“Empty your mind… empty yourself…you are nothing and nowhere… just floating in the embrace of the universe…” It is a nice idea and one I have heard at the start of many a meditation… and in meditation, such a vision has a place. As a way of living, it is not particularly practical though. Someone has to walk the dog, take out the trash and clean the bathroom… and a person wafting through life being ‘nothing and nowhere’ is unlikely to be getting down and dirty with a scrubbing brush or chasing a recalcitrant hound across a muddy field.
It is such concepts that, for some, consign the whole idea of spirituality to the odd corners of life. It becomes a pastime, something to ‘do’ in spare moments or with a group. It isn’t reality, is it?
For many others though, it is just that… the most eminently practical way to live… not something to do, but something to Be.
But just how can you reconcile the nitty-gritty needs of everyday life with living a spiritual life? Especially when the daily grind seems to get in the way and haul you forcibly back from the Threshold you long to cross?
As a young mother with two small boys creating daily havoc and a longing to pursue my own spiritual studies, I read a chapter in ‘The Training and Work of an Initiate’ by Dion Fortune, one of the most respected esoteric teachers of the past century or so. She wrote of the Path of the Hearthfire and how each moment, each task, every dirty cup or grazed knee could be part of the bricks and mortar of a spiritual life. She explained, with her customary clarity, how every experience and every chore, if the attention is focussed and the intent conscious, becomes a rite… and is, therefore, a very real part of the spiritual journey. She wrote of the Unseen Guest for whom we may keep a place beside the hearthfire and, slowly, I began to understand.
Everything we do, learn or feel becomes part of the fabric of our being. Every choice we make takes us to another fork on that personal road and leaves its mark on who we are and who we will become. Our lives, our experience and our actions are a spiritual journey, whether we recognise it as such, or not. The only difference between those who walk a deliberately spiritual path, regardless of its name, and those who do not, lies in conscious choice, awareness and intent. Each of us may learn and grow without turning our backs on everyday life. All of us have the same rich vein of experience from which to extract alchemical gold.
There comes a point in most of our lives when we begin to question and may turn to whichever spiritual path seems to call us. It is at this point we are also called to question the nature of the vessel we have formed from the gold of experience. ‘Know thyself’, phrased in innumerable ways, is a core tenet of the Mysteries, whatever path we choose.
We learn to see ourselves as a chalice, a vessel made from the raw materials of our personality and experience into which the wine of life has been poured. That vessel may be a thing of beauty… but is more likely to be a little skewed and battered. It may be jewelled with knowledge or made of an earthier clay. It matters little… we do not taste the vessel, it serves only to hold the wine.
There may come a moment when we wish to offer that vessel in dedication, to serve the Light we see. To hold up that vessel and allow the Light to fill it… and to do so, the vessel must first be emptied. Many texts seem to teach that we must turn away from the world, ‘rise above’ our flawed humanity or become detached from the humdrum life. I do not believe that this is so.
Detachment is a cold thing, very different from the non-attachment that embraces all but is enslaved by none.
We are what we are… fully human, full of flaws and imperfect. Yet there is purpose to our imperfection for without it we could neither learn nor grow. Our imperfection is perfect in its design and mirrors something greater. To turn our backs on our humanity is to deny our nature and refuse the value of our unique experience upon this earth.
We craft the vessel from the sum of our experience, its light and its darkness, our gifts and our knowledge, bringing all that we are to its making. We offer our whole self willingly and with love…and such a dedication empties us of the fears and desires of the fragile and transient personality that thinks itself king. There is no ruler in unity.
To be no-thing but whole, to be now-here instead of nowhere… to be present and conscious within the universal embrace… empties the mind of who we think we should be… and allows us to be what we are.
Reblogged this on The Light Behind the Story and commented:
From Sue Vincent:
<3
Your posts usually encourage deep thinking, Sue… but strangely, this one seems to have taken away the ability to think of anything. A kind of meditation?
Perhaps…
Or perhaps we tend to overthink much of the time 😉
A beautiful and powerful post, Sue. So much wisdom in here. Harder said than done, but you’re right that it does come down to “conscious choice, awareness and intent” and practice. 🙂 <3
I don’t believe it is supposed to be hard… I think it should be our natural state of being…but life does get in our way 😉
I was meant to see this tonight – thanks!
Ah…
I totally agree with this way of thinking, Sue. Every little action or thought we take each day is a spiritual one and living in the moment is one of, hardest yet, rewarding experiences. xxx
Every action is part of the journey… it only takes a little attention to make it a conscious part of the path. xx
Very true words, Sue. I’m going on holiday for two weeks, with Becca and our four legged friend to a caravan beside the beach in Sutherland. No internet, so I’ll look forward to catching up when I get back. xxx
That sounds like heaven, Adele…enjoy!
With luck and Covid permitting, we’ll be north and west of Inverness in a couple of weeks…
oh no, just when we’re on our way home. lol we will meet one day. xxx
One of these days 🙂 xx
Reblogged this on Stuart France.