By Gayatri Naraine
Author’s Bio: Gayatri Naraine is the Brahma Kumaris Representative at the United Nations in New York. This article, (copyright 1998 by Gayatri Naraine), was a featured article in “The Fabric of the Future—Women Visionaries Illuminate the Path to Tomorrow”, edited by M.J. Ryan, and published by Conari Press, Berkeley, California. Written 8 years ago, the article is still vitally relevant today.
Gayatri Naraine anticipates the emergence of the feminine at the level of spirit.
Personal
growth and human development are perhaps two of the more popular
banners flapping in the breeze at the eve of the 21st century. So
what’s new? Aren’t these two old chestnuts that humanity has been
chewing over throughout history? The issues may indeed be the same but
what is new is the emergence of a suppressed part of the human dynamic
that can be called the feminine principle. This principle does not
cater to a prejudiced belief in the superiority or inferiority of one
group compared to another. Nor does it seek to replace male chauvinism
with female chauvinism. Its aim is to allow the blossoming of a full
and balanced personality that is at once vigorous and serene in an era
of both light and might.
The feminine principle is a subtle
energy, which has remained untapped within the psyche of both men and
women. It is merged in the essence of our spiritual identity and is
marked by qualities attributed to the more gentle side of the human
being—care, respect, trust, patience, loyalty, love honesty, empathy,
and mercy. When this principle is understood and realised, it is a
force so powerful that it awakens us to new realities and realigns us
to the true purpose and meaning of life .Both men and women possess
this feminine principle but throughout history it has often been
equated with emotion, weakness, and vulnerability and, in the context
of social, economic, and political issues, flushed from the mainstream
of development to a backwater and then labelled as ‘women’s issues’.
The feminine principle was thereby controlled and crushed by the iron
hand of patriarchal power, which almost invariably demanded nothing
less than the sacrifice of intuition at the altar of rigid logic, the
suppression of gentleness for the sake of brute strength, and the
compliance of women with the dominance of men.
If the problems
which have arisen through the suppression and control of this principle
are to be corrected in a way that will last, then this must be done
through a change of consciousness rather than a reversal of positions,
roles: a change of consciousness which takes its birth from a base of
spirituality and not from a base of sexuality. The feminine principle,
this untapped subtle potential that lies at the core of our being, must
now be realised to restore a balance between intellect and intuition,
facts and feelings, reason and realism.
At the brink of the new
millennium, in the midst of the most turbulent of times, the feminine
principle is the clear, cool spring that can give life to humanity’s
arid wasteland; the sacred water from which to draw purpose and meaning.
Lessons Come From Hindsight
Looking
back at the twentieth century, one my say that the progress of women
has been slow and laborious, for up until the ‘60s women were best
known for their roles as wives, mothers, sisters, nurses, and
secretaries. As women’s liberation movements asserted that women were
also entitled to human rights, the international community responded
with a series of women’s conferences that have contributed to the great
strides made in putting women’s concerns high on the global agenda.
Yet most women who managed to claim the positions they deserved in the
world did so at the expense of the feminine principle and were either
caught in the power play of sexuality or achieved their positions only
by developing an iron-fisted control over others. While such measures
were doubtless successful in the short term, any individual who has to
compromise on who she is, and knowingly or unknowingly deny herself
access to the source of her own strength, will sooner or later succumb
to the trap of exploiting, manipulating, and discriminating against
others—the very evils she sought to dispel. Deprived of the strength
that comes from within, these are the only tools available to a person
living outside the borders of their own being.
Twentieth-century
women will be remembered as pioneers of a hard and perilous path to
freedom and liberation. Their efforts brought phenomenal breakthroughs
and taught significant lessons. The starting point was action-oriented
and was influenced by characteristics associated with the left
hemisphere of the brain—courage, determination, will-power, and
advocacy. The result was the formation of an international network of
women’s organizations and groups whose fingers are on the pulse of
political, social, and economic changes, and who know how these impact
the lives of women all over the world. Faced with the paradox of some
material and professional success but very little emotional and
spiritual fulfilment, such women continued to feel a sense of inner
depletion and a lack of self-worth and self-esteem. Recognizing that
the advancement of women was an uphill task, a whole of many parts, it
became apparent that progress on the outside had to be nurtured by
growth on the inside. Soon, programs on self-development and personal
growth began to mushroom. Conferences, seminars and forums were
replaced by dialogues, discussions and conversations. The significant
lesson learned was the patience to trust that whatever happened was
part of a process that would lead to a successful outcome and the
rediscovery of characteristics such as intuition, creativity,
spirituality, nurturing, sustenance, care, love, and compassion. This
shift in consciousness became the backbone of their stories.
Vision Comes From Foresight
Women
of the twentieth century have developed guidelines and set standards
for women of the twenty-first century to pursue and develop further.
The feminine principle, which has come to be seen as the light at the
end of the tunnel in the latter years of the twentieth century, will
become a natural way of being in the future. Trust, respect, and
wisdom will lie at the heart of authentic leadership by women and men;
integrity and high moral standards will sustain it. Power will no
longer lie in the hands of others who make decisions for us, but within
the hearts of each one of us. As natural leaders, we will lead from
the core of our inner strength and will follow our own inner
principles, conscience, and truth, thus creating our own disciplines.
It
will be an integral part of the awareness and attitudes of women
responsible for the growth and development of children that every child
has the right to participate fully in all areas of society and to
equality of opportunity. These guardians of humanity’s future will
ensure that the worth of an individual is not determined by gender and
will bestow the love and respect with which the true self of each young
person may flourish. To a great extent, it lies in the hands of women
to master a process that will rescue us and succeeding generations from
being restricted by discriminatory attitudes, abusive patterns of
physical and emotional behaviour, and the limitations we may have put
on ourselves. This will be the sine qua non of our ultimate freedom.
Wisdom Comes From Insight
“Who am I, always keeping an ‘eye’ on ‘I’?”
At
the confluence of the two millennia, one of the most challenging
insecurities to be overcome is that felt by people in relation to
themselves—the question: Who am I?
By using the feminine principle
as the premise to explore this mystery, we can embark on our journey of
discovery from a perspective of faith in one’s self. We are often
reluctant to look within ourselves because we lack the confidence to
come face-to-face with the person we fear the most—our own true
selves.
Spiritual knowledge gives a deeper level of
understanding that can remove the fear of the unknown and open the door
to insight. Insight gives the spiritual clarity to recognise the self
and the inner strength to accept the self, including our present
limitations. Insight also serves as a searchlight with which to see
through the layers of limitations we have acquired by overemphasizing
the temporary or physical aspects of our identity and with which to
focus on the realization of our original and eternal identity— “Who I
am always.”
To identify with the inner self is the method to
free myself from the confines and constraints of the physical
limitations. Faith in myself elevates and divinises my intellect and
opens my third eye of wisdom. This is the kind of faith that creates
trust and gives me the courage to accept the past, enjoy the present,
and create the future I want. It is the wisdom that women must
embody. This wisdom is born from the depth of a spiritual
consciousness and has been remembered as shakti—will-power received
directly from God. Such wisdom, when brought into action, has a truly
transforming effect on our lives and the lives of those around us,
bringing about integration with integrity.
Using the feminine
principle to bring about integration with integrity is the most
powerful tool now at our disposal. The practice of returning to one’s
original identity and remembering “Who I am always”, as we play our
different roles and honour our various responsibilities, is crucial—as
it enthrones us on our seat of self-respect. When our subtle inner
abilities are integrated in the wholeness of our being and allowed to
be expressed with the support of self-respect, actions are performed
with a high level of integrity.
The feminine principle has often
been mistaken for femininity on a physical level and so respect for
inner beauty has often yielded to an obsession with beauty that knows
nothing deeper than the skin. A women’s worth comes from the original
and innate qualities of the soul: truth, love, purity, joy, and peace,
and it is from these values that a women’s beauty is derived and
radiated through her features. To believe in the beauty of one’s
innate worth and to see the self in the context of this eternal
reality, rather than just the transitory physical appearance, gives a
tremendous boost to one’s self-esteem and self-confidence.
To
feel is a basic human trait, yet when it comes to expressing our
feelings in a particular relationship, our passion for a task or
admiration for a piece of art or music, often we either overindulge
ourselves and lose our sense of reason or we suppress ourselves with
the fear of being rejected or of being too emotional. Something
somewhere has gone wrong with feelings and so we need to understand
deeply what true feelings are. Feelings are linked to motives,
intentions, desires, and expectations, and I can control the way I feel
when I am in touch with these. I am empowered when my feelings are
based on the strength of what is true to me and come from respecting
and believing in myself. I am disempowered when I allow external
influences to create doubts and fears in the way I feel, causing me to
look outward to validate my own feelings. Looking outside myself is
the way to let loose waves of victimisation, uncertainty, and
insecurity and so feelings are often suppressed and never dealt with.
This suppression of feelings leads to depression as I am unable to
trust my own feelings and I am reluctant to talk about them, fearing
being misunderstood, criticized, or rejected. Staying close to my own
truth, innate values, and inner strength enables me to trust my
feelings. I am responsible for the way I feel and I have the capacity
to remove any painful feelings and to create pure feelings in their
place.
Capacity building is the art of balancing feeling with
reason. This balance is especially needed in areas of trust, honesty,
loyalty, and love. Reason tells me that when I begin to cultivate and
nurture any of these values, my own insecurities, fears, and doubts
will arise to test the strength of my commitment and to stretch my
capacity. Every test has a benefit merged in it. What needs to be
understood during these battles is that I must not shrink my capacity
to trust just because someone betrays this trust, or my capacity to be
honest just because someone lies to me. It is so easy to be influenced
by someone else’s behaviour and to internalise their weakness in a way
that causes me to lose faith in my own capacity and to waver from
staying in alignment with my own values. This is where space is
required to maintain healthy and long-standing relationships and not to
become so wrapped up in another that I lose all sense of who I am.
This stepping back to maintain my own independence and integrity
nurtures my growth and increases my capacity to exercise freedom of
choice rather than succumbing to the pull of external influences or the
expectations of others.
It has been observed that a woman’s
intuition guides her ability to make decisions, almost like a sixth
sense. However, intuition on its own is not enough for effective
decision-making. It is only when motives are clean and devoid of
selfish desires that the intuition can give clear signals to help make
objective decisions. These subtle abilities must be applied or
expressed in relation to facts and not fancy or imagination. Walking
the tightrope of daily life can also challenge our ability to make
decisions with integrity. This is why it is so important to
periodically keep an ‘eye’ on ‘I’ to see whether my actions, words,
thoughts, and values are in alignment with my principles. If they are
not we must use our sense of self-worth to allow us to delay the
decision and, if they are, then that alignment gives us the authority
to take a stand, make the decision, and be committed to it.
Within
the heart of the human soul, a new world is waiting to be born. The
gift we can, and must, offer —to ourselves and to each other—is to
rekindle within ourselves the flame of the feminine principle and then
to keep that flame glowing strong and steady in our souls, sustaining
it with the oil of pure feelings, faith and determination. A
commitment to live by this principle is a commitment to ignite the
spirit of the twenty-first century in the hearts of all humanity. If I
don’t make this commitment, who will?