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AUDIOBOOK
An amazing variety of people who share intensely
compelling experiences of speaking from the heart. Narrated by Marcus Flanagan.
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Earning and Spending Soul
Robert Rabbin
Many of my lectures and workshops revolve like planets in tight orbit around a
central theme: how do we express and demonstrate our spiritual understanding?
What do awareness, consciousness, and realization look like when those words
take shape and move into the world within a body of values, choices,
commitments, and actions?
This area of inquiry is what I term engaged spirituality. But even as I write
that phrase, I realize that authentic spirituality does not require the
qualifying adjective “engaged”—it is repetitive. Authentic spirituality is
automatically engaged: insight and action are as inseparable as flower and
fragrance. The only way to impede the natural movement of insight toward
corresponding action is if one builds delusional dams of such naïve notions as
there is no self, the world is not real, and nothing matters, everything is
pure consciousness.
Just as we work to refine our inner sight, we must work to clarify our outer
actions, so that they accurately and appropriately reflect our deepening insight
and wisdom. This inside/outside work is what I call spiritual activism, and it
implies a high degree of personal responsibility and honesty about our values
and our choices. Spiritual activism refers to all the ways in which we
actualize—make real through action—our spiritual understanding. I’ve
encountered considerable resistance to this notion of insight and action being
one and the same within spiritual communities. People don’t always want to look
at the relationship between what they say and what they do. There is a lot of
unconsciousness in this area. There is a lot of hypocrisy. Awareness and action
are one thing, and we must speak of them as one thing. We must hold each other
accountable to this truth, and to whether there is the same truth in our actions
as in our words. In this regard, I cannot do better than to quote Ralph Waldo
Emerson, "What you do speaks so loudly that I cannot hear what you say."
Money is perhaps the biggest blind spot when it comes to awareness of, and
responsibility for, our actions as expressions of our spiritual insight. MONEY.
The word alone is enough to take your breath away, isn’t it? Until we look at
our relationship with money square in the eye, until we wash each penny earned
and each one spent with our full awareness and conscious choice, our spiritual
light will be dim, our spiritual power will be weak, our spiritual heart will be
closed.
In our culture, money stands proudly on the same podium with religion, politics,
and sex as hot buttons of reactivity. Money is wired to a lot of emotional and
psychological buttons. Money triggers life and death issues for us, since it is
connected to our physical survival and well-being. Money triggers egoistic
issues, since it is connected to status and privilege. Money triggers
entitlement and abuse issues, since it is connected to power and authority.
Money triggers self-esteem issues, since it is connected to an individual’s
worth. Money triggers so many things, doesn’t it, and I wonder how many we are
aware of? How many issues around money do we look squarely in the eye, and then
do the same deep work we do as when we are trying to find our way to the soul?
Our beliefs—conscious or unconscious—about money will determine whether or not
our life choices and actions are a real and true expression of our inner
understanding. How we earn and spend our money may be the surest compass with
which to locate the North Star of our spiritual journey to Oneness, and to
wisdom, love, and compassion.
As spiritual beings, we say we are generous, but are we? We say we are
compassionate, but are we? We say we are selfless and concerned for others, but
are we? We say we care about the environment, about fair trade and socially
responsible business practices, about social justice—but do we? I think that how
we earn and spend money tells us the truth, and it may be a truth we’d rather
not see. I wonder what we might learn about a person if we were to simply watch
how they earned and spent money for one month, without being able to hear
anything they said to justify or obscure their tendencies.
My spiritual teacher, for whom I worked as a manager of his international
educational foundation, was forever telling us that money was the shakti, the
spiritual energy, of the world. For him, awareness of Self and awareness of a
dollar were not different. His respect, care, and consideration for money—not
the concept, not the abstraction, but each and every penny—were absolute. You
could watch him make money choices and know the true state of his heart,
motives, values, and character.
It’s easy to see how our money choices fertilize our attitudes and nourish our
habits. It’s also easy to see how our money choices enable and empower social
institutions. Every time we spend money, we are saying yes to a galaxy of
cultural values, assumptions, and structures: from the exorbitant salaries of
CEOs to the quality of education to the availability of affordable health care.
Money is an expression of our attention and intention; thus, what we do with our
money demonstrates the quality of our attention and the clarity of our
intention. How closely aligned are our money choices with our most important
values and our aspirations and hopes for ourselves, others, and for the world in
which we live? Our money choices are a form of worship, and our money choices
show us what we honor, respect, and love.
When you attend a lecture or event with a “by donation” entry fee, what goes
through your mind? How much, or how little do you donate, and why? Do you go
through the same process when you fork over nine dollars for a movie, and
another nine for popcorn and a soda? What is behind your complaints, fears, and
withholds around money? Do you believe in abundance, or scarcity? Do you believe
you’re a better person driving a BMW than an old Honda? Do you feel that you
“own” people to whom you pay money? Do you get mad at poor people? At rich
people? Do the tides of your self-worth and self-confidence rise and fall
according to your cash reserves? What dreams of passionate self-expression have
you betrayed for financial security? How much money is enough? How much is not
enough? Can you look a street person in the eye as you pass by? What does the
money you have serve and support, other than your own personal needs?
It’s a good idea to find out if your money choices speak for your truth and
stand for your heart in this world. Looking into all of this is hard work, I
promise you. It’s a lot easier to blow the whole thing off, but in so doing, you
would also blow off your soul and the possibility of living a truly meaningful,
noble, and majestic life.
I urge everyone to begin looking at his or her relationship to money squarely in
the eye. Work with some of the questions I’ve posed in this article, or come up
with some of your own. Ask your teachers to tell the truth about their
relationship to money, if they can. Don’t cut any corners on this inquiry. By
all means, sit like granite or glacier through a hundred years of silent
meditation, but spend as long seeing into the buying and selling of soul. Become
aware of the countless effects your pennies and dollars have, in your name.
Money is a sacred emblem of our heart, and our money choices are as true an
indication of our spiritual character as can ever exist.
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An inspired guide that will help you discover your own infinite nature
— one of enduring happiness and peace.
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