Of those
Sanskrit terms that have been adopted into western spiritual
language, Dharma may be the most trivial and blurred in meaning for
the western spiritual pupil. Dharma has sometimes been translated as
duty, as a way, a path or a mission, also as the Law.
I am not going to tell you what is the true
meaning of the word, I simply don’t know, but I would like that we
would consider together at least one particular meaning, one that
has given me personally a clear insight into the spiritual life, and
at the same time been to me a practical subject for meditation in my
personal search for growth.
They are closely related, but of different
nature, and play a different role in the clockwork of the Universe.
Karma plays the role of an immutable Law, impersonal, absolute,
invariable and universal. It is always active and everywhere the
same. Dharma is not a Law, it is individual and ever changing, i.e.,
each individual, a group of individuals, a species or a whole, has
its own or unique Dharma, which is ever changing according to the
actions, attitude and even the outer circumstances of that
individual or group. In a way one can say that Dharma is the
relationship between so-called acquired Karma and the Universal
order or the inherent harmony of Existence.
My private Dharma is thus my private and
‘normal’ path to universal harmony, and accordingly my ‘duty’
towards the Existence or God. No individual or person has the same
duty as I have. Everyone has a unique Dharma, and there is actually
no way to compare the Dharma of different individuals. To be a ‘bum’
may thus be the closest that a certain individual can come to
fulfilling his/her individual Dharma. As a ‘bum’, that individual
has a role, or Dharma, that can be well or badly performed as the
case may be.
On the other hand, one can’t expect any
ordinary human being to fulfill his/her Dharma to the point, without
exception, all the time. That would only be in the power of an Adept
or an Arhat, which lives the universal harmony moment by moment, and
thus doesn't create any personal karma.
How then can I know what my Dharma is at this
moment?
Dharma is my natural flow of life. It is the
natural path to go in each moment of life, and from a certain point
it can be viewed as my personal thread of destiny. Dharma does not
restrict life in any way. It is only a clue pointing to the way
back, the way home again.
Let’s just look at the free will of man, to be
able to choose. The free will does not mean that we can choose
whatever we want. We are not almighty, but we have relatively wide
freedom to mold our lives and our closest environment. One can say
that most choices are out of phase with the Existence, i.e., not
according to the Dharma of the moment. We must not think though that
Dharma only gives one correct possibility in any one situation.
There are still countless possibilities in the cards to make a
harmonious choice.
Dharma is not about sitting down and finding
the correct path once and for all, and then live according to that
idea for the rest of your life. To approach Dharma we have to
approach life itself, moment by moment, and adapt our life in each
given moment to the circumstances present. Dharma is about learning
from the moment, to be sensitive to the effects of our actions, and
to instantly correct that which turns out to be in disharmony.
Approaching Dharma with our thoughts is not effective, simply
because when the thought is formed the Dharma has changed into
something different than the idea that we had about it. An idea is
also never the reality anyway.
All the spiritual advisors are in reality about
how we can approach Dharma. Meditation is the direct path to
experiencing what we are, and where we are heading. It is an
important part in the understanding of Dharma. But a perception does
not suffice unless there is also a harmonious action. It is only
through life itself, that we really can encounter our Dharma.
We must not think for a moment that any form of
inner or outer struggle is needed to fulfill our Dharma. Every
action that craves effort, renunciation, self-control or inner
struggle is surely in contrast with Dharma. Dharma is the path of
harmony, and can’t be reconcilable to any form of disharmony,
neither within nor without. The search for Dharma is the search for
inner harmony, which eventually and inevitably will result in outer
harmony. When you have found your Dharma, you will ‘know’ that you
are doing the right thing. And now, don’t think that I’m talking of
something exceptional, that only happens to few people or rarely at
all.
We all have our moments when we are in harmony
with existence, and spread the harmony to others by only being
there. We all have moments when all is well, so absolutely perfect,
that we don’t even take notice. Let’s pay attention to these
moments, for they are our closest contact with our Dharma. This does
not mean that Dharma in life is any kind of inaction. The real trick
is to bring harmony into every situation in life, something that is
meant in ‘The Light on the Path’ when stating:
"Stand aside in the battle to come, and be
not the warrior even while you fight."
This is exactly the thing, not to be the one
that is doing things, but someone that existence uses to do things
with. This is the absence of self, and at the same time a union with
the Godhead, being in unison with one's own Dharma.
How should we then proceed in approaching our
Dharma and living up to it in our everyday life? What requirements
does Dharma inflict on us?
Let’s first consider how Karma works in our
life. The concept of Karma seems to mean two things: firstly, it is
the Law of cause and effect, how the consequences relate to the
cause. Secondly, it refers to our Karma-debts, i.e., causes that
have not yet given birth to their consequences. The Law then states;
that everything that happens to us, moment after moment, every
second of our life from birth to death - are Karma-debts in
fulfillment. What happens in this moment is a consequence of earlier
actions or an interplay of actions, and this particular Karma is
thereby fulfilled and will never return again. It does not say that
another similar or identical one will not come. That depends on how
we react to what comes to us, or rather, if we react at all.
Let's take a very simplified example. Let’s say
that I get a blow in the face, right out of the blue. According to
the Law, I had it coming, because I some time in the past apparently
gave that person one on the trumpet, too. We are therefore even, if…
- if I don’t react to the blow. On the other hand, if I hit the
person right back, pay him in the same, I have restored the
disharmony, which I will have to straighten out later. In most cases
it is not quite so simple. In reality, karma works mostly through
the emotional principle, for it is in the subconscious that we keep
our accounts. It therefore depends first and most on how and if we
react emotionally, whether we leave a track of karma or whether we
walk the world without any footsteps in the trail. It is rarely the
outer actions that tell if we are acting rightly or wrongly, but the
inner attitude, inner feeling or understanding.
The one that acts out of a perfect
understanding and love, will never do an evil act, whatever his
actions may be! In this the mystery of being ‘righteous’ is
concealed. Scrutinize your attitudes rather than your actions, when
you try to discern if you are doing the right thing, and be very
careful in judging the actions of others, for they will not always
tell you what the real character is like. This is where we are
approaching Dharma. But Dharma is more than just doing the right
thing. Dharma actually includes the purpose of your life. Not your
personal purpose, your purpose, but much higher and more profound
purpose - the purpose of the Existence itself with your life. And to
find out what your Dharma is and approach it, you will first have to
find out what the universal purpose of Existence is in its whole,
and then what your special role is in that enormous scheme, - not
was, not will be in the future, - but is now. Don't seek far from
yourself, in books or with the sages, for your Dharma is nowhere but
within yourself.
Let me present an example, simple and easy to
understand. When an egg meet a sperm, a certain process starts, with
the separation and multiplication of the cells by the millions. To
start with, they seem all exactly alike. Actually they all are. Soon
the time will come that they will divide into certain groups, that
will later become the different ‘limbs and organs’ of the new fetus.
Although all the cells seem the same in the beginning, it’s like the
position in the body will give them different roles or Dharma. In a
sound and healthy body, these billions of cells work together like
an undivided whole. They all do their ‘duty’ in some extraordinary
way. The yogi tells us that they would do so, much longer and more
effectively, if the emotions and thoughts of the inhabitants, you
and me, would not be present. And what happens if some cell cuts
itself from the harmonious cooperation and starts to live its own
life, minding its own business? One thing that we know can happen is
called cancer, uncontrolled division of cells, without the concern
of the environment.
This may perhaps give us some limited, albeit
realistic picture of the nature of Dharma. It tells us that my
Dharma, your Dharma, and everyone else’s Dharma is interconnected
into one whole, and that my thoughts and my actions are the concern
of the whole world. We are all one inseparable whole, a cell in one
big flower of the world. But do we live accordingly today? How many
‘sane’ cells are there in the body of humanity?
This shows us what is the mystery of righteous
life. The keyword is obviously wholeness, oneness, which in our
lives means the same as ‘brotherhood,’ a total absence of egoism, to
live in harmony with the whole, to fulfill one’s own role, instead
of perpetually interfering with others - but first and last, to
understand and care for the Existence as it is, and know one's role
in the whole.
This is the path to Dharma, the road to
perfection.
©
: The Theosophical Society in Iceland.
From a talk held at the Summerschool of the
Theosophical Society in Iceland in June 1996.