A
friend whom I never met in person, but who guided my thoughts, walked with me in
times of confusion and lifted my spirits; a spiritual giant who illumined the
lives of many; a sage who took the wisdom of the ages from all corners of the
world and distilled it in very simple language; a towering personality, a sharp
intellect, a man who knew his roots, a great author and speaker – Wayne Dyer.
Last
week saw him cast his body, which he knew pretty well as an impermanent abode
during his transit to higher realms. Though born in a dysfunctional white
family with poverty as his company, he clawed his way back as an amazing
exponent and author of psychology. The Shift
that happens to the ones who choose to let it and he let the influence of great
souls like Nisargadatta Maharaj, many eastern thoughts from Advaita to Taoism
to Zen. I take this opportunity to ponder on some of his memorable quotes.
These simple Dyerisms need no commentary, but reflecting my thoughts over his,
I feel the satisfaction of a subtle interaction with him.
“Love is co-operation rather than
competition.”
The
best I can express my feelings is with another quote, from Swami Chinmayananda – To
give love is freedom. To demand love is slavery. Wayne emphasized the
giving nature of Love in almost every talk I have heard. Competition within
relationship results in friction and loss of synergism. Wayne emphasized the
eastern wisdom that we are part of the world. Only when we see We vs the world,
there is competition.
“Doing what you love is the cornerstone
of having abundance in your life.”
Loving
what we do is a winning attitude which comes naturally when we do what we love.
When we have this outlook, there is no labor of love as commonly expressed, as
love is expressed as labor (work). Wayne shared anecdotes of attracting
abundance as a child by collecting soda bottles or by innovatively seeking snow
shovel chores from neighbors. Every time, he said it with such enthusiasm that
I felt like watching it live as my most favorite movie.
“Be miserable. Or motivate yourself.
Whatever has to be done, it’s always your choice.”
Wayne
was perhaps the biggest promoter of Purusharthas. He emphasized on taking
personal responsibility. Though I have never heard him use that word, he has
freely quoted and used Hindu words and concepts like Dharma, Karma. He was a
firm believer of Karma; hence he focused on living in the NOW. If the PAST is
the reason for our PRESENT conditions, then it goes without saying that the
FUTURE is a function of our PRESENT. If we do take charge of our PRESENT, our
FUTURE choices are more in our favor; if we don’t, then our PAST controls our
FUTURE. This is the essence of Karma theory, which is aptly crystallized in
Wayne’s wisdom.
“When the choice is to be right or to
be kind, always make the choice that brings peace.”
This is straight out of ancient Indian wisdom repackaged for the west.
satyaM brUyAt priyaM brUyAt na brUyAt
satyam apriyam | priyaM ca nAnRRitaM brUyAt eSha dharmaH sanAtanaH || - Manu Smriti
Speak truth in such a way that it should be pleasing to others. Never
speak truth, which is unpleasant to others. Never speak untruth, which might be
pleasant. This is the path of eternal morality, sanatana dharma.
Peace
and harmony are at the center of Indian thinking. It is very evident that many
vedic mantras have a shantipath ending with OM Shanti, shanti, shantihi.
“Upon awakening, let the words Thank
You flow from your lips, for this will remind you to begin your day with
gratitude and compassion.”
Much
of Wayne Dyer’s wisdom was actionable, practical tips to daily life. He
routinely emphasized the importance of seizing the day, right from early
morning. He shared his personal experiences of early rising, something which
all great sages and saints have shared. Rising before Brahmamurta and taking
time to meditate or think through the day is something he loved to inspire
others to try. The most important attitude he kept reiterating was being
thankful and grateful. He extensively quoted research on how compassion raises
the serotonin (feel good neurotransmitter in the brain) of not only the
receiver and giver, but also the observer. Let us begin our day with the wisdom
of Dyer.
“Here is an affirmation for today: I
feel passionately about my life, and this passion fills me with excitement and
energy!”
Wayne
was a big promoter of positive affirmations. His psychology background came to
the fore with this practical tip. Passion is the energy of the mind. When the
mind moves passionately in a direction, the body merely follows it. We need to
have some life when it comes to our own success, which begin in our thoughts,
words and actions. Unless one is excited about something, there won’t be any
actions. Due to our vasanas, we may not be inclined to think positively or
break out of our Tamasic nature. Self-affirmation is a way to bridge this gap
between our thoughts and actions.
“Self-worth comes from one thing –
thinking that you are worthy.”
This
is in line with the earlier quote. Wayne believed that our thinking determines
who we are. How can one think one is worthy, when one doesn’t feel like it,
when life has beaten them repeatedly? Positive self-affirmations were one of
the important tools Wayne provided. His books and talks were filled with
anecdotes, suggestions and emphasis on changing the way we think. This is
echoed in the next quote.
“Change the way you look at things and
the things you look at change.”
This
is one of the most powerful and favorite quotes. This is actually an echo of “You must be the change you wish to see in
the world – Mahatma Gandhi”. Swami
Tejomayananda said it even more beautifully, “Change your outlook, then look out”. Einstein challenged us by asking us if we are
living in a friendly world. A common adage asks us, if we are seeing the glass
as half full or half empty. Be it scientist or a sage, they have emphasized on
the mental weather pattern as a critical barometer of how we perceive and react
to things and hence the results.
“I cannot always control what goes on
outside. But I can always control what goes on inside.”
Wayne stressed
on personal responsibility. He taught repeatedly on not to be a victim of the
circumstances, but to raise above. We may be surrounded by situations that make
us angry, we can choose not to be angry. The same is true for any emotion we have,
like fear, jealousy, hatred or situation in life – poverty, drug addiction. We
may be going 200 miles per hour in the wrong direction, but the first step is
to realize that. Second one is to stop and then reverse directions. This is an
inside job.
“It’s never crowded along the extra
mile.”
Wayne spoke in
a series of long talks on this topic and was grateful to listen to them on CDs.
He did not approach it from a motivational speaker style, egging the listeners
to do more to get more. The best I can
do is to outline the major bullets of his talk and encourage the reader to
fetch and listen to these awesome messages.
- Have a Mind That Is Open to Everything and Attached to Nothing
- Don't Die with Your Music Still in You
- You Can't Give Away What You Don't Have
- Embrace Silence
- Give Up Your Personal History
- You Can't Solve a Problem with the Same Mind That Created It
- There Are No Justified Resentments
- Treat Yourself As If You Already Are What You'd Like to Be
- Treasure Your Divinity
- Wisdom Is Avoiding All Thoughts That Weaken You
“You’ll see it when you believe it.”
A
materialist or atheist or skeptic always wants proof before believing. But the
same person has qualms about going about accepting so many basic things in life.
We simply fly on a plane or drive our car without checking the credentials of
the pliot or plane or car conditions. Wayne would argue calmly that instead of
saying, Seeing is believing, Believing is
seeing. A newborn believes in its mother. When one has firm conviction that
God or Universe or a higher power is there to guide us and support us and
protect us, our success is guaranteed. The reason why intellect or mind wants a
proof and not belief is due to the EGO. Wayne’s favorite acronym - Edge
God Out. Ego makes us believe we are separate independent entity
from God. Ego makes the wave believe
that it is independent of the ocean. Once we resolve this battle with our EGO,
we can see what we believe, manifest situations of choice. Wayne kept singing
this song through his real life battle with leukemia, heart challenge, knee
challenge.
“How people treat you is their karma;
how you react is yours.”
Another
fine example of Wayne’s focus on taking personal responsibility. This is
classical Indian Karma theory, but with a spin to make it digestible for the
western audience. He acted like a bridge between the Eastern wisdom and the
western audience, making more palatable, but remaining true to the message
conveyed. This treasured quote of Wayne hits home to every person who is having
trouble finding their footing due to the pressures of life. His teachings and thought process was always
coherent. In a small sentence, he packs the wisdom of Karma theory, how to
overcome other’s bad actions, how one’s personal actions alone (purushartha) is
the panacea for such behavior, how our attitude determines the outcome of our
actions and our future. His constant message was we are the master’s of our own
destiny. His genius insight explained the tussle between fatalism and
free-will. Free-will, according to him, is the choice one can exert to connect
or not with the Source(his term for God).
“When you judge another, you do not
define them, you define yourself.”
This was
another of his core suggestions. He explained how the ego, bounces off the
Universe and sets up a reaction, it’s called Karma. When we judge others,
firstly we give remote control of our actions to others and also the permission
to others to judge us. The world outside is a reflection of our inside. The
following quote connects with this theme.
“When you squeeze an orange, orange juice comes out – because
that’s what’s inside. When you are squeezed, what comes out is what is inside.”
This
analogy and quote is a master-stroke as it works at all planes of
understanding. When one is angry or afraid, it manifests in one’s actions. Basicially
one’s beliefs get expressed like the orange juice from orange, through their
actions, thoughts and words. But Wayne went few steps further, we believe
ourselves as the body, or the mind, or the brain or the intellect, all
manifestations of the ego. Hence our actions are always tinged by the color of
ego. As one realizes the true nature (Atman) of the Self, Bliss gets reflected
as the essence of such a great Soul’s life. Thus, his central focus was always
in connecting back to the Source.
“Stop acting as if life is a rehearsal.
Live this day as if it were your last. The past is over and gone. The future is
not guaranteed.”
Wayne
kept repeating this theme. Again taking personal responsibility for one’e
present and future is the key message. He enjoyed waking up the mentally asleep
tamasic audience to live a purposeful life. Many of his fans endearingly called
him as “Father of Motivation”. We are a slave to our vasanas and we let our old
mental programs to dictate our present and naturally our future. Wayne wanted
us to take control of our present, so that we can be masters of our own
destiny. In either case, we are the masters of our destiny only that in one
case, we are conscious of it and guide ourselves to a higher purpose. He never shied
from sharing his personal experiences, failures, struggles. He began learning
Yoga when he was almost seventy. He practiced radical humility and was always
eager to live the life the fullest.
.”The
highest form of ignorance is when you reject something you don’t know anything
about.”
One
of Wayne’s emphasis was ignorance as a prop for ego. Krishna talks this kind of
understanding of rejecting anything and everything without proper understanding
as Tamasic, in the last chapter of Bhagavad Gita. Again the reason why we have
this shroud of ignorance is, because of our Ego, we being separate from the
source.
“The fact that you are willing to say, ‘I do not understand, and it is
fine,’ is the greatest understanding you could exhibit.”
The
above quote is a practical demonstration of Wayne’s non judgemental and practicing
radical humility outlook. Accepting lack of one’s understanding is a far higher
sign of maturity and receptivity, rather than an ignorant ego rejecting
something it cannot fathom.
“It is impossible for you to be angry
and laugh at the same time. Anger and laughter are mutually exclusive and you
have the power to choose either.”
Again ties with typical Dyerism of taking
personal responsibility. Between action and reaction is a gap. The gap provides
us the freedom to make a choice. The choice determines the nature of outcome.
The more observant one is of the gap, one finds there is increased power to
choose wisely.
“Love is the ability and willingness to allow those that
you care for to be what they choose for themselves without any insistence that
they satisfy you.”
Love
is always giving. We find even in most loving conditions of daily life, love is
conditional. Despite our tall claims, there is a strong undercurrent of atleast
being recognized for the love we share to our spouse or kids. Wayne declares
this as conditional love. In such a non judgemental unconditional love, one
finds freedom. Real freedom to express oneself more freely. This also shapes
the surroundings much better more synergistically.
”My belief is that the truth is a truth
until you organize it, and then becomes a lie. I don’t think that Jesus was
teaching Christianity, Jesus was teaching kindness, love, concern, and peace.
What I tell people is don’t be Christian, be Christ-like. Don’t be Buddhist, be
Buddha-like.”
Wayne
was open to learning from all traditions. He felt that the masses following the
religion are merely aping some traditions, customs, dogmas in the name of
religion, rather than following the real essence of great souls. Unless one
follows the real footsteps of Christ, Buddha and the other great souls, merely practicing
the –isms will be such a travesty.
“A mind at peace, a mind centered
and not focused on harming others, is stronger than any physical force in the
universe.”
This
is the real essence of Sanatana Dharma. Being Dharma centered and a mind that
sees the presence of divinity in all, cannot have any animosity to any other
life. Thus shattering the ego barrier, one is connected to the source. As the
Universe Intelligence is all powerful, the mind that is tuned to this source
acquires a strong power that yields to no basal things.
“Practice
being the kind of person you wish to attract.”
Wayne
applied this to every aspect of life, be it as advice to a helpless drug
addict, or a person with relationship troubles or one who likes to attract
abundance. Envisioning emotionally is a powerful tool that helps iron out the
kinks in our personality. This also helps us to connect back to the source.
“The more you see yourself as what
you’d like to become, and act as if what you want is already there, the
more you’ll activate those dormant forces that will collaborate to
transform your dream into your reality.”
The
first part of this quote is a very popular principle amongst motivational
speakers. But Wayne always approached such ideas from the premise that we came
from the Source and we are of the same kind. If the Source is approached minus
the EGO, it responds in kind. It galvanizes behind the emotional request coming
from the individual. The Source is equally available to all who seek it, with
or without the EGO. But the EGO is the world’s best travel agent, sends all on
a trip, EGO TRIP which can effectively negate the benedictions from the Source.
One need to be very careful, not to become one’s own bottleneck.
“Miracles come in moments. Be ready and
willing.”
Wayne
believed that miracles happened all the time. All one needs to be is willing
and observant. He shared many personal experiences which one can only label as
miracles, yet instead they were not met with surprise but as normal occurrences.
In our own lives, we can find unexpected information or help coming from
unasked quarters. If we can practice radical humility with a firm belief that
the infinite organizing power of Universe that took care of us in the first
nine months since our conception, it can also take care beyond that. We need to
submit out egos and let Universe’s mysterious ways to organize a solution for
us. Just like the reed that yields to
the wind, if we can let the Universe’s intelligence to guide and empower us
without our ego clashing with its plans, we can lead infinitely better lives.
“Begin to see yourself as a soul with a
body rather than a body with a soul.”
This
is the real essence of Advaita and the theme of all Indian mysticism and
spirituality. We are not this body, nor are we the breath or the mind. We are
not the intellect. We are not the impressions that are stored in the brain as
Science tells us. People who want to sound intelligent call ourselves the soul
and the ones who want to flaunt their vedantic insights call it as Atman. But
unfortunately this is something that needs to be realized and can never be
verbalized. Ramana Maharishi simplified this with a simple question “WHO AM I? – “Naan yaar”.
Wayne
definitely knew he was not the body and he had no fears of confronting death.
He was more eager to know the other side. I sincerely wish, he will find a
mechanism to communicate what his experiences on the other side is. What a
blessed soul one can be if we can merely read and follow the long list of
books, CDs, Videos he has left for us. He took spirituality to the masses
without complicating or distorting the wisdom of the ages. May he continue to
guide us. Your corporal presence will be missed, but you have already taught us
that we are not this body. I am convinced that your blessings and wisdom will
continue to guide us to higher realms.
Om Tat Sat
Suggested
Reading / Viewing:
Thank you for bringing Dyerism to us. The striking semblance in import and the congruence in essence of his sayings with ancient Hindu knowledge or for that matter of any religious teachings is unmistakable. Just goes to prove, much of what you become is from what you believe.
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