WORK AS MEDITATION
FOR THE CARE OF THE SOUL
This is an essay on teaching as an occupational hazard
& the care or neglect of the soul, based on a
reading of Thomas Moore`s , Care
of the Soul:
`Not understanding soul, companies look to the work
of other cultures and try to mimic their methods.
What they don`t realise is that method is not the
only thing. Another culture may be successful in its
business because it is still mindful of the needs
of the heart. It may not be enough to copy surface
strategies, ignoring the deeper evaluation of feeling
and sensibility that gives work grounding in the human
heart and not just in the brain.
Care of the soul requires ongoing attention to every
aspect of life. Essentially it is a cultivation of
ordinary things in such a way that soul is nurtured
and fostered. If we do not tend the soul consciously
and artfully, then its issues remain largely unconscious,
uncultivated, and therefore often problematic.
As a school student, I observed what I saw as good
and bad teachers, but what impressed me most about
my education was just how futile I felt the overall
schooling process was. Therefore, as a teacher, I
am aware that whatever our teaching title, I endeavour
to impart some wisdom, intimacy or maturity about
life into what is taught. If we are honest, we may
recognise that many of our parents and teachers meant
well, but often acted largely unconsciously at times.
As a result, unless we grow in reflection, we will
harm our children in the same way. We must try to
teach children to do their best to avoid being moulded
in the same way as their parents and the previous
generation have before; crippled by a society which
only wants behavioural norms and obedient students.
Especially when thinking of educating children, we
should remember that all of mankind, everyone, is
miserable until they find a pattern of life which
suits their nature; one which gives expression to
their inner qualities and allows them to realise their
creative gifts. There is no satisfaction or fulfilment
in living a life predetermined by well-intentioned
people ? parents or teachers- who decided that it
would be good, it would be the best thing, if someone
followed a certain path. Naturally we want to help
our children by foresight to avoid some of our own
judged mistakes and grievances which we felt ourselves:
but this is freedom and it can be frightening to all
concerned.
The misery felt from not knowing who you are or what
you are supposed to do is very deep and it is one
of the causes of the frenetic activities in which
modern man finds himself incessantly engaged. He or
she is always searching but does not know what for.
Sometimes it is money, sometimes status, almost always
success, but what they fail to see is that all this
activity is a cover-up. Modern man is searching for
himself, his soul, or a purpose and he has been lost
because he has not been taught where his real self
is to be found. He has always been taught to look
outwards, never inwards, and if a person does pause
so that his energies start to be redirected, he immediately
feels restless, then bored, then odd and eventually
frightened, so people avoid boredom at all costs because
in boredom fear arises.
The fear is senseless because it is only a self adjusting
process. The energy is moving inwards instead of outwards,
but this is healthy. Something is changing and this
is what we have been taught to fear. So here we have
one of the origins of the sense of guilt.It represents
the feeling that something has gone wrong, and things
are not what they should be. Its origin lies in the
difference between a person`s potentiality and their
actuality, between what they are actually doing and
what is within their potentiality to achieve.
Guilt has several origins. One is taught by parents
and society as thou shalt nots, this is right and
that is wrong. Others come from the persons themselves-
from a conscious or unconscious knowledge of their
real capabilities, of their real nature. The first
is likely to be phoney because much of it will be
artificial. The second one is real, however. People
know they have certain abilities or attributes which
they could use to enrich their lives or the lives
of others but they are failing to use them and hence
they have a feeling of disease, or sense that things
are not as they should be. Once the essentials of
life have been catered for, realisation of this potential
ought to be a secondary aim of society. .
To live the spiritual life in earnest, what emerges
in clarity is the impersonality of all life: in other
words if this is recognised deeply, we are always
ceasing to live a life which is only for ourselves.
Generally what most people seek is only happiness.
But teaching requires us to address this self-centred
position through inquiring very deeply into the question,
`What is life really about? ?Are we here only to have
and to get? Or is there a deeper understanding of
life which involves everyone`s education?`
Teaching children is a noble occupation if we don`t
use teaching to force students into pre-set ways of
doing things and encourage them to find ways to express
their inner qualities. If you have the passion to
teach with openness and in awareness, you will learn
a lot about yourself through it, so don`t let anyone
- even yourself, knock it!
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