More and more, I am seeing that detaching from materialism is vital to humanity’s evolution. Materialism is a symptom of our disconnect from ourselves and from nature, and it defines the world through limitation – that things must be proven in order to be believed. We are taught to rely on the five senses which perceive only 1% of the greater spiritual reality. We are made to feel foolish if we believe otherwise.
Materialism gives our power away by putting tremendous worth into objects that are outside of ourselves, instead of the truth within each of us. Our rules and possessions sneakily become our identity, and we use them to feed the ego.
The Gospel of Mary Magdalene advises, “Attachment to matter gives rise to passion against nature. Thus trouble arises in the whole body,” and this seems to sum up exactly what humanity is experiencing. In modern society, those of us at the “top” acquire far more than is needed. This creates disastrous imbalance.
Director Tom Shadyac illuminates this concept in his film “I Am.” He tells the story of a healthy tribe of people who take care of each other and live harmoniously. In this tribe, everyone’s needs are met. Suddenly, one of the strongest hunters starts hoarding his kill, and this spirals as more hunters do the same. Balance becomes lost and the “weak” are no longer cared for. Life becomes a contest of winning and acquiring in perpetual, frantic cycle, while others suffer in neglect. We are that tribe.
With hoarding comes a lack of concern for all else. We need only look at how we’ve treated our earth and each other for proof. We have gone against our home, our neighbors, and ourselves, and called it progress.
Greed has been taught to us by those at the absolute top because it feeds them. It has been sold to look glamorous, successful, and desirable. We have become distracted and imbalanced by money in this rat race that runs up and down the ladder.
But I don’t want to blame any more. I want to face this disease that I too am a part of and heal. And of course, I don’t want to overlook the unhappiness that comes from a lack of necessities. With gratitude, I recognize the incredible comforts and freeing abundance I have been blessed to experience in this life. But what my soul seeks more and more is healthy material detachment coupled with conscientious behavior. I believe that things are meant to be enjoyed and are part of fully experiencing life, but not at the expense of others. We each deserve generosity, beauty, and even luxury, but not of an elitist nature.
Elitism is born out of fear ,and it keeps us in materialism. We are afraid that we’re not worthy, successful or good enough – that we are nothing without our stuff and that can’t live without it. And so, we overcompensate through exclusivity. Our things then feed us like a numbing medicine or a fleeting buzz, and they become addictive.
Although material attachment can bring a sense of safety, in the words of the poet Tagore, all that we really accomplish is “my little hoard gleaned through the years.” It is time to put the stuff down and get reconnected to who we really are. Within the problem lies the solution, for when we let go of our physical attachments, we heal and see our true selves. When we shed our cocoons of baggage, we find that we were in fact born to fly.
Humanity is at a crossroads. Will we choose harmony or trinkets? The more liberating choice comes naturally when we reconnect with our spiritual selves and with nature.
The Mayan Elders implore us to restore balance to our world, and I think that we can start by not buying things that harm and choosing alternatives that help. But we must push ourselves to do far more than this. We must strive to take care of all human beings. We must recreate balanced systems to live by and seek creative innovations. It is time to detach from the materialism that has bound us so tightly. This giant step will help us to welcome our spiritual metamorphosis.
LOVE THIS……. gotta share!
Bev
This is so important and reminds me of my recurring nightmare about my luggage increasing and there is no way I’m going to get it all home. I try lugging it in a child’s wagon but thieves are about and stealing my stuff. I try to stop them but I can’t because I’m still loading up the stuff and it is falling out all over me and is suffocating me and I become paralyzed by the stuff before waking up from this deep REM sleep.
What a perfect, illuminating image of materialism!
This reminds me that materialism can look like the easier way, but it’s quite a difficult path. Detaching from its importance frees us, and we realize the fear that kept us trapped.
There are those that think so little of themselves that they try to buy “happiness”. There are those who had little or nothing when they were brought into this life that they want things for their present families so that they will not “suffer” from the same lack of things. And then there are those who are trying to not only “keep up with the Joneses” but surpass them with things.
All of those THINGS do not make us happy as you say they are a burden to our souls on this journey. I do not think that to be happy or to live a full life that we have to suffer from lack. Just as we do not have to suffer from lack we also do not have to suffocate from too much or too many.
“Happiness is a journey not a destination,” and that journey need not be burdened by the MATERIAL.
I love the way you bring up happiness and materialism. Excellent topic and great insight!
As we hopefully approach a positive shift in consciousness in the early 21st Century,, the lessons of sharing and balance are of great importance. I especially like your comment of fully enjoying and experiencing life without doing so at the expense of others. Nicely done.