Swami Ramananda
A Message from the President
Sri Swami Satchidananda (Sri Gurudev), our spiritual teacher, has often remarked that all people share a common desire—to be happy—but attempt to fulfill that desire in myriad ways. One way of expressing that goal from a spiritual point of view would be that we want to be at peace with ourselves and the world around us. Such a profound goal seems to require great effort. Many of us pursue our spiritual happiness with the same “just do it” mentality with which we’ve learned to pursue school, jobs and recreation. We end up struggling with ourselves and trying to force change, as if we must battle for personal growth by conquering our wrong thinking and bad habits. Unfortunately, fighting to bring change is not such a good way to find peace.
Another spiritual teaching suggests that the source of all unhappiness is selfishness and the way to peace is to renounce our desires. While this is a deep truth, if we do not learn how to develop renunciation and selflessness step by step, this teaching can worsen the tendency to fight with the patterns of behavior we wish to change, rather than help us to grow out of them mindfully. How many of us, for example, upon suffering the ill affects of eating or drinking too much of the wrong things, have vowed to ourselves, (in a moment of temporary dispassion), to never do that again. And then we watch ourselves making the same mistake over and over. When we are under stress and fatigues, or when our emotional buttons get pushed, our will power may fade, and self-discipline disappears. Though we may know that change is needed, we may not know how to overcome patterns of behavior that are compulsive, and probably deeply rooted. I remember once thinking that the only bad habit I ever gave up was making vows I couldn’t keep.
Lasting growth comes from transformation that happens deep within. This requires bringing compassionate attention to the root causes of our unhealthy ways. By cultivating the ability to witness our own minds in meditation, we can become less identified with our thoughts and feelings, and better able to analyze them without shame or frustration. As we look deeply into compulsive behaviors, we can begin to understand that, as much as we may not like them, they are fulfilling some need. We may see how we use food and drink as a reward or an escape in response to some difficulty we experience, or the pain we want to block out. Pain is a message to us, a call for healing attention and if we can learn to bring awareness to our suffering and understand it, it will begin to transform and we won’t need to escape into some form of pleasure that brings temporary relief.
Sri Gurudev has taught us to grow out of thoughts and behaviors by replacing them with more appropriate ones. Taking time after work to exercise and relax, take a sauna or get a massage, can be excellent replacements for other way of relieving stress and recovering from a hard day. The most effective way of letting go of undesirable foods may well be to find healthy ones that we can enjoy as well and add them in. Spending time in good company, with like-minded people that are supportive of our efforts, can help break away from relationships that contribute to or support behaviors we want to change. The fresh energy of a new hobby, habit or friendship can be so helpful in interrupting unproductive patterns, and the company of others making the same kind of efforts is a powerful reinforcement that focuses our energy on a positive step vs. a negative one.
Another beautiful example of compassionate efforts to grow is illustrated in the practice of Hatha Yoga. When we encounter the limit of our capacity in a specific pose, we combine our effort to move further with an effort to soften around the resistance, we attempt to let go in tiny increments. If we push through the tightness in the body because we want to be further than we are, the body revolts by contracting and resisting further to protect itself. Likewise the psyche may revolt when our efforts to change disregard where we are now. When we accept and understand where we stand now, we can set realistic goals for ourselves and step mindfully forward without strain. We can develop our willpower a little bit at a time and build confidence, rather than failing in an attempt to reach goals that are too big a stretch. In this way, our growth is born of a compassion for our bodies and minds that is in harmony with our natural tendency to be loving and with our ultimate goal to be at peace.




