Perfume Of Wholeness

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Hand-drawn art by Rupali Bhuva
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A new challenge awaits us at the beginning of the twenty-first century: to go beyond fragmentation, to go beyond the incompatible sets of values held even by serious-minded people, to mature beyond the self-righteousness of one’s accepted approaches and be open to total living and total revolution.

In this era, to become a spiritual inquirer without social consciousness is a luxury that we can ill afford, and to be a social activist without a scientific understanding of the inner workings of the mind is the worst folly. Neither approach in isolation has had any significant success. There is no question now that an inquirer will have to make an effort to be socially conscious or that an activist will have to be persuaded of the moral crisis in the human psyche, the significance of being attentive to the inner life. The challenge awaiting us is to go much deeper as human beings, to abandon superficial prejudices and preferences, to expand understanding to a global scale, integrating the totality of living, and to become aware of the wholeness of which we are a manifestation.

As we deepen in understanding, the arbitrary divisions between inner and outer disappear. The essence of life, the beauty and grandeur of life, is its wholeness. Life in reality cannot be divided into the inner and the outer, the individual and social. We may make arbitrary divisions for the convenience of collective life, for analysis, but essentially any division between inner and outer has no reality, no meaning.

We have accepted the watertight compartments of society, the fragmentation of living as factual and necessary. We live in relationship to these fragments and accept the internalized divisions—the various roles we play, the contradictory value systems, the opposing motives and priorities—as reality. We are at odds with ourselves internally; we believe that the inner is fundamentally different from the outer, that what is me is quite separate from the not-me, that divisions among people and nations are necessary, and yet we wonder why there are tensions, conflicts, wars in the world. The conflicts begin with minds that believe in fragmentation and are ignorant of wholeness.

A holistic approach is a recognition of the homogeneity and wholeness of life. Life is not fragmented; it is not divided. It cannot be divided into spiritual and material, individual and collective. We cannot create compartments in life—political, economic, social, environmental. Whatever we do or don’t do affects and touches the wholeness, the homogeneity. We are forever organically related to wholeness. We are wholeness, and we move in wholeness. The awareness of oneness refuses to recognize separateness. So the holistic approach de-recognizes all the fragmentation in the name of religion or spirituality, all the compartmentalization in the name of social sciences, all the division in the name of politics, all the separation in the name of ideologies. When we understand the truth, we won’t cling to the false. As soon as we recognize the false as the false, we no longer give any value to it. We de-recognize it in daily living. A psychic and psychological de-recognition of all manner of fragmentation is the beginning of positive social action.

When awareness of the totality, of wholeness, dawns upon the heart, and there is awareness of the relationship of every being to every other, then there is no longer any possibility of taking an exclusive approach to a fragment and getting stuck there. As soon as there is awareness of wholeness, every moment becomes sacred, every movement is sacred. The sense of oneness is no longer an intellectual connection. We will in all our actions be whole, total, natural, without effort. Every action or nonaction will have the perfume of wholeness.

Seed Questions for Reflection

How do you relate to the notion that a psychic and psychological de-recognition of all manner of fragmentation is the beginning of positive social action? Can you share a personal story of a time you became aware of an exclusive viewpoint you held and were able to move beyond it to a space of wholeness? What helps you meet each moment with an awareness of wholeness?

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4 Past Reflections
BS
Brian Shiers LMFT
Dec 24, 2024
This is a beautiful reflection of Reality; it is well reflected in Buddhism's Two truths: The Relative truth and Transcendent Truth. However, if you, like I, feel dissatisfied after having read it, there may be a common cause. The Wholeness that is pointed to - the Transcendent Whole informing the Relative and separate - is only something that can be realized by an individual or a very small group of dedicated and interdependent individuals; such principles cannot be faithfully and effectively scaled to monasteries let alone families, neighborhoods, cities, states, countries, or affinity groups no matter how tightly bound. That's because there are so many relative truths that are dependent on relative perceptions, all of which rely exclusively on concepts that describe, differentiate, and separate things, people, processes, and meanings from one another. This article tickles our numinous sense but disappoints that part of us that exclaims, "Yes! But, how...." Only a collective "hi... View full comment
JP
Dec 20, 2024
To go beyond fragmentation and diviseveness is essential not only for the survival but also for the fulfillment of our potential. Sadly we see the world fragmented by religions, races, classes and colors of our skin.. God has created all beings equal regardless of man -created differences. This looks like a revolutionary idea. We all need not internalize it and to manifest it and put it into our daily actions. I agree with Vimala Thaker's assertion when she writes" In this era to become a spiritual inquirer without social consciousness is a luxury that we can ill afford, and to be a social activist without a scientific understanding of the inner workings of the mind is the worst folly." This is a big challenge as we have to revolt against our longheld beliefs of discrimination, prejudices, and prefences to expand our narrow mindedness outlook. The inner change leads to outer change. This way we become whole and embrace unitive consiousness. Such inner work takes time as the in... View full comment
JP
Jagdish P Dave Dec 20, 2024
To go beyond fragmentation and diviseveness is essential not only for the survival but also for the fulfillment of our potential. Sadly we see the world fragmented by religions, races, classes and colors of our skin.. God has created all beings equal regardless of man -created differences. This looks like a revolutionary idea. We all need to internalize it and to manifest it and put it into our daily actions. I agree with Vimala Thaker's assertion when she writes" In this era to become a spiritual inquirer without social consciousness is a luxury that we can ill afford, and to be a social activist without a scientific understanding of the inner workings of the mind is the worst folly." This is a big challenge as we have to revolt against our longheld beliefs of discrimination, prejudices, and prefences to expand our narrow mindedness outlook. The inner change leads to outer change. This way we become whole and embrace unitive consiousness. Such inner work takes time as the inner chains of divisiveness are strongly built. I was blessed to be in a relatively poor family but my parents have cultivated inner wealth of love, compassion and kindness. They were role models for all of us in our family. My childhood experiences and learning to live with open mindedness and open heartfulnes have enriched my life and I am very grateful to them for planting the seeds of uncondional love. Learning and practicing mindfulness and meditation in my everyday life and living mindfully has kept the candle of awakening shining in my mind and heart. Namaste! Jagdish P Dave
DD
Dec 19, 2024
I think of derecognized fragmentation as still being fragmentation only not recognized as such. I think it is better to stop the fragmentation and see the wholeness of all that is including of all people, which would be a very good beginning of positive social action. I had an exclusive viewpoint about many issues, thinking I knew better or was better than others, which I became aware of, and I moved into increased awareness of wholeness. I now believe deeply in wholeness, in all existence being one, in difference but not separation. What helps me have that awareness is paying attention, being open, reading, discussing, and reflecting.