Be Vigilance

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Hand-drawn art by Rupali Bhuva
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Vigilance is often misunderstood. Usually what passes for vigilance is careful monitoring by the superego. I'm sure you're very aware of this kind of monitoring-- "Oh I shouldn't have said it that way. I shouldn't have done it that way. I shouldn't have thought that. I should have surrendered." This monitoring is not vigilance. It is an imitation of vigilance. Vigilance comes from the word vigil, meaning to keep vigil. Keeping vigil is a form of worship. Vigilance is sacred, quiet, peaceful vigil at the flame of truth. (...)

It is a mistaken understanding that implies vigilance to be a burden. The real burden is the denial of your beingness as awareness itself. The idea that vigilance is a burden comes from the concept of spiritual practice. You are admonished to practice. You have to keep your practice. I don't know what the word practice is translated from, but it is a bad translation, because in English practice means some kind of preparation for a real event. You practice for the football game. You practice for your recital. You cannot practice for life. Life is right now. So I don't use the word practice in terms of vigilance. I am talking about being vigilance. Be that now. You are that already. Recognize yourself as that, and be vigilant to your true nature. Then see. Without looking for anything, see. [...]

"Wait and see" doesn't necessarily mean you sit on your couch and never move. It also doesn't necessarily mean that you get off your couch and move. It is much deeper than that. An active life can be lived as vigilance, and an inactive life can be lived as vigilance. there will be many insights. There will be many revelations and deepening experiences. In the midst of it all, be vigilant to what has not moved, what has always been home, what has always been radiant and unpolluted. There will be even deeper insights. Enjoy them as they come, wave them goodbye as they pass, and be vigilant to what has not moved, what has not been lost by the experience of loss, and what has not been augmented by the experience of gain.

Be vigilance. The deepest joy of the human experience is to be vigilant. It is not a task. It is bliss itself. A bliss that is awake and vigilant to what never moves, to what is always present. Be that. Then you will see this entity called your lifetime unfold exquisitely, as a flower unfolds. As it begins to die, it will die exquisitely, as a flower dies. You don't need to dip it in wax so that it will stay forever at a certain stage.

Excerpted from Freedom and Resolve: The Living Edge of Surrender.

Seed Questions for Reflection

What does being vigilance mean to you? Can you share a personal story of a time you were being vigilance? What helps you be vigilant about what has not moved?

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9 Past Reflections
RC
Rodolfo Caballero
Dec 28, 2022
Just yesterday, I had the experience of the deep alert and then I can see more clare the life. Before, I lost this conection, but, thanks to you for remember me how I can come back at THIS....
BC
Bpo call center Dec 29, 2022
I had the experience of the deep alert and then I can see more clear the life. Just yesterday thanks to you for remember me how I can come back
ST
Dec 27, 2022
Wow! Gangagi's words have opened some inner eye into me. There is so much in this piece for me to think about or not think about and allow my self to experience. I seem to remember times in my life when I was less of an I and much more or completely immersed in just being. I guess that has been when on what we would call a vacation and out in natural settings. So much inner space to explore or perhaps ignore.
I will go to beach today and bury my naked self in sand. And, who knows, perhaps I will Be vigilance.
SU
Dec 27, 2022
Self sovereignty is vigilance. The quest is Who Am I ? Being soul conscious is to be vigilant. It's this faithful understanding-eternal soul is pure, pious, pristine and peaceful. It's orginal in built nature is full of joy, freedom, power, quite
compassion and abundance. Equanimity in equilibrium. Going within helps to realise our innermost core reflected in brightness of sun and tranquil calmness of moon in the service of all living beings. An earnest honest desire backed by meditation with persistence, perciverance and responsibility is the way forward as taught in our scriptures and the self sovereign saints/sages. Aspire for an unexpected friendship to lasting relationship with your own true self. No comparison or analyses.The experience may be unique and different for every seeker. Maturity opens the tresure of borderless truth slowly and steadily. Reveals the real and hides the obvious- physical body and evergreen Soul. I am still a student.
BA
Dec 27, 2022
For me, this is another form of mindfulness. Being awake to what is happening in this moment is mindfulness and vigilance both. This is what I strive for and am lacking so many times in life. So being vigilance, being mindful, meditating on the NOW in this moment is key to living in a happy existence. Even pain and suffering in the moment but also knowing that this will change as well as nothing ever remains the same. We must suffer to also learn what happiness is.
TE
Dec 24, 2022
I often seem to use the word "Awareness" in the same way this author uses "Vigilance", but the same challenges arise for both of those words: a) That some opposite (non-awareness? non-vigilance?) is implied to also exist, and b) There is someone who IS (or isn't) Aware or Vigilant, and perhaps makes that a practice. It seems to me that the infinite Awareness, or bliss of BE-ing has NO actual opposite, only our temporary distractions from it as long as we see ourselves as separate. From the perspective of separation we can appreciate and value Awareness (or not), exercise and practice Vigilance (or not). But perhaps a clearer perspective may be that Awareness actually applies to the larger wholeness within which all of this transient dream of duality plays out?
DD
Dec 23, 2022
Thank you for this wonderful essay. Vigilance seems be what Krisnamurti refers to as pure observance or choiceless awareness, which to me is pure open unadulterated awareness in the present to what is happening, which is what each of us essentially is and we go away from. I like that the author says we are vigilance and says vigilance is sacred and is bliss. There can be vigilance while active and inactive. I am being vigilance when I am aware and present to and with what is happening, free of judgments, prejudices and preconceived notions of any kind. If I am ever that, I am for moments at a time. What helps me be vigilant about what has not moved is knowing that all creation is moving and not moving all the time. For me to be vigilant with creation is for me to be vigilant of what is moving and not moving, what has moved and what has not moved.
KP
Dec 23, 2022
I love this reframe being vigilance as keeping vigil in worship/peace. Thank you. I will need to meditate on this to see what this reframe brings up. I have layers of lived experience of vigilance related to trauma and work with survivors of abuse too, so I have layers of unlearning to do.
JP
Dec 23, 2022
To me vigilance is to remain awake and aware of the reality unfolding ritght in front of my outword and inword eyes. When I keep my outword and inward eyes clear I make wise choices. Light of vigilance helps me see things as they are and not to be deluded.
It is very important to me to remain awakened and aware of the physical, mental, emotional, behavioral and relational dimensions of my life. When I am vigilant abou how I relate to these dimensions of my life everyday lifivin becomes joyful and blissful.
As I have mentioned before awakening and awareness helps me live blissfully. Light of vigilance helps me to live mindfully and fully.
Namaste!
Jagdish P Dave