There was an air of
festivity, fun and frolic at a large convention hall. It was a college reunion
gathering.
After the dinner, the whole
gathering settled down into smaller groups generally along with batch mates.
In one of such group of late
seventies and eighties batch, the conversation was going around the
difficulties of aging!
Suswasa, one of the old students
was sitting silently but keenly listening to the conversations, suddenly stood up.
Everyone in that group was
eagerly waiting for him to speak. Suswasa is known for sharing his deep
insights and immense knowledge in a simple way, right from his college days.
“YOU HAVE IMPRISONED BUDDHA! AND ONLY YOU CAN SET HIM
FREE” uttered Suswasa, and
continued; “Imprisonment is
confinement, usually within a small space and it is complete curbing of
freedom.
Buddha referred here is not
a person. It is the space where we all want, desire and struggle to be in! The
space that is serene, calm and peaceful!
So, when Buddha is imprisoned, we lose calmness and peace. We become restless and over stressed.
Do you know who imprisons
Buddha?
It’s the stream of thoughts
that we harbour in our mind!
Hence, to set free Buddha
and reclaim our rightful space that is serene, calm and peaceful; we need to
step back from the thinking mind!
We are all worried about
ageing and its ravaging effects. But we need to embrace ageing!
However, we are all conditioned to fear ageing. We all have seen
people around us including our near and dear ones struggling with ravaging
effect of ageing on physical body and psychological condition. It seems the loneliness, the sufferings, and
helplessness – all the three descend simultaneously on an ageing person!
If we keep our body and mind
fit through wellness regime, we can enjoy
and live purposefully for sixty more years!
And it all begins by setting
Buddha free! It’s very easy.
The moment we are aware of
body through sensations, we take care of our body, by taking appropriate food, doing
exercise, and growing in health becomes effortless. When we are aware of
senses, we are in high alert state and perceive the world around us rightly. When
we are aware of thoughts, we know that most of them are to be discarded and few
remaining ones are to be acted upon. When we are aware of our emotions, we use
them judiciously instead of being used up by them”.
The entire hall was
reverberating with the clapping of his batch mates.
***
You can also set the Buddha free! Connect with the author of the blog for the 'how' part!
1 comment:
Subra... Totally overwhelmed. So beautifully connected with ordinary man... Love your style of presenting.
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