is holy.
Our society teaches us to be skeptical of the sacred. But every
saint is your future, and every master is reaching over his shoulder to look at
you, waiting for you to join him. Human representatives of God constitute an infinite
treasure. Dipping into this treasure will help you open your heart.
9. Allow God to take over.
Most people are addicted to worry, control, overmanagement and lack of faith. Resist the temptation to
follow these tendencies. Don’t listen to the voice that says you have to be in
charge, that constant vigilance is the only way to get anything done. Let spirit
try a new way. Your intention is the most powerful tool at your disposal. Intend
for everything to work out as it should, then let go and allow opportunities and
openings to come your way. The outcome you are trying so hard to force may not
be as good for you as the one that comes naturally. If you could give one percent
of your life over to God every day, you would be the most enlightened person in
the world in three months. Keep that in mind and surrender something, anything,
on a daily basis.
10. Embrace the unknown.
Over the years you formed likes and dislikes; you learned to
accept certain limits. None of this is the real you. The unknown is awaiting you,
an unknown that has nothing to do with the “I” you already know. Some people reach
the edge of illusion only at the moment of death, and then with a long look backward,
one lifetime seems incredibly short and transient. The part of us that we know
is the part that flickers out all too fast. When you feel a new impulse, an uplifting
thought, an insight that you have never acted upon before, embrace the unknown.
Cherish it as the newborn baby. God lives in the unknown, and when you can embrace
it fully, you will be home free.
This article is submitted by Deepak Chopra - www.chopra.com
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