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	<title>A Sensitivity to Things &#187; heart</title>
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		<title>What Matter Age?</title>
		<link>http://sensitivitytothings.com/2008/06/22/what-matter-age/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=what-matter-age</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 21 Jun 2008 12:01:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jaitra</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[childhood]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[There’s a funny saying about things that go around coming around. Usually it’s karma, an eye for an eye and a sow for a reap—the great spiritual law of the universe that dictates bad things for things done badly, good for that done gladly. But inspiration goes around as well, and more like a fire [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://sensitivitytothings.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/the_wheel_of_life_bhavachakra.jpg"><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-276" title="The Wheel of Life, Bhavachakra" src="http://sensitivitytothings.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/the_wheel_of_life_bhavachakra-181x250.jpg" alt="What goes around, comes around" width="181" height="250" /></a>There’s a funny saying about things that go around coming around. Usually it’s karma, an eye for an eye and a sow for a reap—the great spiritual law of the universe that dictates bad things for things done badly, good for that done gladly.</p>
<p>But inspiration goes around as well, and more like a fire than the predictable arc of an arrow—leaping, dancing, taking light as it spreads; a force that creates and multiplies rather than destroys.</p>
<p>A blog comment by a reader inspired me to write an entire post in return, a list of childhood memories which beget and became <em><a title="Sumangali.org: My First Meme" href="http://www.sumangali.org/my-first-meme/">My First Meme</a></em>, a charming, illumining anecdote on age, meditation and self-transcendence at <a title="Sumangali.org: In the Spirit of Serendipity" href="http://www.sumangali.org" target="_blank">Sumangali.org</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>Age does not matter. Until his passing at age 76, Sri Chinmoy proved that to me. Through his life of meditation and self-transcendence he showed me that perhaps I am not as limited as I think. I hope to continue forgetting how old I really am. I hope to feel amused, rather than bound, if I do happen to remember, and grateful to Sri Chinmoy, especially if others find it funny too.</p></blockquote>
<p>The torch is passed, the wheel turned. And <a title="Kurt Vonnegut: So it goes" href="http://books.guardian.co.uk/departments/generalfiction/story/0,,2057297,00.html" target="_blank">so it goes</a>&#8230;</p>
<h3>What Matter Age?</h3>
<p>I can relate to the sentiments above in so many ways.</p>
<p>At age thirteen, and in my first year in High School, I would at times be mistaken for sixteen or older, not because of my size, but my attitude and demeanour. I was overly serious and “adult,” something of an grown up trapped in a child’s body, and for the most part related to my elders better than my peers. Which isn’t necessarily a bad thing unless it is making you miserable. It was and then some.</p>
<p>Now twenty years on and thirty-three, I find age to be a bit of a joke. I have reached a kind of dim, twilight zone, like a purgatory between youth and senility, where I have to stop and think to remember my age. I still can not believe I am in my thirties, and for that matter during my twenties I could not believe I was not a teen.</p>
<p>This is only because of meditation.</p>
<p>With the regular practise of meditation—in which I am certainly no expert, but hopefully an advertisement for: a poster-child for meditation’s slow-dawning felicitation to experience life in the ever present, ever lasting now—I again feel as I did before those forgettable, teen-aged years.</p>
<p>Like a child. Like myself once more.</p>
<p><!-- More -->Musing upon the inevitable forward march of age, I am reminded of learning to drive recently—several years ago in fact—in which getting over the insistent feeling that I was an impostor acting as a grown-up—driving seeming like such a grown-up thing to be doing—was far harder than getting a handle on the rules, firm grip of the wheel.</p>
<p><a href="http://sensitivitytothings.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/mail_model.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-277" title="Mail model" src="http://sensitivitytothings.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/mail_model-176x250.jpg" alt="John Gillespie, postman" width="176" height="250" /></a>Likewise my career. After years striding the streets as a postman—a card-carrying job for loners, introverts and others who wish to drop out of the ‘nine to five,’ or in my case, approximate a wandering, meditating monk, composing poetry while roaming up to thirteen kilometres a day, I exchanged hair shirt for one starched, press-ganged into a pre-press job with a design company, and rejoined my last seen at university, career-making peers on the cusp of their thirties, threshold or over of marriage, mortgages and children.</p>
<p>What a joke it all was. Feeling like a child trapped in a far too big body I had to get head around idea of being an “adult,” or at least its outer appearance; joining serious colleagues in serious decisions about heavy responsibilities and pressing problems—not to mention getting in line for performance appraisals and promotion, a necessary evil when regular, expensive overseas trips to supply my meditation habit—or self-enlightenment sanity excursions as I subtitle them—were a necessity.</p>
<p>Throughout my extended tour of the five-days-a-week world of adult duty, I was always keenly conscious of the illusory nature of it all, of its secondary status to the pursuit of my ageless, real identity.</p>
<p>Funnily enough, and this is a very real letter of recommendation for meditation, I find that people value a person who can bring a child’s touch to a serious situation, a person able to laugh and to joke, remain good-natured and even-tempered when others do not. I was genuinely moved by the extent my colleagues showed their appreciation when it was time to move on from that job—their sincere, heart-felt sentiment running to pages on hand-made leaving card. Not to mention all of the hugs I had to dodge.</p>
<p>In feeling like a child still, I in truth should be grateful to my mother, whose raising of me was anything but conventional—I am “old” enough, or at least wise enough to appreciate this now. Now sixty-five and looking barely fifty, she is a guileless, child-like woman, and as far away from adult politics and game-playing as is possible; it is I her child who has to point out the alternative interpretation of occasional, unintentional faux pas. Her youth-like, light of heart qualities I once mistakenly sought to uproot in myself, leave behind in a wrong-headed, head-strong rush to “grow up”—early, regrettable attempts at self-transformation with a labourer’s pitchfork, rather than the meditation’s gentle pruning.</p>
<p><a href="http://sensitivitytothings.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/ckg211.jpg"><img class="alignright size-thumbnail wp-image-278" title="Sri Chinmoy" src="http://sensitivitytothings.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/ckg211-125x119.jpg" alt="Sri Chinmoy by Pavitrata Taylor" width="125" height="119" /></a>But most of all, I can relate to <a href="http://www.sumangali.org/my-first-meme" target="_self">Sri Chinmoy’s</a> philosophy of <a title="Sri Chinmoy’s philosophy of self-transcendence" href="http://www.srichinmoy.org/resources/library/talks/human_experience/self_transcendence" target="_blank">self-transcendence</a>—transcendence of mind, belief, achievement and of age. In this respect alone I have so much to be grateful to my meditation teacher for.</p>
<p>Initially self-taught in <a title="A Sensitivity to Things: meditation" href="http://sensitivitytothings.com/category/meditation/">meditation</a>—I am something of an autodidact in most things; a good quality when one remembers to be humble, or the much that one does not know—I have come to learn that meditation is so much more than a moment of peace, or a silent mind only in a silent room. Sri Chinmoy’s philosophy of the child-like heart, of living as a child rather than living childishly, has re-invented my life in the most remarkable ways, transformed me in a fashion I once could not imagine.</p>
<p>Compared to my former self, you could say I am re-born.</p>
<p><strong>Photo Credits</strong></p>
<ol style="font-size: smaller;">
<li><a href="http://bp2.blogger.com/_xvLMR7UYI9c/SCOvHIup4BI/AAAAAAAAAZY/Sa9YM9Dj-H4/s1600-h/the_wheel_of_life_bhavachakra_tk75.jpg">Teh Google</a></li>
<li>Mail model John Gillespie, <em>Post News</em>, Dec 2003</li>
<li><a href="http://www.pavitrata.com">Pavitrata Taylor</a></li>
</ol>
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