Would you like to be happy?
Think about that goal-I want to be happy.
It's a common goal that many people share.
The question I want to ask you is
why? Why do you want to be happy?
Let's look at it logically. You walk by
a candy store, and suddenly you desire to go in the candy store and have
a piece of candy. Why? Because you know it tastes good. You've had it.
You know what candy tastes like.
Now go back to I want to be happy. Why?
Because it feels good, and you know it feels good because you've been there
before.
So why did you leave?
You'll probably say, "Well, I made some
bad decisions. I did some things I shouldn't have done and acted in ways
I shouldn't have acted, and here I am."
For a moment, imagine yourself as the
divine "I" holding the world in your hand and looking at it. Think, "It's
OK. It's really OK." Then you're happy. This is the natural state. You're
outside the world, the world is OK, and you're happy. When the world's
not OK, you're not happy.
Then something happens in the world. You
enter the world and go in to see what's going on. "How can I make it OK?"
"I?"
Not the same "I" anymore. Not the happy
"I." Now it's the questing "I." Do you think God meant to confuse us by
experiencing every creation as "I"?
You enter the world as "I." You start
to define yourself: "I am a white male. I'm an American. I'm a blond. I'm
a college graduate. I raise dogs. I drive a Corvette." More and more definitions.
The more definitions, the further you sink into the world.
One day you say, "I want to be happy."
In a way it's saying, "I want to be whole," but we don't usually understand
that so we say, "I want to be happy."
Someplace you seem to remember that trust
is part of being happy. So you begin to trust, and the first thing you
see is an advertisement in a magazine that says: "Be Successful, Be Happy!
Drive a Rolls Royce!"
"Be happy." That was what you wanted,
right? You're trusting. That was what you wanted too.
So a Rolls Royce, that's the secret. Then
you really lock it in. You define your lack of a Rolls Royce as unhappiness.
You begin to create, "I really need a Rolls Royce! I need a Rolls Royce
to be happy." You labor for a few years-quite a few years-all the time
defining yourself as "unhappily lacking a Rolls Royce" and thinking, "When
I get a Rolls Royce, I'll be happy."
Finally you have enough money to go to
the Rolls Royce dealer. Again you practice your spiritual path-you trust
the salesman. You turn over your money, and you get into your Rolls Royce.
It's a moment of bliss. "So this is what it means to be happy."
You drive out of the showroom and immediately
notice that there are other cars on the street that could really mess up
your Rolls Royce. You want to protect it. What you need is a garage. If
you had a garage, that would make you happy. Oh, and a guard to protect
the garage. And maybe another guard to watch the first guard. Somehow you
don't remember happiness taking this much work.
Worry. What has happened to your happiness?
You collect it, and then you protect it. Those go together-collect, protect.
When you're protecting, you're not happy. Maybe you took bad advice. Maybe
you've been seeking happiness in the wrong direction.
You know what will make you happy
in the world?
Nothing. Pursuing, possessing or protecting
any "thing" to make you happy doesn't work. You're unhappy until you get
it, and then after you get it you're unhappy when you think you might lose
it. Are you sure you want to be happy? Are you sure you won't settle for
being rich and famous? I know what you're thinking: "Well, if I'm going
to be unhappy anyway..." No, no. Seek happiness first. Being rich might
be bearable once you're happy, but if you're rich and still unhappy-what
unbearable suffering.
Happiness requires that you restore inner
peace. You can't be happy without inner peace. There's no joy without inner
peace. If you have any kind of upset or any lack of inner peace, you can't
be happy. Attachments eat away at your inner peace. Expectations disturb
your inner peace.
You expect something to happen, and it
doesn't happen. You experience disappointment. You're disturbed, and you
lose inner peace. You're swept away in the swirl of the world. Some people,
instead of realizing they created the expectation that led to the disappointment,
blame someone else for disturbing their inner peace. "You didn't do what
I expected you to do. Shame on you."
After enough suffering-lifetimes, in most
cases-you finally decide, "Maybe I should look for happiness where I lost
it." Light bulb! What a brilliant idea! Seek happiness where you lost it.
So you start dropping the definitions:
"I'm not a Corvette driver. I'm not a dog raiser." These are just definitions.
"I'm not an American. I'm not a white male." These are definitions. "I
don't need a Rolls Royce to be happy." No expectations. Nothing has to
happen or not happen to make you happy. You get back to the viewpoint where
you look at the world and it's OK.
This is ReSurfacing. Little "I's" quest
for happiness is really a longing to return to the viewpoint of divine
"I." (Isn't it curious? Marketing and advertising work, because they appeal
to an unrecognized spiritual longing.)
This is pretty traditional spiritual path
teaching. The inner circle teachings go another step beyond this. They
say that if you have enough wisdom and skill to manage your desires and
fears, you can participate in the world and make it better without becoming
entrapped or unhappy.
Now, that is Avatar. You can start by
not defining yourself so much that you sink.
