When the Tiger Drank Next to the Cow
Just when you realize you're being pulled into the Zeitgeist of Acrimony, that's the time to practice as if you were a monk in the meditation forest.
The following might seem out of keeping with the zeitgeist: acrimony. Perhaps today you are riled up by something you read online. Caffeine and outrage are the drugs of choice most days. It pulses in your temples. It rages in your veins. It distracts you from more creative endeavors. Remember, if you get angry at the Other, everything goes according to the plans and purses of those who operate the anger syndicates. But when you are aware of your reaction, you are capable of summoning a moment—a space—that can help you return to centeredness and virtue. Some will cling to their anger and rectitude.
But they will poison themselves in doing so.
In the Hindu tradition, Patanjali's Yoga Sutras offer timeless wisdom for living a virtuous life. Swami Satchidananda, a modern translator of the Yoga Sutras, recounts a compelling story of monks meditating deep in a forest.
The sages embody the principle of ahimsa—nonviolence—the first of the Yamas, which means practices of reining in or self-control.
How does ahimsa differ from an ethical rule of nonviolence?
For the forest sages, ahimsa was not an abstract ideal but an active practice. Their peacefulness radiated outward, creating an environment where even the forest animals coexisted peacefully. It is said that the tiger and cow drank side by side from the same stream while in the monks’ presence.
As a transformative practice, ahimsa offers the foundation for an upgraded liberal doctrine. Unlike the old liberalism of indifferent coexistence and abstract principles of non-harm, integral liberalism calls for a rebirth of practiced virtue in thought, word, and deed.
Such is neither an abstract rule nor an ideal but instead a discipline to be cultivated daily, radiating nonviolence in ever-widening circles from the self to the world. As with other virtues, it requires our movement toward mastery. That means we must practice every day, just as we practice violin, painting, or jiu-jitsu.
Ahimsa as a Practice
To embody ahimsa is to practice it consciously. Such a practice does not preclude self-defense or standing firm against one’s enemies, but prioritizes nonviolence as the first virtue, first practice.
Such requires equipoise—a state of centeredness in which we align our internal drives, fractured selves, and reflex responses.
Drawing from Western psychology, we can see these drives through the lenses of Freud’s Eros (life, creation) and Thanatos (death, destruction), as well as Jung’s anima (feminine) and animus (masculine). These forces manifest in distinct yet interconnected ways:
Eros Masculine: The urge to control and build, to “make it happen” through planned order.
Eros Feminine: The power to facilitate and let order emerge, to “let it flow” through collaboration.
Thanatos Masculine: The drive to end or destroy, to “burn it down” or “end it now.”
Thanatos Feminine: The release of letting go, preparing for change without forcing it.
Each of these forces has healthy and unhealthy expressions.
Destruction, for instance, can be necessary, like ending a toxic relationship, while creation can be dangerous if taken to excess. The key is balance: releasing the feminine without suppressing the masculine, maintaining the creative destruction of Eros and Thanatos. We learn to channel or suppress as circumstances dictate.
As the old mystic Gurdjieff suggested, combining the wisdom of the yogi, monk, and fakir creates a “sly one.” Balance, aligning the cognitive (head), emotional (heart), and intuitive (gut), returns control to its inner locus.
The paradox of centeredness in ahimsa is that you will be better prepared for war.
Radiative Sovereignty
This balance practice begins within and, with mastery, radiates outward, a phenomenon we call radiative sovereignty. By mastering our inner world, we project peacefulness and determination into our outer world.
Starting with the self, we extend this harmony to family, friends, and the wider world. As the saying goes, "Don’t try to save the world before yourself." This concentric circle approach ensures our actions are grounded in centeredness and degrees of competence before we face challenges outside the home.
Strange that we live in a system that attracts the venal and uncentered to authority. Then again, one who has mastered ahimsa is by disposition and practice averse to political power, which we have suggested is a pathology.
Join us for a symposium on the subliminal.
It's wonderful to see something like this as a post, rare. Generally all I see lately is a ton of negative rants on the same 5 topics in politics, conspiracy, medicine and fear porn terrorism. Perhaps I'm stuck in a toxic algorithm. I follow Advaita Vedanta, or inquiry, which leads to the Self. One of the best books on this is I Am That by Nisargadatta.
I love this.