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Concentration: One of Three Powers in Karma Yoga by Fǎshì Lao Yue

Buddha in the Garden by Fashi Lao Yue

A Request: Before you begin to read take some time to find your attention and concentrate on what you read. Ask for an intuitive approach, giving you some help to receive what is important to your practice, to your life.

The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full. John 10:10 NIV

Keep the quote in mind in this sense: all bondage (the thief) is in the mind and all freedom (the True Self) is in the mind.

As I start the day I write a word on a slip of paper and place it on Sweety who now sits on the kitchen counter. (see image)

Today’s word is concentrate. To concentrate. Here is what the dictionary tells us….

con·cen·trate
ˈkänsənˌtrāt/verb
focus one’s attention or mental effort on a particular object or activity.
gather (people or things) together in numbers or in a mass.
a substance made by removing water or other diluting agent; a concentrated form of something, especially food.

I see this definition as applicable to the quote. Keep this in mind.

To concentrate is something to do. To concentrate we find and gather our attention and place it on a particular object or activity. Undiluted. Fully present.

It is clear at least in this definition that to concentrate, is a two-step process. Fully focus on and remove what dilutes the focus. We focus our attention fully by gathering and remove whatever waters down our ability to focus.

This morning I focused on John’s quote above. On the surface it looks two-sided. On one side there is a thief who steals, kills and destroys. I ask, “who is this thief?” On the other side,  a giver of life and a form of giving that lacks nothing. I ask, “where is this giver of life?” If we focus and concentrate further the teaching opens and in opening  it is clearer.

Jesus knew the scoop. The thief is name and form (otherwise known as the ego, the me) and it is this conditioned side of us that comes to realize that something is lacking, something is missing which may result in stealing, killing and destruction. The ego is hungry, thirsty, needy, striving, searching for something that will satisfy it. The True Self beyond name and form (the Transcendent) is a life free of lack. It is a life that is able to meet what comes in life in the whatever form (name and form) as coming to awaken. When we know this as true we  avoid clinging and grasping after the name and form and listen, see, touch, taste the truth within the name and form. If we do cling we ultimately experience dissatisfaction.

As the quote suggests, the True Self knows that conditioned things will steal your peace of mind and happiness and will never bring about the fullness of life. The True Self warns us of the deadly power of the thief.

We need to be awake enough to see the thief that has come in the shape of some name and form and then be able to surrender our grasp on whatever name and form that has come our way. When we see the thief we must make no deals with it. The thief is a condtioned mental state not to be taken as real or believed to be true. And this takes practice, daily, committed practice. It is not enough to see the thief, we must do something.

The mind who takes its own confusion as real….(fooled by the thief)

does not know that this confused reality (delusion)

is the origin of pain and suffering.

The thief is an obscuration which more often than not comes in the form of an emotion (both positive & negative). And it generally is a habitual pattern. We have to be willing to surrender without analysis to look at the mental confusion and stop believing it is a doorway to the giver of life in its fullness. The thief comes in the form of some confusion that we think is real which over and over causes havoc in the mind and life.

Most emotions obscure a full life. The only ones that don’t arise from the ego (name and form) are forms of selflessness.  Selfless lovingkindness, compassion, sympathetic joy and equanimity are considered the only forms of emotion that are selfless. Even these emotions, however, can be co-opted by the thief because we can pretend to be kind, caring, sympathetic and even-minded.

At first, it may be difficult to see. Our emotions blind us from knowing our True Self. If we have gotten into an emotion, we must learn to ride it out until it dies without taking action on it. If we see the confusion before it gets emotional we can STOP! When we identify with emotions, we are caught by the thief, whether it is the love-thief or the hate-thief. In this conditioned state, we need greater effort to get free. Our heaps of form, feelings, impusles, consciousness, and mental images have been swamped by the emotion.

How many times have we defended our feelings by saying, “THAT’S how I feel!” which is often accompanied by “THAT”S who I am!”

We lose our spiritual life to our feelings because our feelings generally arise from one of the poisons. (greed, hate, delusion) Emotions often arise from a lack of something in our life and we claim we have found it (positive) or lost it (hate). They sometimes give us a false sense of control as well as a false sense of being out of control. What is actually happening is that we have given up control to well-established patterns and habits that we have reified as a thief in order to survive. The highs and lows of these emotions lead to disappointment and disenchantment. It is at this low ebb that the thief is at its weakest. And it is at this point that we can know firsthand not to believe the thief. Because The possibility of deliverance increases when disappointment and disenchantment shows up because we learn the thief is not to be trusted.

The thief (name and form, ego, emotions) obscures our True Self. John in his quote lays out the truth if we are willing to see it. Concentration helps us gather the mind (the skandas) and dilute the thief. But it is something we do and practice right where we are doing what we are doing with full attention. Concentration does not make room for the thief. It is an antidote worth practicing.

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