The Open Dimension

Commentary on social issues; politics; religion and spirituality

My Photo
Name:
Location: Laguna Hills, California, United States

I am a semi-retired psychotherapist/psychiatric social worker and certified hypnotherapist. Originally a practicing attorney, I changed careers during the 1980's. My interests include history, constitutional law, Hindustani classical music, yoga, meditation and spirituality.

Sunday, September 21, 2014

 
   
September 21, 2014, OpEd News

Ancient India's 5 Words for Love
(And Why Knowing Them Can Heighten Your Happiness)
 
By Richard Schiffman

An article about the five stages on love's journey, according to Indian philosophy.
Photo by Abhinay Omkar / Flickr.

Hinduism has a beautiful myth about the origins of love. In the beginning, there was
 a superbeing called Purusha. This being was without desire, craving, fear, or indeed
the impulse to do anything at all--since the universe was already perfect and complete.

As humans, we too are seeking unity, and love is the word we use for that search.

Then the creator Brahma took out his divine sword and split Purusha in two.
 Sky became separate from earth, darkness from light, life from death,
 male from female. Each of these set off passionately to reunite with its severed half.

These days we tend to focus on the romantic and sexual elements of the process.
 The signs of this are everywhere: Millions of people use online dating sites
each month in search of romantic partners. Advertisers exploit our love affair
 with love to sell everything from aftershave lotion to sports cars.
And Hollywood jerks our heart strings with blockbuster romantic adventures.

A visitor from another planet might think that we earthlings--
and Americans in particular--were obsessed with chasing love
If you asked the sages of ancient India, however,
 they'd probably say that love is not what we're actually chasing.
Instead, we pursue the intense but fleeting emotional high
"falling in love," which generally doesn't last very long.

So how do we keep the life-giving flame of love alive? The ancient thinkers
 of India, who devoted a great deal of attention to this problem, recognized
and honored the power of sex and romance to jump-start our flagging emotions.
 But the important question for them was, where do we go from there?
 How do we harness the intoxicating power of falling in love to create
 a happiness that endures even after the initial flame dies away?

These philosophers began pondering this topic during Vedic times
in the centuries before Christ and further developed their ideas
 during the great revival of bhakti yoga, or the path of divine love,
 in the 15th century and beyond.

They taught that love consists of a series of stages through which
an individual can climb. The lower stages on love's journey
aren't necessarily supposed to go away as one gets more enlightened--
however, remaining stuck at the lowest rung can cause a lot of
frustration and sadness.

The important thing is that we keep climbing love's ladder. As the 19th century
 Hindu apostle to America, Swami Vivekananda, put it, "If one would expand,
 he must love, and when he ceases to love he dies."

Here's a look at the five stages of love as the Hindus see them:

1. "Kama," or sensory craving

At first, the desire to merge gets expressed through physical attraction,
 or kama. Technically speaking, kama means "craving for sense objects,"
 but it is usually translated as sexual desire.
Love consists of a series of stages through which an individual can climb.

In ancient India, sex was not associated with shame--as it is in many
 interpretations of the Judeo-Christian myth of the "fall of man"--
but a joyous aspect of human existence and a topic worthy of
serious investigation. The Kama Sutra, which was written around
the time of Christ, is not merely a catalogue of kinky sexual positions
and erotic techniques. The majority of the text is a philosophy of love
dealing with questions such as what sparks desire, what maintains it,
 and how it can be wisely cultivated.

But while the sages honor kama as a legitimate goal of life,
 they insist that we'll never achieve wholeness through the act of sex alone.

2. "Shringara," or rapturous intimacy

Sex without true intimacy and sharing can leave us feeling empty.
That is why the philosophers of India focused on the emotional content
 of the experience, and they developed an especially rich vocabulary
 to express the myriad moods and emotions associated with it.

Out of this bubbling stew of feelings is born shringara, or romance.
 Lovers stir the pot of their erotic attraction by seeing one another
 as embodiments of all their cravings. And they spice it up by sharing
 secrets, making up affectionate names for one another, playing games
and giving inventive gifts. This imaginative play of love is symbolized by
 the relationship of the divine couple, Radha and Krishna, whose romantic
 adventures are celebrated in Indian dance, music, theater, and poetry.
Yet the ancients were realistic about what a mixed bag romance is.
 They did not imagine that finding our "soul mate" would solve our problems,
 relieve our sense of unworthiness and self-doubt, or satisfy all
 of our emotional needs.

Nevertheless, Indian philosophy teaches that romantic love, enjoyed in
 moderation, provides a foretaste of something even greater.

3. "Maitri," or generous compassion

To the millions of OK Cupid subscribers, India's philosophers of love
 would probably say, "Stop waiting for love--it is within your power
 right now to make it happen!"

The way one does that, they would say, is by giving out love in little ways
 whenever you can. That could mean a smile at the checkout counter,
a gift of food to the hungry, a soulful hug....
"The simplest acts of kindness," said Mahatma Gandhi,
"are by far more powerful than a thousand heads bowing in prayer."

"The river that flows in you," says the Indian mystical poet Kabir,
 "also flows in me."
Compassion resembles the uncomplicated love that we
 naturally feel toward children and pets. It is also
associated with "matru-prema," the Sanskrit term
for motherly love, which is said to be love's most
giving and least selfish form. Maitri is like a mother's tender
love but expressed toward all living beings not just for
 one's own biological child.

Compassion for strangers, however, does not always come
 naturally. So in Hindu and Buddhist practice, there are loving-kindness
meditations in which practitioners develop the ability to wish others well.
 The idea is that compassion is like a muscle that can
become stronger if we use it regularly.

4. "Bhakti," or impersonal devotion

While compassion is a wonderful quality, it is not quite the final word.
 Beyond interpersonal love, the Indian tradition envisioned an impersonal
form in which our sympathies gradually expand to
 embrace the whole of creation.

As a bridge to this, the sages came up with a path called "bhakti yoga,"
 which can be translated as the cultivation of the self through the
 love of God. Luckily for those who aren't conventionally religious,
 bhakti need not be focused on God in the usual sense. It can be
 directed toward whatever higher ideal speaks to us most powerfully,
 be that kindness, truth, or social justice.

Think of leaders like Nelson Mandela, Jane Goodall, the Dalai Lama,
and countless others whose love for the world was as passionate
and powerful as any romance.

Through bhakti one learns that one's true family
 is the family of life itself.

5. "Atma-Prema," or unconditional self-love

Up until this point, each stage of love has been directed
outward into the world. But at its apex it comes full circle
 back to the self. Atma-prema can be translated as "self-love."
 This is not the self as we usually think of it, but the essential
 self, the self that exists at the center of all of us.

What this means in practice is that we see ourselves in others and see
others in ourselves. "The river that flows in you," says
 the Indian mystical poet Kabir, "also flows in me."

When we achieve atma-prema, we recognize that--when stripped
of the accidents of our genetic heritage and upbringing--we are all
expressions of the one life, the life that the Indian creation myth
 represented as Purusha. The great Sufi visionary Rumi gave
voice to this paradoxical experience:

I, you, he, she, we--
in the garden of mystic lovers,
these are not true distinctions.

Atma-prema arises from the realization that beyond our personal faults
and foibles--beyond even our name and personal history--we are all
 children of the most high. When we love ourselves and others in
this profound yet impersonal way, our love loses its boundaries
 and becomes unconditional.

Love itself will teach us

We don't live on the summit of universal love. We climb the mountain,
and then we descend it in order to share what we've found with others.

The sages of ancient India did not view the five stages on love's
journey as mutually exclusive. You do not need to renounce
 sex and romance in pursuit of a "higher" love. All the
 forms coexist in the heart that is mature.

By fully developing each of the five stages in turn, we can
 free ourselves of the addiction to romance as well as
 our narrow attachment to kith and kin, and become
transformed into genuinely full-hearted people.

Reprinted with permission by Yes! Magazine.



Submitters Bio:

Richard Schiffman is the author of two spiritual biographies and
 is a poet based in New York City, as well as a freelance journalist.
 His passions are his love of nature, studying the world's great
 mystical traditions and activist writing and journalism such
 as appears in his posts on OpEd News. His work has also
 appeared in the New York Times, The Washington Post,
 Salon.com, The Christian Science Monitor, the Huffington Post
 and leading literary journals worldwide. His radio stories have been
 heard on "Morning Edition," "All Things Considered," and many other
public radio shows. His "Spiritual Poetry Portal" can be found
at http://multiplex.isdna.org/poetry.htm.