NOVA Magazine, Australia's Holistic Journal

The Point of Return

A holistic way of life based on respect for all life holds the key to our future. Story by Margaret Evans

The Point of Return“I do not desire kingdom, heaven, paradise or even nirvana. I only desire the end of suffering of all beings upon this Earth.” – Sanskrit verse recited by Mahatma Gandhi in his daily prayers.

“We live in an age of anguish.”
As the opening statement of a book, any book, it commands attention, particularly as it seems to be more resonant with truth with each passing day. Yet in this particular book, “Spiritual Compass: The Three Qualities of Life” by Satish Kumar, this confronting phrase serves to identify the commonality that links us all – an anguish that is political, social, ecological and spiritual, regardless of where, and how, we live on the planet. And, in that simple act, it’s already started the healing process.

Once again, I’m struck by how attuned the finest thinkers and holistic healers are to the needs of us mere mortals – they seem to know instinctively, intuitively, what we need at a given time. Eckhart Tolle did it with “A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life's Purpose”, then Deepak Chopra followed with “Power Freedom and Grace” 18 months or so ago, and Wayne Dyer with “Change your Thoughts – Change Your Life: Living the Wisdom of the Tao” more recently.

Yet while these others are household names and some would suggest they’re just doing what they do best, Satish Kumar has a humility and directness that speak directly to the heart and the soul. Indian by birth and a Jain monk for nine years (the Mahatma was also a Jain, a sect whose guiding principle is extreme non violence to honour all living things), Kumar espouses the philosophy of Ayurveda for its holistic healing of the self and the planet. Steeped in this ancient tradition, Kumar is also well aware of the materialistic and self indulgent ways of the West having lived in Western Europe for the past 30 years. He is a well known commentator, magazine editor and, lately, a presenter on BBC TV of a program that demonstrates his holistic view of nature.

In keeping with Mahatma Gandhi’s desire to end the suffering of all beings, Satish Kumar’s intention in “Spiritual Compass” is to give us “a way out of the anguish”, a direction to follow in all aspects of our lives. The “three qualities of life” of which he speaks are the Ayurvedic principles of sattvic, rajasic and tamasic. Simply put, the idea of sattva or a sattvic person is “comparable to the Wabi-Sabi of Japan, the Zen of Buddhism, the Tao of China, the Sufi way of Islam and the ways of the Shakers and the Amish”. It seeks wholeness and harmony, or as Kumar frequently suggests, “elegant simplicity”.

The rajasic way as we can probably gather from the root word raja, is all about drive and energy and arrogance and making the big statement. We are very definitely living in an age where the rajasic way rules supreme, says Kumar with the clear firm voice that gives this book its very distinctive tone. I suspect not everyone will like his forthrightness and some will find his comments about the apparatus and attitude of the global environmental movement, for instance, something he dismisses as “scientific environmentalism lacking depth and wholeness” and thus rajasic, as too dismissive. Maybe even a little rajasic themselves!

The growing preoccupation with the dire consequences for our planet, and all who live on her, from climate change, rising oil prices, widespread pollution, depleted energy sources, and, most recently, soaring food prices on the back of less and less space to grow staple grain crops, is leading us somewhere we have to strenuously avoid retreating, Kumar suggests. The common thread through all is fear, a tamasic quality relating to all the forces of darkness. It takes us to a place where we’re better not to venture, says this astute and compassionate thinker. While fear has its place in the climate debate, in making us act in a meaningful way to change policies and our own lifestyles, “if we allow fear to overwhelm us, to rule us, if fear becomes the driving force behind our environmentalism, then we are likely to be debilitated, disempowered and depressed.” This man doesn’t mince his words and I suspect no institution is safe from his piercing, but always truth seeking, gaze.

The alternative to fear, is, quite simply, love. And when he espouses this idea, it’s easy to find the Jain monk still beneath the trappings of a successful life in the West. “Our lives and our actions need to be rooted in love of the Earth and of the natural world,” he tells us. And for most of us, “caring for the Earth is a way of life rather than a way of crisis management”. His deep conviction that we really can find our way out of this morass and that the future is not one of dustbowls and deluges is very reassuring. But that’s only possible, says Kumar, with a total turnaround of the prevailing attitude that really it’s only humans who matter on this earth. Such rajasic “born to rule” arrogance flies in the face of an intrinsic understanding that we are but one small part of nature’s whole. I’m reminded of a telling comment by a senior lecturer in the Theosophical movement reported here in NOVA a year or so ago that Gaia would still exist in her eternal rhythms long after the human race had disappeared! It seems even more prescient now.

Satish Kumar tells us that he is frequently asked whether he is a pessimist or an optimist and his answer is always “optimist” because pessimism is tamasic, the way of no return. While he agrees with the scientific view that we are currently on the precipice because of our slavish devotion to a life fed by unsustainable and destructive fossil fuels, in his clear sighted way he believes this makes our choice easier: “If we go any further we will fall into the abyss. So the only thing we can do now is to take a step back; I call it the ‘the point of return’.” Interestingly, Sanskrit has a word for this state, pratikraman, and another, atikraman which means stepping outside our natural limits. And says Kumar, “Atikraman is what happens when we break the universal law.”

Applying this knowledge to today’s world, we need to step back from our current attitude of atikraman towards our natural and finite resources and return to energy derived directly from air, water and sun, the Pratikraman way. Given our Western love affair with the car (can it really be true that here in Australia four wheel drives are the fastest growing segment of the motor industry?), not to mention all those other creature comforts we find it impossible to live without, this is no easy task. But Kumar, at least, thinks it is achievable and, once again, he is persuasive. After all, this “ wasteful, destructive and consumerist tamasic culture” has only been around for 250 years or so and “in the context of the evolutionary timescale 250 years is a very short time. What was created by humans can be changed by humans.” He’s right of course so maybe that optimism is well placed after all.

It’s Satish Kumar’s effortless understanding of what it means to be holistic, to have a holistic worldview, that makes “Spiritual Compass” a book I will turn to again and again. A Jain sees the universe as a single entity, a uni-verse, as opposed to the dualistic view that prevails in so many ways.

One example is the way we view the land and its use – in a biodynamic, Slow Food culture, there is reverence for the rhythms, integrity and balance of nature, and the creatures that exist in that ecosystem are permitted their place as well as man and his useful “commodity” animals. But when monocultures driven by monopolies – Kumar informs us that four or five giant multinational corporations now control 80 per cent of the international food trade – hold sway this is the tamasic, almost nightmarish, vision “resulting in the breakdown of society and destruction of the natural world.” And aren’t we seeing that already in the current escalating global food crisis where staple foods are being priced beyond the reach of millions because such foods are in shorter and shorter supply. Not only can’t they not afford them, they’re just not available anymore. The reason? In large part, it’s that we have allowed monopolies to replace food crops with biofuels to feed our insatiable demand for energy, for cars, for comfort, for a continuance of the profligate lifestyles we have arrogantly assumed as our right.

Here’s where people like Satish Kumar and, before him, Mahatma Gandhi, have so much to offer us that is relevant as we face up to these modern crises. The Mahatma told each of us: “Be the change you want to see in the world,” and his disciple Kumar actually comes to our rescue with an 11 point program of “sattivic action” so that we can “combat the rajasic values of consumerism, address the problem of global warming and begin to live a joyful life”. Some of the more immediately accessible include “live simply”, “consume less”, “waste not”, “use no harmful products”, “walk”, “meditate”, and “work less”. Primarily though, it all starts when we “change our attitudes” because it’s only from a viewpoint of acknowledging the right of other creatures, plants and fellow human beings for that matter to live a full and contented life that we can possibly begin to bring about the change we want to see.

“Spiritual Compass: The Three Qualities of Life” is a book for our times and I can’t recommend it enough.

Spiritual Compass: The Three Qualities of Life
Satish Kumar
Finch Publishing
RRP $24.95





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