Showing posts with label Nature of Love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nature of Love. Show all posts

Monday, October 4, 2010

Opposites

To understand Love, we must understand the opposites.

Love is often an opposite of either fear, hatred and evil. But Love has no opposite. Fear is the opposite of courage, hatred is the opposite of forgiveness, and evil is often the opposite of good. Courage and forgiveness are both transcendent quality of Love, where they represent Love as a direct experience. Good and Evil are, on the other hand, not really opposites at all. This problem can be understood through the two kinds of opposites. In the truth of Love, we will see that there is a thin line that separates the the nature of opposites: either opposites are complementing or opposing.

Complementing opposites are basically natural: light and dark, hot and cold, high and low, hard and soft. They are all part and whole of this reality. Nothing separates them except in our minds. The experience of complementing opposite is what most spiritual teachings call Oneness.

Oneness is the ultimate sense of unity. It is deep beneath the physical reality we see. It is the essence of connectedness, no matter how different people, things and events may be. In Oneness, opposites do not oppose; rather, they are always one and the same. They are in the same spectrum. Darkness is simply absence of Light, and Coldness is simply absence of Heat. In absence, we define presence and vice versa. At first this would be mind-boggling, but we will further understand this when we understand the next kind of opposite.

Opposing opposites are distorted view of the opposite, an experience we often call Separation.The ultimate separation ingrained in our beliefs is the opposition of good and evil. From here, all natural opposites seem to be always at war with each other: Black versus white, superior versus inferior, strong versus weak, rich versus poor, man versus woman. We have always believed this illusion that it has perpetuated a culture of survival of the fittest. We destroy each other because we both believe the other is an enemy rather than a friend, or we see ourselves more righteous than others. We have become self-centered creatures that our only survival is our concern. This primal instinct has wiped the dinosaur species millions of years ago.

Seeing beyond the opposites leads us to an awakened soul. We would not see that the mind and body are separate, more so of seeing God and humanity. There is no more rift between two opposites, only understanding them as two expressions of the same essence. Deepak Chopra, the poet-prophet of mind/body medicine, says that "good is the union of all opposites; evil does not exist." As we operate on this consciousness, we would never identify evil as the great opponent of good. Good is the all-encompassing circle that includes all opposites that naturally mirror each other. No more enemies. No more evil.

But why do we still think in opposites. One reason: because the nature of Love is completely whole that it cannot be experienced without a conscious mind that can experience it.

Think of a flower. A flower is perfect in itself. It behaves on its own reality without the need of other flowers' appreciation. But a flower is not conscious of its own existence. We, human beings who are conscious of our own, cannot escape the reality of being conscious of others' existence, be it a fellow human, living beings such as plants, animals, and inanimate things such as nature, heavenly bodies. With this consciousness, we see the flower, appreciate and give name to it. This is the experience of seeing the flower, as if the flower experiences itself through us.


Because of this consciousness, we sense our reality as if separate from us, an illusion most thinkers call duality. I am here, you are there. Kahlil Gibran, the poet-mystic author of The Prophet once said: "Is not the mountain far more awe-inspiring and more clearly visible to one passing through the valley than to those who inhabit the mountain?" By being down here, we can see the mountain up there. If we are up in the mountain, we cannot see the mountain at all.

This is why opposites exists, not to separate us from everything that exists, but to be conscious of all of them. Love is infinite in many ways, expresses in different forms, and how Love does it is a mystery to all of us. And these seemingly separate expressions of Love, be it in words, deeds, objects, persons, creatures, arts, etc., are all but same manifestation of this Oneness.

This is why opposites exist not to separate us from everything that exists, but to be conscious of all of them.

A man is naturally a man, and his experience is different from that of a woman. They are different forms of the same species: homo sapiens aka human beings. Can we really say that their nature is opposing? How can another human being be born without a man-woman sexual union? It is because of their difference--opposite--that they can complement each other, and their unity bears another creation, or material unfolding of Love that remains intangible and invisible.

It is in this sense of Separation that we can appreciate this sense of Oneness. And the irony is that It is because of this Separation that our consciousness seem to contradict itself. This is known to many as paradox. Christ himself has taught paradoxical teachings, of which loving your enemies is the most well-known. In the realm of separation, truth will naturally contradict in the form of paradox because each opposite can embody the truth of another. Paradoxes are so universal and natural that it traverses all systems of thought. Our notion of opposing opposites tells us to take sides, yet the realization of complementing opposites tells us that we cannot--choosing one means choosing the other. As one meditation teacher puts it, you cannot choose the right wing of a bird more important than the left one. Both of them are important.

Now, we can refresh our ways of seeing opposites. In a paradoxical manner, I am you, and you are me. We both have this same human experience and both of us seek to embody what Love is. So long as we seek for Oneness, through intentions of cooperation, collaboration and participation, rather than competition, domination and manipulation, we are materializing the possibility of Love to exist in our lives, not just a concept, but a true and tangible existence.





Monday, August 10, 2009

Questions

How can anyone of us truly Love? How can Loving be easy if things are not quite right? If at times we feel bad of those unwanted things happening, how can we say that there is really Love? When mental and emotional pains linger, how can Love be felt amid them? What if Love is just a thought, an imagination, a sentiment all exist in a realm impenetrable to our senses? What if Love is just that, an intangible reality, only real in the dreams we make?

What is the nature of Love? It is proven that Love last forever, and can be felt as emotions, yet why do emotions never last? Why is Love beautiful and yet we still see the ugliest of things? It is said to be sacred but what makes us see it less? Why can we not accept that everything we see is Love, even if some are horribly unacceptable? What makes these paradoxes true, and see them to lie to us every time?

While some people tell that we are all Love, why do we need to Love others? Why do we need to give Love if Love is present in each of us? Why is it when we try to give Love, it does not comes back to us the way we wanted to? Why in the world Love brings so much pain and bliss at the same time? We have heard people who teach Love that Love itself is not painful, yet why people are beset with pain? While they teach that we have to know Love, why is Love difficult to know? Why do they call it a mystery, if it is something that is right before our eyes? What is the use of mystery, if answers are really always there?

How can all of us learn Love? Each of us want affection and attention from others, yet why do we need to give these things that we ourselves are really in need of? Isn't it difficult to give something that we ourselves are seeking for? How is it possible, when the more we can give Love, the more we can receive? But what is the purpose of Loving others, if the Love within them is complete? Do they still need Love if they are truly filled with it?

And if we are Love in the real sense, why are we not aware that we are? What makes Love powerless to let us know that we are powerful? Why does Love allow us to question its nature, if its very nature is unquestionable? Why does Love appear absurd to our reasoning mind? Why does it keep us perplexed of its truth? Why does it perplex us, and becomes the clearest thought we can understand? How can we understand something that renders itself unintelligible? What makes it so strong to shatter our logic, which has taught us the world we knew? What makes us so weak not to understand Love, when the irony is that the Love that weakens us is the same Love that can make us strong?

Why does Love destroy our small minds, then it makes us realize that they are bigger than we think? Why does Love make things contrary to what they seem, and make them appear unreal? If Love could be simple, why is it too complex? Others speak about Love, yet why is it unspeakable? Why is Love both possible and impossible? What makes us humanly imperfect, but as Love we are perfect? Why do we need to learn Love if Love is supposed to be unlearned? Why do we need to remember it, if the truth is nothing is forgotten by Love? Why can Love not remember everything, if Love itself is remembering? Or is it us that we forget Love? Why, as Love, can we forget things that all this time we remember?

When is the right time to understand Love? Why do we need to spend centuries for us humans to learn our lessons of Love? If Love is compassionate, why does it need to sacrifice lives in order for us to honor life? We are told that Love is now, and we should Love from now on, yet what were those days in the past? Weren't they the "nows" that those people should have acknowledged? Was a particular time in our human history a perfect timing to understand Love? Or is it the time today that comes to our awareness? If Love is really timeless, why do we need to spend time to express our Love? And why is it that this world needs time to live when Love does not have it at all?

Love is within in, they say, yet why is it hard to find? Why is that our narrow dimensions of reality cannot contain what is Love within? What makes Love vast inside of our limited bodies? What makes us limited to contain the Love that is unlimited? Or to be someone that is limitless? And why do we need to experience this boundless Love through our thoughts and emotions when Love is neither of them? Why could we not exist immaterially, if this formless Love exists that way? Why do we need this physicality to let Love be real? Why is Love both real or unreal in the material and immaterial? Why do all physical things we see come from Love even if Love cannot create anything other than what we wanted to create? And if we are creators ourselves through Love, why can our hands destroy, if these hands are Love themselves?

Why do we need to ask these questions if there is no need to find answers, since Love has them since time has begun?





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