Karuna Response to the Coronavirus
Karuna comes from the
Sanskrit kara, meaning “to do,” or “to
make.” Karuna is a compassionate state
of being as part of a shared human experience. Karuna is the compassionate
doing of something to alleviate suffering. Karuna is a key element of the yogic
path, opening the “eye” of enlightened wisdom to see the harmony, contentedness, and interdependence of all living beings and their natural
environments within the whole universe. Karuna is the highest level of
compassion and is comprised of six basic spiritual virtues latent in the soul.
These latent virtues are transmitted from the living beings, souls, through the
spiritual trajectory of awareness, attitude, vision, and action. These virtues
live as vibration frequencies in the soul, and their expression forms a living
system of interrelationships that connects us in the experience of life. Karuna
is like a satellite that emits the frequencies of love, kindness, mercy,
forgiveness, nonviolence, and generosity. The Corona virus is a global health
and societal emergency that calls for the collective effort of human beings to
take informed and effective action to protect the self and others. The virus is
an excretion of a toxic cell that has gone viral. It spreads mainly between
people through respiratory droplets from an infected person as well as through
touching surfaces that may contain germs from the virus, then touching one’s
own mouth, nose, and eyes. In order to cope with the sudden-ness of this
outbreak and the drastic precautions people are being asked to take, there are
a lot of emotional and psychological consequences, such as distress and
anxiety, uncertainty and worry, confusion and fear, and overreaction. Because
there is no immediate treatment available to deal with the virus, people are
moving into spiritual domains for strength, support, and signals. Karuna is
offered as a collective spiritual experiment to help open our hearts and souls
to a more elevated response, one requiring resilience and flexibility
Compassionate
Love
Compassionate love is
care and consideration for someone. It is not selfish in its aims and upholds
respect, reverence, and regard. Its intention is pure. People who love
compassionately, whether for loved ones, their community, or all of humankind,
do so continually, and maintain a relationship with others through selfless
service.
Social
Distancing – Don’t Be Distressed
In observing social
distancing, the space of six feet apart invites us to practice the spiritual
principle of “being detached and loving.” The foundation of human life is love.
Love brings souls closer. Being detached gives us the chance to be fully
present. Social distancing is the opportunity to share spiritual love. With
your eyes, emit the vibrations of elevated thoughts, pure feelings. This is
called
“drishti” — the sharing
of soul conscious love. With your folded hands, honor the divinity in the
other. This is called “namaste.” With your smile, acknowledge the other with
the peaceful greeting of “om shanti.”
Compassionate
Kindness
Compassionate kindness comes from
self-compassion – do unto others as you would have them do unto you. It is the
ability to be gentle with the self and to go beyond self-judgments. When we
enhance this inner ability to really see the self, then we can see and feel
what is around us. We would treat others the way we would want to be treated.
Compassionate kindness brings stability and satisfaction in relationships. It
gives courage and strength to see every thought, word, and action as an
opportunity to be kind in large and small ways.
Cleanliness
Is Important – Don’t Become Frustrated
At a time when we are
dealing with preventative responses, the spiritual tenet of “cleanliness gives
the clarity to be safe” is applicable. Every time I wash my hands or wipe a surface,
I am being kind and keeping others safe. It takes a clear and clean intellect
to discern between choice and compulsion. Choose
Compassionate
Mercy
Compassionate mercy
motivates benevolence – going out of one’s way to help another. To be of
service to others gives a feeling of gratitude, something to be thankful for.
It is a spiritual disposition of understanding the essential in the expansion,
the underpinning wisdom in the vastness of information overload.
Be Informed –
Don’t Over-react
To be knowledgeable of
something is to have mercy on yourself, family, and community. Knowledge makes
it easy to follow directions with understanding. Mercy is to stay with what is
essential and not to over-listen, over read, over-speak, and overreact about
the information so abundantly available. Don’t keep thinking about the many
different opinions. Not keeping the detailed expansion in your mind and heart
means to have mercy for the self. Merge the waste of worry and stay with the
pure feelings of hope. The mercy of your own heart enables you to have
disinterest for the various types of ideas and opinions that could cause
over-reaction on your part. Compassionate Forgiveness Compassionate forgiveness
is an awareness that generates a willingness
to let go of guilt and blame that cause disturbance and distress to the soul.
It is the wisdom to forgive the self for acting out of ignorance and to
reinstate a sense of dignity by acting from enlightened responsibility.
Check for
Symptoms – Don’t Blame
When millions of people globally have to face
the fact that they may contract a deadly virus, then we know that we are
embracing a collective settlement for something that we contributed to in some
way and form. The
Usual response is to
project, to blame, and to accuse. In this particular settlement, it appears the
law of karma is enabling the animals to have their karmic revenge. The time of
collective settlement is also a time for reconciliation and forgiveness. It’s
the time to take our lifestyle seriously and to change our awareness, attitude,
and actions especially toward animals, plants, and Planet Earth. Forgiveness is
grounded in deep realization of causes, symptoms, and consequences. Forgiveness
sets us free.
Compassionate
Non-Violence
Compassionate
non-violence is to appeal to fairness, not to fear. The human heart is capable
of conceiving a complete substitute for violence. The heart’s deepest nature is
to trust what is true and real. The roots of this substitute grow from courage,
not from confusion. True nonviolence is only possible with unadulterated
fearlessness.
At Times
of Uncertainty — Don’t Get Confused
Some people behave in
certain violent ways when their behaviors are driven by fear. Panic unearths
exclusion and discrimination, resulting in anger, resentment, and prejudices.
For other people, compassionate non-violence is embodied best at times of
uncertainty. At these times, these people spontaneously act from the heart,
coming together in community as one human family.
Compassionate
Generosity
Compassionate generosity is to live from the
heart and not from the ego. As a human family, we must accept that in life
there are many challenges. In the face of challenges, we must rise with
humility, calmness, and courage. Compassionate generosity urges us to open our hearts
to our people and our planet. Compassionate generosity stops us from viewing
life through the eyes of greed. It prevents us from becoming small,
narrow-minded, lonely, bitter, and resentful. Compassionate generosity is to
live from a place of authenticity and abundance. It opens our eyes to see life
as it is (a new normal), instead of how it should be (normalcy bias).
Compassionate generosity awakens goodness in the soul and helps us to cultivate
heart-to-heart bonds and to live pure, unselfish lives.
Lockdown —
Enough for Everyone’s Need – Don’t Panic
There is a panic that runs through the society
when there’s a lockdown. People begin to stockpile and hoard food and other
essential supplies. The supermarkets and stores can sometimes hardly keep up
with consumers’ demand. The mindset is “survival of the fittest.” Compassionate
generosity can be applied through the simple reminders of “less is more,”
“enough for everyone’s need, but not everyone’s greed,” and “sharing is
caring.” To practice compassionate generosity at the time of crisis fosters a
sense of community and a feeling of interconnectedness. This shifts the focus
away from selfishness to a spirit of being in it together. In conclusion, the
thought and deep hope is that the human family will rise and open their hearts
with a more elevated response, moving from the shared human experience of the
Coronavirus to a collective spiritual response of karuna. What would this look
like? Karuna is like a spiritual scheme, a subtle vibration system. The
combined concentrated force of Karuna – love, kindness, mercy, forgiveness,
non-violence, and generosity — is in the subconscious of every soul. The
collective force of Karuna can transform the toxic vibrations present in the
current state of our world. Think of Karuna as a spiritual satellite, orbited
beyond the gravity of the universe, and souls as living modems strategically
planted across the world. Karuna has to be generated from a “Higher Source” to
carry properties to transform matter. The souls are spiritual beings, and when
connected to the “Source” of spiritual power – the Supreme Being — the souls’
collective Karuna can spread across the globe instantaneously. This is the
practice of Raja Yoga. It is the way to access “shakti,” or transformative
spiritual power, from the Supreme Source and to ignite the spiritual power of
Karuna from within the soul. It is the method to purify the energy fields of
physical matter.
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