Saturday 14 February 2015

Seed: A Return to Sacred Meaning


Seed: A Return to Sacred Meaning
We like to celebrate the coming of the New Year. It is the end of a twelve month cycle of the four seasons and the beginning of a new one. Twelve is the number of completion, forming a whole, a perfect and harmonious unit. In ancient civilisations it corresponded to the plenitude, the completion of a thing. It expresses the idea that the Universe forms a whole.
In the New Year we all hope for new and favourable beginnings. We do not always know what it is or how to articulate it, but deep inside there is a longing, to live according to a true calling that comes not from the personality but from a deeper part of ourselves that is connected to a greater whole that, if we recognise, opens a door to a different experience of life. It offers the possibility that we can see and experience and connect to life in a new way that enables us to participate differently and more deeply , from an awareness of a great and unfolding mysterious whole of which we are a part.
This emergence of the new light, a new beginning in the winter, also belongs to a mystery of light and dark that we have always been part of. So although it may appear to be an end of a cycle, we are really participating in a mystery that has been celebrated in every culture over thousands of years of recorded history . I call it a participation of being. The need to participate with a greater awareness evokes in me the image of the seed and the question: in today's culture, what are we really rooted in? We wish for a fresh start, like a new seed, a new growth. The power of a seed is unimaginable. Within it lies the mystery of time, the cycle of seasons and of death and rebirth. It possesses both masculine and feminine qualities which are in constant creative dialogue. From the dark womb of the feminine the direct force of the masculine emerges and shoots up into the light. Light and dark are in constant relationship. The seed is also both the centre and the circumference, calling us to remember the sacred nature of life, the inter connected language of the universe, a song of oneness communicating to us and telling us, again and again, that we too are partaking in a primordial whole.
When we begin to realise this, we begin to participate in the great mystery of being that is so central to our existence. We begin to realise we are rooted in a greater rhythm, the reality of a greater whole which is at the same time unique to each of us. If and when we begin to live from such awareness, it could bring with it a very different understanding, so essential to the quality of our life, providing us a new sense of our roots.
Returning to such awareness is a returning to the language of life, no longer from a place of separation but from a place of sacred communion.When we hold this awareness within our body we become a full participant with the earth and the cosmos­ at that moment something is allowed to live according to its true nature. We remember. That which is remembered lives. When we hold this consciousness in our heart, we naturally offer it back to life. This not only gives life meaning, but like a seed, revitalises it. We then participate not only in the mystery of our own being but in the whole wonder of creation.
Om Namah Shivay

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