The Spirituality of Unity?
I was reflecting on how, many times,
spirituality is often conveyed as unifying the self with all being. I remember reading
William James ‘s Varieties of Religious
Experience, where he describes saints who went through this conversion process,
and started to see themselves as united with all nature. Shifu Sheng Yen
describes this in Hoofprint of the Ox
as a kind of initial understanding of emptiness, but it doesn’t go far enough
to question what is the self who entertains all that experience. In fact, I
recall that Sheng Yen refers to this as Big Self, meaning a self that has
expanded to include all phenomena around it.
Is there anything wrong with this big,
unified self?
One problem is that it is still a “self”, and
it is easy to get attached to the feeling of being unified with everything. I
recall reading certain poets in my undergraduate years, Coleridge and Wordsworth,
who seemed to be describing the ecstasy of being one with the universe, and having
no conflicts with the universe at all. I have had a similar, though rather
trivial, experience in my undergrad years. I was sugar-deprived for a while (or
perhaps just food deprived in general), after which I went to a Jewish bakery
on Bathurst and Lawrence. There, I had bought a Danish or pastry with blueberry
jam inside of it. I recall eating the pastry and immediately feeling a kind of
rush, as though all the thoughts and things around me had suddenly become very transparent. I even felt a kind of weightless sense as I
was walking home. I think this is what happens if a person doesn’t eat for a
while! Of course that rush subsided, but the feeling I had was not getting
caught by thoughts, yet being very lucid and feeling reconciled with the world.
The other challenge with the notion of unity
is that it is rare to always feel unity with all experiences. Anything one
asserts has to have an opposite somewhere. If I feel unified with all things one
day, where would the sense of disunity fit into that equation? Again, I recall
what the Venerable had mentioned in his trip to Toronto recently: see the calm
in the vexation, rather than attaching to calm itself. Unified mind is
equivalent to attaching to some feeling of unity. And I write this because I am
so tempted to look for that feeling of unity… because I somehow think it means
that the self is dissolved. Quite the contrary, anything that I attach to is
going to have a self, because attachment always entails subject and object. The
implication of this is that even if what I experience is not so unified or
feels fragmented and even wrong, I need to recognize that all these impressions
are thoughts. They are neither unity nor disunity. If I can recognize that the
thoughts are neither parts nor wholes, I can cease feeling anxious to try to
unify the thoughts together into some coherent or pleasant pattern. In that
way, I see past the thoughts to understand where they arise in mind, without
trying to ‘join them’ to mind through some pattern.
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