by Steve Champion (Adisa Kamara) - San Quentin death row Finding your Sacred Place
Finding your sacred place in a world where everything seems to happen instantaneously and where people are conditioned to expect results as fast as a microwave oven can cook food is a problem. People want a quick fix to problems, and when they don’t get it, they become frustrated and sometimes give up on life. The creation of the internet is a wonderful thing. It continues to be instrumental in bridging the world, just like boats, trains and airplanes did when they were created. The internet offers a way to communicate and interact with people without the baggage, as some people would say, of physical contact. People can connect or disconnect from each other with the flick of a switch. It is a highly depersonalising and anti-spiritual way to live life. But in fast pace technological societies it’s becoming the norm. Many great spiritual teachers of the past found sacred places to take refuge. What Akhenaton, Moses, Krishna, Buddha, Lao Tzu, Jesus, Prophet Muhammad and many others taught humanity in the past, is the same message spiritual teachers are teaching humanity today, the sacred place lives within you. To find your sacred place, it doesn’t matter where you live. I live at San Quentin prison, on death row, in a four-by-ten-foot cell that is smaller than your average bathroom. But when I close my eyes and meditate I am transported to another place, another time as if I am not here. Wherever you are, you must be an agent responsible for finding your sacred place. The Tao Te Ching say, “those who overcome their opponents are powerful; those who overcome themselves are strong.” Your sacred place is where you are standing. It is there you will find strength, solace and inner peace. The self – an aspect of our being that defines our essence – is the vehicle for finding a sacred place in your life. No one can give or take it from you, because you were born with it. In a sacred place, the hustle and bustle of life ceases to exist. There are no parents, no spouse, no children, no siblings, no relatives, and no friends. No boss, no job, no bills, no pain and no worries. No identity or responsibility, except oneness with universal consciousness. In a sacred place, you just are. You can just “be”. Despite what your life is or isn’t, a sacred place is where you can bring forth what and who you are, or what you might be. You come to realise the unity of life and the real truth of your own life. You are able to nourish your creative imagination in your sacred place. When you find your sacred place, you will find tranquillity, just as the Buddha found enlightenment under the Bodhi tree. Every person needs a sacred place. It requires space, both mental and physical space, and a time during the day to be alone, a time to heal the mind, body, and spirit, and to realise you must take ownership and be present in your daily life. A sacred moment might last only a minute, but it will be a minute where you see and experience the whole world in a temporal moment. Steve Champion a.k.a. Adisa Kamara PO Box C58000 San Quentin State Prison San Quentin CA 94974
2 Comments
8/1/2018 11:19:47 am
Find your sacred place instantaneously and where people are conditioned to expect results of food is a problem, keep follow the sacredeyeofthefalcon site. The showing of compassion and technological societies it’s becoming the norm.
Reply
10/11/2020 11:49:31 pm
This is very helpful for me. Thank you for sharing the news.
Reply
Leave a Reply. |
Adisa Kamara
Poetry, writing & Lessons in Life from San Quentin death row Archives
July 2019
Categories
All
Archives
July 2019
|