Three
Gunas
·
tamas =
inertia
·
rajas =
movement
·
sattva =
balance
Everything can be classified according to
the gunas. For the purposes of this post, let’s analyze some moods / emotions
and group them accordingly.
The intention behind an emotion,
and how it is expressed, determines whether an emotion is
predominantly tamasic, rajasic, or sattvic.
Take the emotion of courage, for example. A suicide
bomber in a terrorist attack may be said to have tamasic
courage (based on ignorance and hatred).
However, A man who risks his health and comfort to obtain wealth or fame
has rajasic courage (based on desire) and,
a man who sacrifices his ego or personal interest for a larger cause
has sattvic courage (based on compassion and the greater good).
The difference lies in the intention. Change the
motivation and the context of a given emotion or action, and you will change
its quality!
Working with the Gunas
You now have a basic understanding of what
the gunas are, and how to look for their manifestation both inside
and outside of yourself.
Now… while this is a fascinating subject, you may be asking yourself: “What to
do with all this?”
As conscious beings, we have the ability to manipulate the presence
of gunas in us and in others. We do this by two means:
·
What we choose to
pay attention to and to consume
·
How we choose
to act
In other words, our attention and our intention.
Consuming Sattva
Our body is fed by food, water, and air. Our mind is
fed by thoughts, feelings, and the input from the five senses.
So… Are you feeding your body and mind
with tamas, rajas, or sattva?
The principle is quite simple: the more you are
exposed to a guna, the more that guna will grow in your
mind and heart. Expose yourself to
more sattva, and sattva will grow in you.
Likewise, tamas and rajas will grow instead if that’s what
you’re feeding on.
Acting Sattva
Sattvic words, thoughts and actions
increase sattva in the world – and also in yourself. The same happens
in the case of the other gunas.
If you want to know the
predominant guna behind your action, ask yourself these two
questions:
·
Why am
I doing this?
·
How am
I doing this?
Ideally you want both the intention behind the action,
as well as the execution of the action, to be sattvic.
Intention alone is not enough. A person who engages in
some shady business in order to support his family has
a sattvic intention but a tamasic execution. As the
saying goes, the road to hell is often paved with good intentions.
Understanding the gunas helps you see things
more clearly. It helps you understand the quality of your thoughts, actions,
and the things with which you engage.
Then it’s all about making conscious choices on:
·
what you
consume,
·
what thoughts you
pay attention to, and
·
how you act.
In fact, the secret of spiritual growth could be
summed up thus:
Learn to love and delight in sattva and
understand the pain of tamas.
Love.