Religion/Spirituality
By Rummuser. Filed in Philosophy, Religion, Tambrams, Writing |Tags: Meditation, Religion, Spiritualism, Sprituality, Vipassana
Ashok, the youngest of the quartet on this Friday consortium binge, for all his youth, chose a topic totally unexpected from him. I hope that this post comes up to his very high standards. The other two, apart from me, Grannymar and Conrad, are seasoned travelers on this route. Both on the Friday posts, and the subject matter. Hints of their capability have seeped through, in their blog posts and I hope that they too would find this post interesting. Grannymar hopefully will withdraw the punishment that she gave me last week for not coming up to her very rigid standards of propriety.
“The hardest lesson in life, is to know which bridges to cross, and which to burn.”
-Anonymous.
“Nothing can be taught to a man; but it is possible to help him find the answers within.”
-Galileo Galilei.
And that sums up my journey from religion to spirituality.
I understand Religion to mean the various actions one takes to establish contact with the Divine.
Like all Hindus, my exposure to religion started from my first being aware of being a person. The constant teaching to pray, attend poojas, invoke God before meals, before falling sleep, before writing anything, asking for blessings, things and so on and so forth. Rituals, rites, group affairs, prayer songs, functions, the upanayanam, an important land mark in a Hindu’s youth when he is given knowledge of Brahma and given a sacred thread to wear. Exposure to our Mythology, Traditions, Legends and lore too played a great role in shaping my religious being.
In India, everything is religious. Nothing is ignored. If one’s foot accidentally touches another, an immediate apology in the form of a Namaste is given, because the other is Divine. If a coin or a currency note falls down, it is picked up and an invocation is said apologizing Goddess Lakshmi for the insult. A sacred symbol is written on top of the page before anything is written. Before studying anything, the Goddess Saraswati is invoked to bless the endeavour.
A lifelong obsession with all these and festivals including marriage and funeral ceremonies being converted into religious occasions sums up a Hindu’s life. Everything that happens, good or bad is attributed to Divine intervention. All commitments are made with the proviso, “God willing!”
My life till my mid teens was no exception. I went through all these things. Belief and Faith was drummed into my head with precision and regularity.
This was in the midst of the Rationalist and Atheist movement gaining strength in the South of India where I was then located. If from one side religion was being drummed into my head, from another side, rationalism and atheism was. I succumbed to the latter due to “peer pressure”. By the time I was sixteen, I was an atheist and a hedonist. Life was good.
Many things happened subsequently in my life, but religion played no part in it except in one case, when a Roman Catholic girl that I was interested in, insisted that I convert to Roman Catholicism before even getting engaged. I attended catechism classes and took serious instructions from her Father Confessor. I could not be convinced, and that relationship broke up. So that attempt at organized religion also failed. Life was good. Life began to revolve around spirits – Rum, Gin, Beer, Whisky, and when not available, hooch.
Fast forward to my early thirties. Something kept nagging me to give religion a shot again. So, I went back to practicing some rituals and visiting temples of worship etc. Life was good. The spirits continued to flow.
Came mid thirties and I was on the fast track in my career burning the candle at both ends. Step in an atheist friend of mine, who incidentally continues to be one of my dear friends and an atheist, who introduced me to Transcendental Meditation, yes the very same that the Beatles took up to. He thought that I would handle my stress better with that technique. I did, and curiosity took me to studying the subject of meditation and I was hooked into spiritualism. That initiation and the subsequent practice as well as reading of various books on matters spiritual, comparative religion etc, put me on a different tack completely. Life got better. The spirits continued to flow, but now the most sophisticated variety, like Single Malts!
Came the early forties and my mentor and then immediate boss, with whom I had many occasions to exchange views on spiritual matters, challenged me to attend a Vipassana meditation camp. I accepted the challenge and that ten day camp, transformed me and the path that it led me to, is the one that I continue to be on today. The importance of spirits started to decline.
So, from the chaotic and totally unstructured Hinduism, I travelled the Atheist route back to Hinduism and then, dare I say, got promoted to spiritualism due to unquestionable serendipity. So, it all boils down to serendipity after all. Came my late fifties, and the spirits simply disappeared from my life. Hedonism too just fell off by itself.
I understand spiritualism to mean, the real-ization that I am a spiritual being having a human experience. This implies that every other person and being in creation too is the same. If that trend of thought is to be taken to its logical conclusion, every ‘thing’ is one. The path that I am on now, should hopefully take me to that real-ization.
I accept that Religion has its place in society, but it is not for me. I am on a different ‘high’. I also accept that Atheism too has its place in society. It is just not for me. While I can defend myself about this, I simply do not wish to.
Post Script: Grannymar, Ashok never did take up your suggestion for brevity. I am glad that he did not. I would not have been able to do justice to this subject, had he agreed.



Friday, August 14th 2009 at 21:28 |
So many of your posts, I take a tour of a culture that seems very unlike our own in America. Yet, I come out with a friend that seems very much family, very familiar.
I like your personal journey spelled out this way. Very interesting – and, now, I want to research Vipassana meditation to see if I can find what you were getting through your camp. As you will see from my post, we have come to very similar positions in our view of spirituality, it seems.
Excellent post!
Rummuser Reply:
August 15th, 2009 at 10:44
The US has many Vipassana meditation centers. You can google for them and find one close to you. Be prepared however to be completely cut off from everything for ten full days. No papers, tv, phones books nothing. Simply learn to meditate and follow instructions day in day out. You will come out a completely new person.
Friday, August 14th 2009 at 21:37 |
I am glad Ashok didn’t listen to me, otherwise we would have missed peeling back another layer to the spiritual you!
Rummuser Reply:
August 15th, 2009 at 10:42
I am waiting for Ashok’s post to see if he decided to follow your suggestion! I suspect not.
Friday, August 14th 2009 at 23:01 |
Mm! I left your until last! (I can’t find Ashok’s post)
I had God and Religion drummed into me at Sunday school, Church, School and by all the adults in my life except my father who just backed up my mother in her insistence that I go to Church etc, even at boarding school (Wymondham College, Norfolk, England). And, I took to it…I really believed all the lies and nonsense…until that God allowed my Grandmother, His most faithful and loving servant, die in the agony of cancer. That after 13 years of continuous pain after a double radical mastectomy.
That was when I started to look at what I had been taught.
I now find I need no explanation of my, what we choose to call, spirituality.
Thnaks for a great post which I will return to.
Rummuser Reply:
August 15th, 2009 at 10:41
I suspect that a vast majority of humanity travels this route but is unable to articulate the journey as well as you have done here.
Saturday, August 15th 2009 at 00:50 |
Rummy, thank you for your sincerity on this subjet matter. I really appreciated your description of your journey through your life and how you ended up at this particular belief in your life.
Rummuser Reply:
August 15th, 2009 at 10:40
Thank you Maynard.
Saturday, August 15th 2009 at 06:14 |
Moi aussi. No Religion. The life of spirit. Yup.
Rummuser Reply:
August 15th, 2009 at 10:40
Amen!
Saturday, August 15th 2009 at 07:21 |
I suppose I’m an atheist. My husband is & he’s kind, gentle, incredibly good. It’s hard to admit. In the 40s everyone went to church because it was the social thing to do. To say you were an atheist was blasphemy.
I loved reading about Hindu religion & rituals.
Rummuser Reply:
August 15th, 2009 at 10:39
Atheism is a perfectly acceptable position within the broad umbrella of what is now called Hinduism. No one loses anything by proclaiming to be an atheist. You might like to see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C%C4%81rv%C4%81ka
bikehikebabe Reply:
August 15th, 2009 at 19:37
I had a religious upbringing. My husband’s brother & his 1st cousin are Presbyterian ministers. I think I’m agnostic but I don’t worship anything.
Rummuser Reply:
August 16th, 2009 at 09:20
Perfectly alright with me.
Saturday, August 15th 2009 at 08:50 |
Grannymar made a suggestion of Brevity?! I am so sorry, I never understood it that way. But none the less I am really glad to read what I read, an excellent description of a very insightful journey from religion to atheism to religion and finally spirituality.
Rummuser Reply:
August 15th, 2009 at 10:37
Thank you.
Saturday, August 15th 2009 at 20:00 |
My family said Grace at dinner. We folded our hands & said a prayer which was a ditty that rhymed.
I was at the top of a mountain with my bicycler friends & it looked like a storm was coming. Jan asked a group of nuns in long black habits (looking at the view) to pray for us; then she stepped back & took a picture. (I had my hands folded.)
Rummuser Reply:
August 16th, 2009 at 09:20
Good enough.
Saturday, August 15th 2009 at 20:03 |
I’m agnostic. Our family went to Presbyterian Church every Sunday, but weren’t very religious. My husband’s brother & 1st cousin are Presbyterian ministers.
Rummuser Reply:
August 16th, 2009 at 09:19
The more I interact with different peoples, the more I find that people everywhere are subject to more or less similar experiences and find their own way.
Saturday, August 15th 2009 at 21:25 |
It was interesting to read about your journey in search of true religion. You went through what is literally called “learning through experience.” You’ve got the wealth of religious knowledge.
Rummuser Reply:
August 16th, 2009 at 09:18
I am glad that you found the post interesting.
Sunday, August 16th 2009 at 03:48 |
Previously I’m a Christian, then follow Buddhism because of a girl (now my wife).
I think all religions are same, namely encourage human to the goodness, and spirituality will enrich our religious insight.
Rummuser Reply:
August 16th, 2009 at 09:16
Entirely in agreement with you. My late wife was a baptized Methodist, but gave up and became a spiritualist, if that is the word to use.
Sunday, August 16th 2009 at 22:45 |
What lovely documentation of something important to you, the spiritual portion of your journey through life. May you always have peace within.
Rummuser Reply:
August 17th, 2009 at 09:39
That is a very nice wish for me Karla. Thank you.