A wonderfully refreshing and most salubrious offering on the spiritual Big Picture that beckons us to a life of Joy, from the perspective of Hindu Philosophy!
I know, these days we think we don’t need yet another new philosophical take on life - bluntly put, we suffer from Brain Overload in this ugly viral age. Did you know that feeling is not new, though?
The great poet John Donne summed up our feelings 500 years ago:
And new philosophy calls all in doubt,
The element of fire (within us) is quite put out;
The sun is lost, and the earth, and no man’s wit
Can well direct him, where to look for it.
And add to that the stressors of living under tight control without socializing - when life in general seems a bleak oversized pressure cooker!
I know the feeling: in just such a constrained, don’t-know-what’s-next kinda mood I took up this little book, when at least the outside summery weather was pleasant.
I needed hope!
And Hodgkinson, with his affable demeanour was ready to oblige...
He says he belongs to the Advaita school of Vedanta, with no distinction between good and evil. Nothing wrong with that, for didn’t Pope Francis recently say that there are no bad people - only badly Confused people? A heartening thought indeed.
Why are there mainly confused and not-so-confused people? Because waking up is devilishly hard to do. Shedding our egos is a lifetime process.
But if you are persistent in avoiding evil and doing good, at the end of your labours you can come to see, with Hodgkinson and Ralph Waldo Emerson, that our personal selves never really existed - and that we are merely part of a vast Oversoul.
And so there I was, in a deck chair outdoors last summer, meditating on the Vedantic theory of One Mind pervading all nature - as a Christian meditating on the all-encompassing Mind of God.
I thought and I read. And as I read, as the odd bright red robin fluttered down to a low-hanging branch on our maple, I thought William Blake was right...
And “every bird that cuts the airy way is an immense world of delight -
Closed off by our senses five!”