THE SPIRITUAL LIFE
Spirituality
is not a way to enjoy better our 'life', ie., to enjoy in a better way the
pleasures that are derived from the sense objects. Spirituality has to do with
the death of our 'life'.
Spirituality has to do with the death of desires, likes and dislikes, of wanting and don’t wanting, of preferring and don’t preferring, of attraction and repulsion, etc., which constitute what we call as ego.
Spirituality has to do with the abandonment of sense-pleasures* for the sake of the enjoyment of peace, freedom and eternal bliss of the spirit.
Truly, it is not possible to enjoy at the same time both, the bliss of the spirit and the sense-pleasure because the former is possible with a pure mind and the later with an impure passionate mind and also because they dwell in different places. The bliss divine lies in the heart and the pleasure in the senses and the sensual mind. If our attention dwells in the senses we cannot enjoy the bliss of the spirit and on the contrary if our attention dwells in the silent space within our heart we cannot enjoy the sense pleasures.
We have to choose between the eternal bliss and the temporal pleasure which is the womb of suffering; we have to choose between the illusion and the truth.
Jesus Christ said:
“No one can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and money."
Spirituality has to do with the death of desires, likes and dislikes, of wanting and don’t wanting, of preferring and don’t preferring, of attraction and repulsion, etc., which constitute what we call as ego.
Spirituality has to do with the abandonment of sense-pleasures* for the sake of the enjoyment of peace, freedom and eternal bliss of the spirit.
Truly, it is not possible to enjoy at the same time both, the bliss of the spirit and the sense-pleasure because the former is possible with a pure mind and the later with an impure passionate mind and also because they dwell in different places. The bliss divine lies in the heart and the pleasure in the senses and the sensual mind. If our attention dwells in the senses we cannot enjoy the bliss of the spirit and on the contrary if our attention dwells in the silent space within our heart we cannot enjoy the sense pleasures.
We have to choose between the eternal bliss and the temporal pleasure which is the womb of suffering; we have to choose between the illusion and the truth.
Jesus Christ said:
“No one can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and money."
Money has no valid in itself, it is only a mean to fulfill our desires.
NOTE: sense-pleasures*:
Sensual pleasure and the enjoyment of
the sense objects are two different things. The sensual pleasure is the
result of the projection of lusty passionate energy (which is
crystallized in our astral body and it is related to rajas guna) on the
sensory object we experience, while the enjoyment of an object is the
natural experience of the pleasant sensation which is caused by the
interaction of the mind with object through the particular sense. When
for example we eat a chocolate we can experience both, the pleasant
sensation and pleasure which is caused by the lusty ego by
identification, projection and superimposition or we can experience only
the pleasant sensation if our mind is free from lust and passion.
Sensual pleasure
When
our mind is in contact with the sense objects or when our mind imagines
the sense objects, the vital-ego projects on them its lusty passionate
energy and gives us the experience of pleasure and satisfaction. This
passionate energy clouds our power of discrimination and thus we fail to
realize that the pleasure has nothing to do with the object itself.
Thus we become attached to the object seeking to repeat the same
experience in order to experience the same pleasure again and again.
The lusty passionate vital-ego (rajasic ego) is seeking continuously
pleasure because it is made of the pleasure of past experiences. This
lusty vital-ego is what Dr. Freud called as Id. This passionate energy
assumes the form of like-dislike and desire and it is what deludes us
and prevents us to realize our true nature and enjoy the peace and bliss
divine.
Due
to this passionate vital-energy the moment we experience a sense
object, a vasana (subtle desire) for this object is created in our
subconscious. This desire becomes a tendency in the subconscious mind
and compels us to seek and experience the same object again and again in
order to experience pleasure. By repetition of the same pleasure
attachment is developed, which can take the form of addiction when it is
very strong. Due to the vital-ego our mind is occupied daily by
thoughts about the objects that give us pleasure as well as pleasant
sensations and comfort. The vital-ego (which is essentially lust and
desire) assumes also the form of the lower emotions of anger, fear,
disappointment, impatience, anxiety, greed, agony, etc. which cause in
us the psychological suffering.
The
only pleasure which is not a product of projection is the sexual
pleasure. When we excite the sexual energy then we naturally experience
pleasure. However a lusty passionate mind ads to the natural sexual
pleasure an imaginary pleasure by projection and imagination. This is
more obvious in the sexual dreams in which we experience an imagined sexual
pleasure by dreaming sexual scenes. The lusty vital-ego has been
created by the sexual pleasure with orgasm. According the gunas there is
the sattvic way to experience sexual pleasure as well as the rajasic
and the tamasic which is related with sexual perversions.
The enjoyment of objects, is something different from the pleasure.
When our mind is free from the passionate lusty energy (predominates
the sattva guna in the mind) then when we experience the sense objects,
we experience their qualities and some kind of pleasant or unpleasant
sensations. There is natural detachment and dispassion from the sensory
experience.
The sensory
experience, in which the lusty ego-energy is not engaged, doesn't create
pleasure, attachment and desire. The very moment that the
sense-experience finishes we forget the experience and we are totally
focused in the present moment. There can be a preference to some kind of
food for example but the absence of this food doesn't cause any
suffering in our mind. Our mind is free from attachment and worldly
thoughts and rejoices always the peace and ananda of our true nature.
The difference of experience of a pure sattvic mind and an impure mind in relation with sense objects is this:
1. A pure mind is detached from the experience and the object itself and experiences with clarity the qualities of sense objects together with the pleasant or unpleasant sensations.
The difference of experience of a pure sattvic mind and an impure mind in relation with sense objects is this:
1. A pure mind is detached from the experience and the object itself and experiences with clarity the qualities of sense objects together with the pleasant or unpleasant sensations.
2. The impure mind identifies with
the object and experiences the qualities of sense objects together with
the pleasant or unpleasant sensations (without the clarity of the pure
mind) and plus pleasure, which is the product of the passionate energy
crystallized in our astral body.