Saturday, May 17, 2014

Religion


I tried to come up with a more graceful title for this post, like "Why Hindu Dharma?" or something, and then I had an interesting and awkward experience the other day.  That experience served to both remind me of something and teach me something new about myself:  I was reminded that I tend to avoid the word "Religion", I associate it with negative things and so tend to couch my own beliefs in more euphemistic terms, such as "Spirituality", in the hope that it's more acceptable to myself and others.  I realized after this experience that this is wrong.  While at one time that might have been accurate, today the strength of my belief is much more than simple "Spirituality"; that using such words now is a disservice bordering on dishonesty to call it anything other than what it is:  Religion.

I've accepted that and have found a kind of joy and peace in it that has surprised me.  I'll explore this more another time though.  This post is really meant to be an expansion on my earlier Intro post, outlining my own wandering journey from the western traditions I was born to in this life, to Sri Shiva’s shining, lotus feet.

This life began being born into, from what I can tell, a fairly religious Christian family.  But then I was adopted.  My Family, who raised me, is an interesting blend like so many often found in the US, especially around the coasts and big cities.  My Mother's family are first generation Spanish (Valencia) and Italian (Naples).  They were raised Catholic, which is the majority from those heritages, but most of them are either severely lapsed and pretty much agnostic or flat out atheist now.  My Father's family is Colonial New England stock by way of northern England.  Suffice to say they were Protestant from way back then, but we're not certain what sect.  Now most of the line is either Unitarian or Congregationalist, my Dad was raised Unitarian.

For those that don't know, these are just about the furthest two extremes of Christianity you can find.  Most are probably well acquainted with Catholicism.  Unitarians are extreme universalists and don't actually care if you believe in the Abrahamic God or not, the services tend to be inclusive of all beliefs and scriptures and they embrace some eastern philosophy in their own way.  All are welcome, though the end goals preached are the same as any Christian faith.  I applaud this, I think it's great to bring people together in understanding and brotherhood, though I think they tend to forget the core beliefs and goals of the eastern thought they have brought in are very different from their own.  This is my background, where this birth began and how my Parents tried to raise me.

Attempts to indoctrinate me into either system of belief met with extreme resistance and sometimes sullen resentment, from an early age.  There are some things I knew with a certainty for as long as I can remember.  These things directly clashed with Christian belief systems.  I didn't have the vocabulary or frame of reference to describe these things I knew very well, but I knew when what I was being told conflicted with what I knew to be true and I couldn’t help but call it out every time.  Here is what I knew as a child:
  • God exists
  • God is all around us, in everything living and non-living.  In us too.
  • God is the warm sun and the sparkle in new snow, God is light and love.  God loves all, no matter what, and doesn’t judge or punish.
  • There is no ‘sin’ as Christians describe it, one is not ‘born in sin’ as they believe, we have God in us so we are as perfect inside as God.
  • Hell is a Human creation, there is no such place as Christians describe it.
  • There also is no Heaven, as Christians describe it.
  • There is no real ‘Death’.  The body changes but we remain.  I knew this because I knew I used to look different and live somewhere else, I remembered it clearly.
  • Everything, no matter how we Humans might perceive it, is Beautiful.  All things, even the most terrible seeming things, are Beautiful and Perfect and Necessary as part of the Whole.
  • Everything is Music, even light is Music.  Everything sings its own song.  The world around us is all of those songs together, all at once.
I couldn’t philosophize or apply logic to these points of knowledge that at that age, I didn’t really begin to explore what any of this meant or why I was so certain until I was around eleven or twelve.  Until then, this was the core of my belief, what I always knew for as long as I can remember, and what I clung to.  I clung tightly, because the views of the people around me seemed so dark, scary and sad and I was afraid I might begin to believe it too.

I questioned and argued with the catechism teachers and ministers/priests.  When I was very young I couldn't express very well why I disagreed, so was often labeled as intractable and stubborn, and frankly I remember being very frustrated with my inability express my thoughts in such a way that I would be heard.  I also knew when I was being patronized and resented it intensely.  Eventually I became so used to being negatively labeled and either argued with or ignored, I preferred to just zone out and stay silent.  My Mom tells a story about how they became worried enough about my silence that they took me to a Psychiatrist for evaluation.  The doctor said I was fine and very smart and that was the end of that.  I don’t actually remember that at all.

The minute I was old enough to choose to be confirmed in the Church or not, I chose (of course) 'Not' and never went back.  I don't think I was the only one who was relieved.  From this time forward began my own search for a faith that matched what I knew to be true.  I didn't stop to think I might not find it, or such a Faith might not exist.  I knew with such certainty that what I believed was Truth that I was also certain there were others like me out there somewhere.

In 5th Grade, I had discovered Western Mediterranean “Mythology” – I use quotes because these were once legitimate religions, but this is unfortunately the vocabulary I have to work with.  I read Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey, the Egyptian Book of the Dead, and began to devour everything I could find regarding the Greek, Egyptian and Roman histories and Religious Pantheon Stories – at least, as best as I could find information in my small New England town.

In 6th Grade I made a friend who was Mormon.  This was my first introduction to a form of Christianity that was not one of the three I grew up with.  Somehow it hadn’t occurred to me yet there were others, at least not any that were still practiced.  I borrowed a Book of Mormon from her and went to a couple of their Temple Meetings.  It wasn’t for me, of course, but it began a new path of studying the various versions of Christianity and their versions of Scripture, and then a further exploration of Abrahamic Religions in General.  In the years after, I read more versions of the Bible than I can remember, the Torah and Talmud, the Koran.  I went to different Churches/Temples where I had the ability to go to any.

It was about this time I began to have certain experiences that deeply affected me as well.  I was having recurring nightmares and strange dreams that were almost prescient at times.  Some of the nightmares also carried into waking for a few minutes.  I started sensing things like rainbows around people.  It was weird and a little scary.  Then someone came to me and taught me about what was happening.  I was taught how to dream lucidly and then control the dreams, how to project a protective barrier around myself, and that what I was seeing was auras of chakras, and how to read and control that ability.  He taught me basic meditation and breath control as well, and lead me to several visions.  Today I call that person a Guru, my first Guru, but back then he was simply a mysterious Teacher and Friend.  He left me only a couple of years later, almost as mysteriously as he came.  He said we would meet again someday, I still hope he meant in this birth.  I will write more about him and these experiences another time.

In 8th Grade, not long after Guru left, I met Sri Ganesha for the first time.  I was in the town library, procrastinating from researching a paper I really didn’t want to write by browsing the mythology and spiritualism stacks – I miss libraries.  I pulled out a book, sat on the floor, and a smaller book I had unknowingly dislodged fell from the shelf onto my head.  It was an illustrated Purana, I think.  I don’t know, because it was written entirely in Sanskrit or Hindi, or a similar script, so I couldn’t read it.  Sri Ganesha was on the cover and in a couple of the illustrations inside the book.  I was very taken with him and wished I could read the book.  I got back up and started looking through the stacks for more of that script and ran into what I now know was the Ramayana as well.  The pictures were stunning.  I couldn’t find anything else though, so I asked the librarian.  She told me she thought it was Indian mythology but wasn’t certain and didn’t know for sure what the books were.  She recommended I look up Indian literature in the Reference Section if I was really interested.

So, I looked it up in references and history but mostly found archeological and cultural anthropology texts.  They were interesting but I wasn’t so interested in it back then.  I did find out the God who had so interested me was Sri Ganesha, but not much else.  I learned about the Ramayana and Mahabharata, but there were no translations available in my local area.  The state of information available to a suburban American kid back then was laughable compared to today.  So, my journey continued….

(To Be Continued...)

Friday, April 25, 2014

A Little About Me, & This Blog

I tend to be terrible at lead-ins and segues, and apparently it's usually best to begin at the beginning...

So, hi there. *waves*  Call me Nora, or if you know me by another name feel free to use that, too.  But play nice.  =)  In all honesty, I have no idea who I think will be reading this.  I don't expect to really draw a readership, I plan mostly to be talking to myself.  That's really what this blog will be about, me exploring my own path now that's I've found it, and putting some of it down in writing.  To keep track of and review, to share with others if there is interest, and maybe to reach out a little to others should anyone ever take interest and read.

I am terrible at lead-ins, and also at these kinds of intro posts.  What does one say about oneself?  The exercise seems largely futile to me at times.  The interwebz being largely anonymous I could say practically anything, how would anyone know what is true and what isn't?  There is nothing special about me that I can speak about at any length, I am unremarkable in pretty much every way, as are my experiences in this life.  Many other have experiences and paths so similar to mine it seems silly to go on as if I'm some kind of unique snowflake.  Intro posts seem fraught with obstacles of Ego, something I am trying to learn to strip away.  But all this said, it's probably a good lesson to attempt to talk about the person I am in this birth without ego.  And without context as to who this person writing is, it becomes difficult to have a dialogue with anyone, and perhaps some day I might have a few readers and friends to interact with.  So here goes:

My body is female of north western European ancestry, currently nearing 40 years of age.  My hair is a dark blonde to light brown depending on the season, my eyes are green, height on the shorter end of average, and arthritis issues that cause me to occasionally walk with a cane.

I was born and raised in the greater Boston area of Massachusetts, USA, and still live there.  I was adopted as an infant.  I am married, to a person of the same gender as I am.  We have been friends for 22 years - more than half of both of our lives as this point - partners for 17 years, and married for 9 and a half years.  I am not gay, I am bi.  I have always found both genders beautiful in form, for me what makes beauty and who I love are the people inside, not outside.  We both chose long ago not to have children, for many reasons.  I knew I would have no children by the time I was 12, not that I don't love and enjoy children, I do.  I just knew it was not in the cards for me and that has never changed, though more reasons have been added over time.

I have a degree in the fine arts and I once considered a career in music.  I love nature and grew up camping, hiking and mountain climbing.  I still love hiking and long walks, and am often at my most content and quiet when outdoors.  I love gardening and digging my hands into soil.  I love to read, particularly philosophy and the sciences.  I also grew up around computers as the first home computers were being developed, and enjoy building and playing with systems and gaming.   I love to travel when I have the money to, and enjoy learning new things.  I adore animals of all kinds, I've cared for many friends over the years from many species, and even phyla, and they've convinced me of how little we humans understand intelligence and sentience, no matter what we think we know.

Like most people of my generation, especially those with degrees in the arts, I am not using my degree professionally at all, though to be honest I am not sure I expected to.  Instead I work in medical research, currently in IT.  I say currently because so far I seem to change careers every 6 to 8 years.

I've been kind of adrift for most of my life, looking for a place that I belong and what I am supposed to be doing.  I cannot remember a time when I have felt like I "fit" anywhere, though I've spent much of this life so far trying to fit into other people's boxes.  I am one of those that doesn't even really fit in with misfits and who has few real and long-term friends.  I tend towards social awkwardness in even small groups and am fairly solitary.  I am content this way.  If this life had been born to another culture or another time, perhaps I would have ended up a hermit of some kind.  I sometimes dream of dropping everything, taking off, and getting a cabin in the woods somewhere.  But there is family and commitments and I value both those I count family and the promises I make, and so I'm stuck for the time being.

I've called this blog "Another American Śaivite", because there seem to be a growing number of people in this country finding themselves at the feet of Sri Śiva.  Many more are coming back around to Sanatana Dharma in general.  I have only recently realized my own way, after spending most of my life so far looking for the system of belief that matched what I knew to be true.  Frankly, I gave up.  In a manner of speaking, it was God who found me in the end, and woke me back up.  Now, I am learning to understand I need no box to fit in at all.  But that's another story, and while it's part of who I am and thus pertinent to this post, it will make this post too long. Here's the link to it.

~Namaste