The Spirituality Of Everyday Life: Transforming Ourselves And Spiritualizing Everyday Life!

When we talk about spirituality of everyday life we are talking about bringing a special sense to everything we do. It means approaching life with a sense of awe and wonder and is associated with feelings of care and concern for others, for the Earth and all living forms. It also means having a sense of gratitude, being thankful and having a feeling of being blessed by an energy or power greater than ourselves.

Engagement with everyday life means life in the family, at work, when socializing, being involved in recreation, sports, doing the shopping or indeed in anything we do whether we are dealing with other people or not. It also means engagement with the mystery of the sacred energy of the universe of which we are a part, without the religious baggage of the past.

My motive for raising these issues is a concern for the state of the world. We face an economic and ecological meltdown, serious social division and widespread psychological alienation. The problems are well known and the experience of more than a century to establish a more humane society through conventional political and religious institutions has not occurred suggesting that new ways must be found to deal with these challenges and bring about a happier world.

There is a lot of interest in various forms of spirituality, but also a widespread feeling that traditional religions have lost relevance. I don’t necessarily share this view, and I would want to bring traditional believers, as well as those who yearn for a spiritual renewal for their lives outside of traditional religious practices, along with me. There is also widespread belief that a serious engagement with spiritual issues is a critical in bringing about lasting change at the collective level, as well as creating the conditions for deep fulfillment.

It seems to me that a twenty first century spirituality of everyday life involves expanding our consciousness around six themes. I call these the six themes of consciousness:

What is the true nature of the self and reality generally; How do we define our needs; How do we satisfy those needs; How do we define a successful life and what motivates us in that life; What is the span of our care and concern for others, for the Earth and for other living forms; How do we define our social and civic commitments?

One of the most important aspects of a spirituality of everyday life involves moving from a sense of self as a separate isolated individual defined in terms of I, me and mine to a realization that each of us, in the words of Eckhart Tolle, does not have a life, but that we are life. In this sense life has us we are life’s instrument or servant. I call this the universal self. Developing a universal self is a pre-eminent spiritual quest. A limited sense of self cuts us off from the universe and we tend to experience our self in this limited way, as all that we are and all that we have. We resist every experience that threatens this sense of self and seek nice experiences and avoid unpleasant ones.

The field of development psychology teaches us that the six themes of consciousness can be defined by people at ever increasing levels of complexity and they can undergo development and growth throughout the whole of life. For many, the themes of consciousness plateau and remain fixed at that level throughout life. For others, their lives are an ever increasing spiral of growth and development. This is a natural process and everyone has the potential to expand their spiritual of awareness and consciousness.

The spiritual challenge that we face is being called to find a way of expanding our consciousness and awareness around the six themes, (particularly the development of a universal sense of self) and to find ways of transforming these themes into an engagement with everyday life. To do this we need to develop the capacities of what I call the seven paths of spirituality of everyday life.

The first path involves qualities needed to live fully aware moment by moment so that we are able to adjust our actions in real time as events unfold. This is about what Eckhart Tolle calls living in the NOW. Living in the NOW involves engaging with everyday life moment by moment as life unfolds and in being able to monitor our actions so as to be able to adjust what we are doing as events unfold

The second path involves the capacity to treat everything that arises as an opportunity to learn and make the most of every moment. This path is about a transformation from a mindset of unilateral control to one of using each moment of everyday life as an opportunity for infinite possibilities. This path opens people up to the realization that the life that they are has the potential for enormous growth around the six themes of consciousness.

Developing the capacities to walk these two paths contain useful guides about how we can develop a universal self where we become a servant of life

The third path involves the capacity of learning how to take full responsibility for the choices we make. This is the secret to living as a full participant in the game of life rather than as a victim of circumstances.

The fourth path involves the potential of gaining mastery of our emotions so that they become an ally in helping us deal effectively with the fortunes of life. All emotions even emotions like anger and fear have their place in our lives. The secret here is to use the energy of the full range of emotions as a positive influence rather than being a prisoner and at the mercy of our feelings.

The fifth path involves the capacity to learn how to turn a crucial conversation where opinions differ, where the stakes are high and where emotions run hot into a positive outcome. This means being able to tell your truth without offending others, even when you disagree with them. Most people when confronted by a crucial conversation become aggressive or withdraw rather than buy a fight. Learning about this path has an important part to play in helping us recognize unconscious attachments relating to the self and has the potential to create an opportunity for a major lift in consciousness.

The sixth path involves the capacity to learn how to turn disagreement into the best decision even if it means giving up a cherished position when a better argument is presented. This is about skilful negotiation where the best decision is the goal rather than winning an argument to save face. This path is about how to participate in finding common interests in order to make the best decisions.

The seventh path involves the capacity to make promises and honor those promises. Learning to walk this path ensures that things get done efficiently and effectively and good relationships are preserved.

The fifth through to the seventh paths are about the practical ways of engaging in a spirituality of everyday life through our interpersonal relationships. These relationships are a critical area of living a spirituality of everyday life.

The achievement of the “Good Society” and the creation of the conditions for happy and fulfilled lives will involve massive transformations and change as we repair the Earth’s ecology, create a new economic order, redress the social divisions and heal the widespread psychological alienation. A necessary step in this process is for a significant number of people, sufficient to influence the course of events, to develop a spirituality of everyday life. This involves building a worldwide social movement whose aim is the spiritualization of everyday life.

If you seek a spiritual basis to your life and feel that becoming part of movement dedicated to the spiritualization of everyday life would fit in with your values and aspirations then visit http://www.bobcalkin.co.nz and join us in setting about playing a part in the transformation of ourselves and our world.



By: Bob Calkin

About the Author:

Dr Bob Calkin has launched a new website to assist people develop a spiritual practice free from the baggage of the past. If you feel that you would like to experience in a heightened way the wonder of the sunrise, the awesome beauty of the outdoors, the wonder of this beautiful Earth, to be at one with others and the Earth and all living forms, to feel gratitude and to feel blessed by an energy or power greater than yourself then you might like to join this program by visiting http://www.bobcalkin.co.nz



Spiritual Review: The Believer, a drama on DVD

RATING:  4.5 Hearts - Excellent

Okay, okay.  So I’m a big Ryan Gosling fan.  In fact, my primary reason for viewing The Believer is because I wanted to see all of Gosling’s work.  When I noticed that The Believer won the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival, that sealed the deal, and I got even more excited about the prosect of seeing it.  Henry Bean co-wrote and directed The Believer in 2001, which is loosely based on the real-life story of Daniel Burros.  Back in the 1960’s Burros became an American Nazi party member and a leader of the Klu Klux Klan, but he shot and killed himself after a NY Times reporter revealed his Jewish heritage.

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The Believer uses anti-semitism to explore love and hate and to show how love and hate get all confused based on fundamental beliefs about God. It also demonstrates how our beliefs about God play a direct role in determining our life and death experience. Director Bean frames The Believer with the recurring theme of the Biblical story of Abraham. Abraham is asked by God to sacrifice and kill Isaac, his son.  But why must he do this?  Does God want us to kill ourselves and others as a sign of faith, devotion, love and obedience?  Does killing self or others make you happy?  Is God just on a power trip?  Do we have the intelligence and free will to override God and guide ourselves if His direction doesn’t make sense?  The Believer reminds us that Jesus was an enlightened Jew who followed God’s will and who allowed himself to be sacrificed and killed to express his love of humanity.  Maybe self-sacrifice is the ultimate path to enlightenment. 

The story is told from the perspective of Daniel Balint, a 20-something neo-Nazi skinhead who denies his Jewish roots and talks incessantly about his desire to kill a Jew.  We see Daniel intimidating and tormenting a meek and bookish Jewish man.  We hear him ranting about how we should hate Jews simply because they’re Jews.  We watch him join an underground anti-semitic fascist group that terrorizes Jews and which ultimately gets Daniel into a lot of trouble.  Daniel has a Jewish female friend who wants to help him out.  She says, “I don’t care about the truth, I care about you.”  She’s telling Daniel that she values him more than she values worldly facts, social morals or Biblical truths.  This is the central message and crux of the movie.  The love we have in our hearts is the one true, irrefutable religion.  It’s the one truth that cannot be argued or denied.   Daniel also feels this love in his heart, and it makes him a very confused and conflicted person. 

When his cohorts defile the Torah (the word of God), Daniel secretly and painstakingly repairs it.  And when Daniel is presented with the two opportunities to actually kill Jews, he can’t do it.  Daniel is supposed to be the sniper who shoots a respected Jewish leader, but he deliberately misses the shot.  The next try comes when Daniel and his group stage a time-bomb that’s set to go off during a service in a synagogue.  But when Daniel realizes his girlfriend and other friends are there, he warns them about the bomb before anyone gets hurt.  Finally, Daniel achieves his goal of killing a Jew when he sacrifices his own life in the bombing. 

Inspiration

Daniel is asked to be a recruiter/spokesperson for the fascist group he joins, but he gets fired when he starts talking about how the best way to get rid of Jews is to love them.  “Without hatred, the so-called chosen people would vanish.  The more they’re hated, the stronger they become.”  He’s saying that Love is the only force strong enough to stop Jews from wanting to stay separate from others. Writer-Director Bean introduces other minor, but important characters who reinforce this point.  Their dialogue includes phrases like “Maybe I was a Jew in a former life,” and “Forget all that Jewish stuff.  It doesn’t play.  The only thing that matters is the market, and it doesn’t care who you are….Maybe we’re all Jews now; what’s the difference?”

Hate is based on the idea that some of our brothers and sisters are different, better or worse than others.  Are Jews really different from anyone else?  All great spiritual truths teach that the hate we feel for others is really a displacement of the hate we feel for self.  Astrologer Stephanie Azaria says “If you check yourself out in the mirror and your shirt is unbuttoned, are you going to reach to the mirror to fix it or are you going to do what needs to be done on your own person? This is no different.” 

Relevance

Daniel is a rebel.  His life is a rebellion against the meekness, passivity and non-action he perceives in Jews, and it’s a rebellion against the power-trip rules imposed on us by God.  When a judge forces him to go to Jewish sensitivity training, Daniel meets several Holocaust survivors and hears their haunting stories.  But Daniel rejects what they have to say because instead of fighting against the Nazis, the survivors accepted a victim role.  One of the survivors tells Daniel he has no right to judge them because he has no way of knowing what he would do in a similar impossible situation.

Of course, at the end of the movie, Daniel is in his own impossible situation. He can save his life and live the rest of it as a criminal in jail or he can sacrifice his life for a higher purpose.   Daniel deliberately and bravely chooses self-sacrifice. Like Jesus, the enlightened Jew, Daniel sacrifices self for the love of others and for the love of God.  After Daniel’s death, we meet him one more time.  He’s back in his Hebrew school, running up one flight of stairs after another, endlessly searching for something:  God, meaning, glory, enlightenment.  But there’s nothing there, nothing except endless searching.  Daniel is learning what we all must learn.  Self-sacrifice is meaningless.  Death is empty. God is not there.  And the example of enlightenment taught by Jesus needs to be reinterpreted without the notion of sacrifice. 

Direction 

The teenaged Daniel does not give a convincing or credible performance.  Luckily, there are only a handful of scenes with him, and what we remember is the disturbing, multi-dimensional performance delivered by Ryan Gosling.  Also, sometimes The Believer plot feels over the top and contrived.  That said, The Believer is extraordinary because it makes you think about whether the ideas we learn about God, the same ones that have been passed down generation after generation for two millenniums, are worth keeping. 

DVD Title:  The Believer

Co-written and Directed By:  Henry Bean

Distributor:  Palm Pictures

Starring:  Ryan Gosling, Theresa Russell, Billy Zane

Copyright: 2001

Review Score: 4.5

Review Date: 05.18.09

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By: The Spiritual Reviewer

About the Author:

Karen Bentley is America’s Spiritual Reviewer. She reviews contemporary books and movies exclusively from a love-based perspective. For more information go to www.spiritualreviewer.com and/or www.karenbentley.com.