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Meditation is Finding Your
Center
One problem with living at your periphery is that it forces you to relate to other people at theirs. They, in turn, will be "on edge" with you. Your understanding of them, and theirs of you, will be a view from the outside; it will therefore be superficial. As opposed to the concept stated earlier, "center everywhere, circumference nowhere," most people perceive life as "circumference everywhere, center nowhere." The secret of understanding is to get mentally inside whatever it is you are trying to understand—to gaze outward, so to speak, from its center rather than inward from its periphery. The secret of understanding other people is to identify with them at their center. To find the center of anything or anyone, first withdraw to your own center and project your feelings empathetically from that point. Meditation is the process of
finding your own center. Techniques exist for doing so, but success
depends also to a great extent on holding the right attitudes. Let me
first discuss some of those attitudes. Then in the next chapter I’ll
discuss the techniques. Self-Acceptance The first attitude fundamental to "centering" is self-acceptance. You are who you are. Make the best of it, and envy no one for what he or she is. Don’t draw comparisons between you and others: Encourage yourself, rather, in your efforts to attain your own highest potential. Self-acceptance will come progressively as you try to live up to the highest that is in you. Unless you are already in superconsciousness, you cannot but recognize the fact that an inner conflict exists between your soul’s call to the heights, and the siren call of temptation to the depths. You can’t laugh off soul-longing, though you may try. Soul-conscience is not something imposed on us from without. It rises spontaneously from within ourselves. Often in history, soul-conscience has pitted individuals against society—it brought Jesus Christ to the cross, and Socrates to the poisonous cup of hemlock. True conscience is innate. It
is the silent voice of the soul. To achieve self-acceptance, you must be
clear in your true conscience. Such clarity comes only when we accept that
our higher Self is our eternal reality. Needless to say, one doesn’t
achieve this degree of self-acceptance in a single leap. So long as you
sincerely resist your lower impulses, and strive toward your own inner
heights, your conscience will be reasonably clear, and you will find
yourself able to achieve that measure of emotional and psychic relaxation
without which it is not possible to find rest at one’s center. Kindness Acceptance leads to the second
attitude necessary for finding your own center: kindness. To achieve that
clarity of conscience which is the companion of self-acceptance, you
should practice kindness also toward yourself. You’ll never overcome your
failings by hating your shortcomings, nor by hating yourself for indulging
in them. Of course, you shouldn’t allow kindness to excuse them. In true
kindness to yourself, you should work, rather, to strengthen yourself in
virtue. Seek always your own highest potentials. If this means being stern
with yourself occasionally, so be it. But never be judgmental. Kindness is
necessary also for understanding other people. In fact, without it, there
can never be acceptance of them. By kind acceptance you will find yourself
intuitively aware of them at their center. Attunement The more you attune yourself from your center to the center in everything, the more you will find that there is a sympathetic inter-relationship in the universe that makes possible the perfect understanding of all things. Depend not on intellectual analysis, which separates things and compartmentalizes them, but try to feel the heart of whatever it is you are trying to understand. Anandamoyi Ma, a saint with whom I spent some time in India, was illiterate. But if scholars asked her to explain some difficult or obscure scriptural text, she would do so to their full satisfaction. All she asked was that someone read it to her first. She once told me, "I could speak English, if I concentrated on it." She went on to say a few words in English, laughing merrily as she did so. Paramhansa Yogananda could
converse easily with people of specialized knowledge, such as physicians,
using their own terminology as though he’d been to medical school himself.
As another example, a lady in Mexico City who spoke no English had a
private interview for one hour with Yogananda, who spoke no Spanish. "I
don’t know how it happened," she told me years later, "but we understood
each other perfectly." A Process of Unlearning Finding your own center, then, is not a process of divorcing yourself from objective reality, but of touching that universal center of which all objective reality is a manifestation. To do so bestows far greater than normal comprehension. And this comprehension differs radically from the usual understanding gleaned from superficial facts and observations. Wisdom gained from tuning in to one’s own center is not at all like going to school, where the goal is to learn. Meditation is a process of unlearning. I don’t mean that we should try to forget all the knowledge we acquired at school. That knowledge has its place, and its own usefulness. Meditation, moreover, is not a path to intellectual ineptitude: Quite the contrary, it greatly sharpens the intellect. What we must "unlearn," instead, are the limitations of delusion imposed on us by our egos.
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