“The Divine is like the wind: It enters through whatever window we open for it and sometimes through cracks we didn’t know existed.” Philip Goldberg
I live in a house built in 1954 which still has most of the
original windows and doors that allow for a great deal of draftiness. If you are familiar with casement,
single-pane windows and louvered glass doors you know what I am talking
about. When sitting inside on a windy
day one can definitely feel the breeze.
So, when Goldberg uses the analogy of the Divine as wind entering
through any opening available I get the sense of what he is talking about. However, it is important to point out that
the Divine, as we know it, is never absent, so It does not need to enter. Rather it is the awareness of the Divine that is like the wind and will enter
through the slightest crack.
Although, we often do not recognize it, each moment is
fraught with opportunity to open to the conscious awareness of the Divine, and
every aspect of our humanity is a portal to it.
Every thought is a window; every sensory perception a gate; and every
emotion a door. However, we often have
the house of our consciousness so tightly closed off that we are unable to
perceive the movement of the Divine in our daily lives.
Thoughts are not personal: they arise in the field of Infinite
Mind and we have access to them all. Not
one of us has ever had an original thought.
All thoughts are recycled communal property. They are not ours unless we attach ourselves
to them and begin to believe them. When
we avail ourselves of the opportunity to observe a thought, rather than claim
it as our own, we open the window through which the Divine enters. Allowing ourselves to become the “silent
watcher” creates the opening. And, the
great thing about thoughts is that they happen continuously giving us
multitudes of openings each day.
Brain research has shown that our memory of past experiences
greatly impacts how the brain interprets stimuli from the physical senses. When we see, taste, touch, hear or smell anything
our memory of it has a profound impact on what we perceive. For example, if one smells a rose, expecting
to encounter a sweet bouquet of fragrance, the mind will conjure the memory of
the scent even if there is none present.
The same is true of the ways in which we perceive the phenomenal world
that we encounter every moment. Allowing
ourselves to truly “stop and smell the roses” opens the gate through which the
awareness of the Divine may enter.
Rather than casually encountering the world around us and assuming that
we know what we are seeing, touching, tasting, smelling and hearing, we can slow
down enough to be present with whatever is before us in the moment and fully
experience it, giving ourselves permission to touch, taste, smell, hear and see
the Divine in all things, fully present, fully aware.
Just as thoughts and senses are openings, emotions also
offer us doorways to the awareness of the Divine. Many of us in Unity have become accustomed to
using denials to assist us in releasing the power of negative thoughts, thus
affecting our emotional state in positive ways.
For some, denial has taken on a psychological context not in keeping
with the original intent, meaning that rather than using denials to deny the
reality of negative thoughts or the permanence of so-called “negative” feelings,
we use denial to deny our experience of feelings that we consider to be
“negative.” For example, we may think
that feeling angry is not “spiritual” so we deny that we feel angry. This is not the intent of the spiritual
practice of denial. Attempting a
“spiritual bypass” which is our effort to move quickly to peace, thereby
avoiding any “negative” emotional state, only serves to keep us stuck. When we are truly willing to feel our
emotions, whatever they may be, and go deeply into the experience of whatever
we are feeling in the moment, we open the doorway to the experience of the
Divine present in the moment. Being
willing to delve into all emotions, including a “negative” emotion, is an act
of Self-Love that opens the doorway to transcendence and realization.
Some philosophies teach that our humanity is just an
illusion. Even if we believe that, each
us of is living the experience of it for now.
So, at least until we transcend our humanity, we
might as well make the best use of it as possible. Let us choose to allow our humanity to be the
opening through which the wind of the Divine, and our awareness of it flows
freely.
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