Conscience
[Middle English, from Old French, from Latin conscientia,
from consciens, conscient- present participle of conscere, to
be conscious of : com-, intensive pref.; see com- + scire, to
know; see skei- in Indo-European Roots.]
"You see this? This is this. This ain't somethin' else. This
is this."
Robert De Niro as Michael Vronsky in The Deerhunter,
1978
To know. Is this knowledge inborn or merely the ingestion of
the knowledge of those who came before us? Do we heed the call
of our conscience only when we believe someone sees that we may
not? Ahhh...so is it ourselves or others?
If you were always listen to that inner voice, never oppose
and always align with your conscience, then what inner peace
you would have! Every time we turn from it, we lose a bit of
ourselves. You know it to be true. Every time we fail to do
what is right in the moment, we suffer for it. The ego will
swoop in with rationalizations that will astound. Deny to the
grave if you wish. Fool yourself. Who's kidding who?
"This above all things: to thine own self be true" (Hamlet,
3.1.81).
Not sure how to find the voice? First clue. Is the voice you
hear in actuality two battling voices? One voice chock full of
righteousness, condemnation and should do's? If that exists, a
sly and seemingly subservient voice arises to oppose. This
second voice manipulates, undermines and blames. For every
'should' thrown it's way, it accordingly responds with an
excuse.
These voices forever struggling for control using your mind
as the battlefield. Each voice secretly needing each other to
survive. A sick symbiotic relationship. This is why the two may
have been mistaken as one mass. Guided by this, one doesn't
even need to leave one's mind to experience co-dependency. And
then there are no meetings to attend.
Go ahead. Lie on a couch for decades. You'll find you will
have plenty of company. Your opposing voices can exchange with
theirs. Marvel at how you manage as if by radar to find each
other. Form a few unholy unions even. Then watch the battle
which has no end and give up that which is precious in the
process. Your self. All the joy, peace and contentment that
wait for you to notice all is not well.
It's not too late. When you tire of this game, come back
home. With apologies to Thomas Wolfe, you can go home again. Be
grateful that there is still time. Your conscience awaits
patiently and only demands that you still yourself. Go beyond
the words to the wordless.
Come home now. Come home from wherever you find yourself.
Take a moment to try this. Gently and effortlessly become aware
of your hands. Feel the tingle, the flow of blood in your
hands. Now choose to concentrate on one hand only, preferably
your dominant hand. Now just stay there! Stay in the present
moment, continually aware of that hand. Simple.
If distracting or battling thoughts, trivialities or "to do
lists" arise in your mind, calmly and intently bring your
attention back to the awareness of that hand. Regain your focus
and return again and again to the sensation in your hand, the
flow of blood, the aware- ness of that hand, the awareness of
this occurring in the present moment.
Ground yourself here. Clearly realize that in this moment
the past is no longer here and the future has not yet arrived.
Therefore the past and future exist in your mind only. You are
absolutely here now only.
Be aware that even at those moments when your mind is
involved with this pseudo-conscience of voices opposing one
another with historical accounts and proofs, it is still
ultimately operating from within the now.
You have a genuine choice only in the now. The eternal now.
Your conscience will make itself known right here if you enter
the gap between punches thrown. Slip in and stay there. It can
take a lifetime or an instant to fully grasp and live according
to this idea of the now. Your sincerity will be the determining
factor.
Do not become frustrated with the barrage of emerging
thoughts that attempt to pull your attention away. Do not
wrestle with any thought; for that only energizes it and
enables it to maintain sway over you. Rather, attempt to
witness the thought dispassionately with patience, acknowledge
the thought, and then bring your attention back to your hand,
the now and a conscience that just is.
Seneca knew the score in 5 BC when he said "A good
conscience fears no witness, but a guilty conscience is
solicitous even in solitude. If we do nothing but what is
honest, let all the world know it. But if otherwise, what does
it signify to have nobody else know it, so long as I know it
myself? Miserable is he who slights that witness."
|