1 |
Practice Non-Violence
(physical, mental and
verbal) within yourself and your own life. |
To be truly non-violent, it is necessary
to cultivate the spirit of non-judgment a forgiveness. Non-violence requires
a continual refinement and awareness of your own inner process. It requires
the reduction and eventual elimination of judgment, criticisms, and
projections onto others. True non-violence is the development of a positive
dynamic quality of universal love and not a mere attitude of negative harm
to others. |
2 |
Express Truthfulness
by aligning thoughts,
words and actions. |
Being truthful has many facets including
following through with our commitments, not saying one thing and doing
another. It is also not saying one thing to one person and making a
contradictory statement to another. It is also not saying another.
Truthfulness constructs rather than destroys; it is not a state of angrily
hurling our opinions or judgments to others, thinking them to be fact. It is
taking responsibility for our own judgments of others by looking to the
source of our projections within our own selves. It is the direct expression
to another, free of the anger that arises out of our own unfilled
expectations and desires. Truthfulness is the gift of non-criticism. It
expresses the thoughts and words that heal rather than wound the hearts of
others. There is great power in truthfulness. When truthfulness is
achieved, your words will acquire the power of fruition and manifestation. |
3 |
Develop
Non-Covetousness (Non Envy) |
When we give up "wanting" many things
will be given onto us and manifest in a variety of unexpected ways.
Non-covetousness creates a feeling of unattachment. We only want or "covet"
what we feel we lack, whether it is material possessions or qualities we
admire in others. If we envy the possessions and qualities of others that we
feel we lack within ourselves, it can create territorialness, competition,
envy and, in turn, the "downplaying" of others in order to boast our low
self esteem. When we are fulfilled within ourselves there is no need to
compete, criticize, or gossip about others to make ourselves feel superior.
When there is no envy or wanting what others have (possessions or qualities)
we can delight in their joys and successes as we would our own. |
4 |
Assume an Attitude of
Non-Possessiveness
- (physical and
emotional) avoiding over accumulation of possessions that causes us to
protect and defend. |
This mainly refers to our emotional
storehouse of memories of anger, resentment, projections and aggressive
thoughts towards others. As we develop a feeling of giving in all areas of
our lives, it contributes to a sense of
trust and non-defensiveness. When we are bound by the ordinary desire of
a variety of needs for security, the walls we build to keep something in
also are the walls that keep something out. We become possessed by our own
need for security which can also take the form of attachment to personal,
ideological, socio-political, religious and spiritual beliefs. When desire
to possess and accumulate is absent, we seek nothing for our separated and
individual self. Non-possessiveness is a stage where we find that "more is
not always better", and that "if only things could be different", then we
would be happy. It is the realization that little is required for a loving
and true experience of happiness. |
5 |
Regulate the Senses
avoiding physical and
emotional self-indulgence. |
Sensual regulation is not repression of
sensual needs for gratification but sublimation of our desires into the
sacred act of giving of oneself. For instance, it is meeting one's sexual
partner as a manifestation of the divine. It is moving from
self-gratification to understanding the roots of the needs of the human
soul. Regulating the senses is not just of food, drink or the sexual drive,
it also includes self pity. When our eyes are filled with our own tears,
they cannot see the suffering of others. When we indulge in our own
emotional pains, we cannot extend our hands to another. Self pity is the
mirror of our ego turned in on ourselves. It creates separation rather than
unification. When we are absorbed with our little self, we cannot serve the
greater whole. |
6 |
Purify Motives |
As we release the motive for power,
success and recognition, we learn to take up each action for the sake of the
action alone, letting go of the need or attachment to a particular outcome.
In conflict resolution, it is extremely important to do everything possible
to bring about healing of the situation and then let go of a desired
outcome. Our mission is to be a spontaneous channel for the outpouring of
love with no self reference or need for self-recognition. Purifying our
motives require a constant watching of all desires and hidden agendas that
cross our mental horizons. It is endeavoring to take an action while at the
same time, letting go of our desire for a specific result. Pride may be the
outcome where there is desire for achievement or an attachment for the
results of our actions. Pride breeds separation and is a hindrance to our
sense of oneness with all humanity. |
7 |
Cultivate Contentment
and Serenity
to develop the spirit of
non-attachment as the witness or onlooker who sees all people and happenings
through the light of universal love. |
Contentment is not a state of repression
but a state of serenity that transforms the negative into the positive
recognizing that every thought we have is contagious and the time is coming
when every thought will become public property. Therefore, our inner
contentment radiates and creates an atmosphere of serenity and peace.
Contentment and serenity is the deep calm devoid of emotional disturbances.
Contentment is "seamless" where we are the in all life's situations of
conflict, but we can help heal conflict situations by contributing our own
calmness, serenity, peace of mind and compassion. Contentment and Serenity
are the way of the "Peaceful Warrior". |
8 |
Develop Equanimity
in all situations. |
Do not try to get rid of life's
difficulties, but be thankful that they are there to smooth the ragged edges
of the personality and to teach greater compassion for others. Find a point
of peace within you in the midst of any or all conditions of life. Achieve
equanimity both in praise and blame, success or failure where public opinion
has no hold over your mind or emotions. |
9 |
Study the Lives &
Writings of Inspirational Role Models |
We become inspired by the lives of
historical figures living and non-living, who have incorporated the
principles of non-violence, love, compassion and forgiveness into their
daily lives. Contemplate their lives and remember them during life's
difficulties and the "dark nights of the soul". Hold the remembrance of
those who have shed light on the darkened corners of mind and heart in
life's most difficult hours. |
10 |
Remember God or
"Higher Self"
in all life's actions
and interactions. |
Whatever your beliefs and non-beliefs,
when confronting conflict situations within your life or within the lives of
others, it is very important to develop growing sensitivity to hearing the
inner voice that leads to the defenseless endeavor to dwell in the Higher
Self. Holding the "remembrance" is the perfect steadiness of inner poise
which holds to the vision yet does the outer work on the physical plane. It
is doing the work of the world with one hand while holding the remembrance
of God or the Higher Self with the other. |