Disillusionment as a Positive Process, Part 2
The Sufi saint Hazrat Inayat Khan said, “Shatter your ideals on the rock of Truth.”
Part of the beauty of this quote is the implication that we—after building our ideals with precious and sincere intention—can be active agents in removing our own illusions. I love this quote because it says so simply that we need not feel powerless and passive when disillusionment begins to arise. We can be idealistic without becoming rigid, by renewing our beliefs. We can take an active part in re-creating what we take to be true, sensing what is solid and using even the hardness of experience to orient ourselves once again.
Embracing disillusionment makes it more comfortable.
But how? When we resist the actualities of life we suffer. Resistance may be the only pain we can spare ourselves. Releasing ideas, opinions and beliefs that keep us from adjusting to life as it is now is the first step to releasing resistance. Disillusionment sheers away the ignorance that supports resistance. Realization is a lot less painful than having the same realization down the road, after you invest even more time, thought, energy, money and love.
Shedding an old belief is not about having “been wrong about life.” We cannot learn what life has to offer before it is in front of us. Like a new tooth, a more effective and mature state grows in to take the place of shattered beliefs—if we do our Inner Work instead of retreating from the pain. Unlike a tooth, we can shed beliefs many times in the course of a lifetime.
Disillusionment is like yoga for your identity, allowing you to stretch. The more you do it the better it feels. Flexibility of belief turns so-called mistakes into stepping-stones.
When expectation or fantasy do not bear out, step carefully. Relax fury. Sink deeper than despair and refuse to become jaded. Insisting that life “should be” different is like saying the way a universe spins should be based on whether or not we personally approve. Life– from the perspective of ego–does not play fair.
Fairness is a human concept and Life is not constrained by it. Find the part of yourself that is bigger than what you wanted.
Disillusionment can feel like a death. It is the death of a state of ego, a form we adopted—borrowed from life. In the world of energy, pain does not always mean something is wrong. Pain can mean something is right. Opening and awakening the heart center farther or faster than you ever have before can feel like floating shards of broken glass.
Disillusionment, embraced, is a spacious feeling. It offers a poignant freedom. We are no longer chained to a view that does not truly serve us anymore. Losing an illusion is cause for celebrating significant success after confronting and rethinking an old point of view.
In a very real sense, beliefs in the early stages of spiritual growth are like training wheels. Periods of disillusionment are like essay exams, when multiple-choice answers we have been given are no longer enough. It is a time to demonstrate understanding from within. Disillusionment is a time to shed points of view that are no longer large enough to longer contain our wisdom.
At first this may feel like losing the path. In practical life we seek to arrive at a destination. In spiritual life the parameters of progress cannot be measured by the same set of standards. What seems to be a sidetrack may be the main road. A receptive seeker gradually learns to sense the direction, attunement, or quality of energy that feels ‘right’ in any given moment. Disillusionment helps us learn to sense this direction instead of making assumptions.
Unshakable acceptance and peace come from being in touch with life as it actually is. Disillusionment is progress to those who aspire to a greater truth.
What have YOU discovered about life that surprised you? What belief did you need to release to be able to discover it?