I was gifted recently with a link to a wonderful excerpt from Osho (The Spiritually Incorrect Mystic) called Greatest Fear of All. Osho’s words always stir up for me some uncomfortable but simple truth. In this excerpt he says: "The greatest fear in the world is of the opinions of others. And the moment you are unafraid of the crowd you are no longer a sheep, you become a lion. A great roar arises in your heart, the roar of freedom. Buddha has actually called it the lion's roar. When a man reaches an absolutely silent state he roars like a lion."
As I read the article I began to wonder. What is it that we’re really afraid of? Through my own work and working with others, it’s clear to me that there is always the deeper fear beneath the one we’re willing to admit to. I wondered - is it that we actually fear discovering our own selves?
Sakyong Mipham pointed out in “Turning the Mind Into an Ally
But what if meeting yourself could be liberating instead of terrifying? In yoga we frequently talk about samskaras – latent impressions that influence the way we think and behave. It is sometimes described like spinning on a wheel – you can’t get off the wheel because you’re controlled by these unconscious impressions. So you relive the same story over and over again, not knowing how to change it. And still these impressions, these habits are constantly being reinforced through lack of mindful awareness and, I think, through the fear of seeing ourselves clearly. To get off the wheel we have to see these habits for what they are – our own shadows in the darkness. Brought to the light of day they have very little substance. Left in the darkness they are monsters keeping us on the wheel and away from a full appreciation of ourselves.
Fear of death - the death of the ego, or persona - accompanied by physical death - and perhaps physical pain - those are biggies too.
ReplyDeleteThe unknown, the void - which the imagination can populate with monsters, because something is better than nothing - that's a whopper as well.
It's fun to explore these concepts. And don't forget - there's nothing WRONG with fear! Fear is. It has its role like every other apparent thing.
Ya, when I was writing I had the image of these samskaras as dust bunnies in the corners of my mind. I saw them being swept out, but then a moment of panic arose as I realized there was nothing left! No dust bunnies, no "me." Yikes! I backed out of that corner fast! LOL.
ReplyDeleteThe yogis call it abhinevesa - clinging to life/fear of death - in the end fear of the death of the ego and the death of the body. I guess fear of our seeming non-existence if we aren't the body/ego. Without the dust bunnies, what are we...?
Thanks for the reminder - it's easy to fall into the trap of the "good" and "bad" emotions.
Francine, you're lovely.
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