As you grow older,
you become more and more convinced that you are wrong about a lot of
things. You reluctantly become a part of this corrective program
where everything you once believed in stops believing in you. It's an
endless humbling process. Let's begin with faith. No, not the kind
that is restored everytime you see a kind picture or a heartwarming
video on the internet. I'm talking about the outside world. For
instance, i used to be a religious kid who accompanied his mother to
temple every Friday like mama's boy. At that time, my dad used to
brainwash me—much to my ma's chagrin—that faith doesn't demand
physical activity. According to him, true bhakti takes place in the
heart. One's mind should be clean and clear about what one's body is
doing. “What's the point in committing mistakes outside the temple
and then going in begging for forgiveness?” That was his philosophy
and i admired it from a distance. It was only after i moved to hostel
for my engineering diploma that i lost touch with the places of
worship. No more visiting mandirs. No more saluting masjids. No more
crossing churches. No more flooring forehead in gurdwara. I was
officially papa's boy. This happened a decade ago. As of now, i've
realized that praying is not about instructing God what to do. It
isn't about talking to oneself like a secret self-pep talk. It's
about influencing the forces of nature. When you sit down or kneel or
stand to pray, what you're basically doing is you're commanding the
universe to pay attention to you. It's putting out your intentions in
whatever form possible. One yogi's prayers are another man's
meditation. It could sound like a cry for help or an assertion of the
person you've become. But more importantly, it's about listening to
what you want the greater powers to hear. When you pray, you should
notice how active your entire body is. Your brain is superactive. You
are calm but your senses are enlightened. Which is why, there is no
such a thing as “Oh, i prayed so lazily today”. According to
psychology, only two human activities demand such heightened level of
awareness: sex and music. Maybe praying should be added to the list.
But before that happen, we need to attempt some etymological coups.
Shouldn't those who pray be called prayers? Yes? Amen.
PS: My dad is a
changed man today and visits temple every Monday (his weekly off)
morning while i continue to blog on anthropological pursuits of our species.
1 comment:
lovely. how life makes us play so many characters over a period of time :-)
Post a Comment