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What is Right Action?

A lot of seekers ask me, what is right action?

Life is full of situations which demand actions, but a seeker is always second guessing his or her actions. Should I accept and be compassionate or should I take action which might lead to confrontations?

We try hard to accept, to be compassionate, while being at war with our inner emotions.

A simple example would be an annoying neighbor who plays loud music all the time. Should I accept the situation and do nothing or should I ask the neighbor to be considerate and stop playing the music? Wouldn’t that mean that I’m not accepting the situation?

The problem is we are looking at actions in a completely wrong way. There is so much emphasis on the action itself that we totally ignore the space from which action arises.

The space from where the action arises is more important than the action itself. All the while you have been focusing on actions themselves.

What should I do? How should I tackle this?

But have you paid attention to the space from which action originates? By space I mean the state of consciousness the person is in.

In the above example of the annoying neighbor who plays loud music, there is a wide spectrum of actions you can take—from being completely passive and accepting to the opposite spectrum of getting into a confrontation.

In between these two extremes there is a range of choices. You can politely talk to him or invite him home over dinner to discuss the issue. So there can be endless number of approaches and each can lead to a different action.

Understanding the Space from Which Action Arises

The seeker has been told to accept the situation, but there is an emotional reaction of irritation and frustration. So the seeker tries to accept the situation, but a part of him or her is upset and sooner or later the acceptance will give way to anger, annoyance, and resentment.

You have to understand that an action has two parts. The first part is the external stimulus, which in this case is the loud music. The second part is your reaction to it.

Why Acceptance Fails

The reason is because we are just accepting the first part, the external stimulus. We are not accepting our reaction to it. Instead of accepting and understanding the anger and frustration, we are trying to repress it.

Please understand this. There can be no partial acceptance of a situation. The situation comprises of both the external stimulus as well as the inner emotions of anger and frustrations which arise.

You have to accept both. You have to totally accept your anger, your frustrations. You cannot repress it with superficial acceptance. Sooner or later the superficial acceptance will wear out, and the mind will revolt, and you will find yourself resenting.

Accepting the Whole Movement

You have to accept the whole movement which arises at that moment. You understand this total movement, the external noise invoking the inner anger in you. Without the noise, there wouldn’t be any of these emotions arising. You accept this entire movement, this entire wave as one. You need to see this whole movement in totality. Not in parts, not in fragments.

And you observe this whole movement. You watch it arise, you accept it totally. This very watching and accepting of the whole movement transforms the space from which action arises.

The inner space is no more reactive, repressed, wanting this or that. The inner space sees the whole movement and takes the right action. The action which will originate from the space of total acceptance will be an intelligent action. It will not be a reaction to the situation, and at that moment the transformation happens.

Becoming the Observer

You shift into being an observer, you shift into witnessing stage. You are no more a part of the content which is being played out. From that state of observing, the right action happens, and at that moment, depending on the situation and the dynamics of it, you might just go ask the neighbour to stop the music, or you might ignore it. Both are valid responses.

The Spontaneity of Right Action

The action which arises from total acceptance is spontaneously the correct action. It is like touching something hot and spontaneously removing your hand. Similarly, you will experience action happens with no more thoughts, no more projections. You just go and do it, and the entire movement ends.

There is completion. You don’t second guess your action. You don’t try to be compassionate or accepting or angry or revengeful. Life does come up with all sorts of challenges. There is no guidebook to tell you what actions to take.

Life and Action

The common approach which religions take is to give out a set of rules and base all your actions around them. Life is way too rich to have a static set of rules. But if the actions arise from the space of observation and total acceptance of the movement, you have automatically solved the question of right actions.

The Monk In The Mansion

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