avatarDavid Gerken

Summary

Ram Dass emphasized the personal and individual nature of the spiritual journey, encouraging spiritual seekers to trust their own truth and not blindly follow any one path or teaching.

Abstract

Ram Dass, a prominent spiritual figure, believed that the spiritual journey is unique to each individual and should not be confined to a single doctrine or method. He advocated for personal exploration and resonance with teachings rather than adherence to prescriptive spiritual paths. The article contrasts Ram Dass's approach with other spiritual leaders like Yogananda and the practice of Kriya Yoga, noting that while these may resonate with some, they are not universally suitable. The author of the article, David Gerken, shares his own experiences with various spiritual teachings and emphasizes the importance of finding a path that resonates personally, as echoed by the teachings of Ralph Waldo Emerson and Mickey Singer.

Opinions

  • Ram Dass's teachings prioritize individual intuition over collective spiritual doctrine.
  • The author, David Gerken, values the teachings of Ram Dass, Mickey Singer, and Eckhart Tolle, as they resonate with his personal spiritual journey.
  • Yogananda's focus on the pursuit of knowing God and the practice of Kriya Yoga did not resonate with the author, highlighting the subjective nature of spiritual paths.
  • The author suggests that spiritual seekers should trust their own judgement and not feel compelled to follow a teaching or teacher that does not align with their inner truth.
  • Emphasis is placed on the importance of love and compassion, as exemplified by Neem Karoli Baba's teaching to "Love everyone, serve everyone."
  • The author encourages exploring one's own spiritual path, even offering a free meditation program at his website to assist others in their journey.

Ram Dass’s Quote About the Spiritual Path: Be the Captain of Your Ship

You know your course better than anybody else.

Photo by Filip Mroz on Unsplash

Ram Dass was a soaring soul our world was fortunate to have for almost nine decades. Known as Richard Alpert until his guru gave him his Hindi name, Ram Dass influenced an entire generation of Westerners, mainly American, from the late 1960s until his death in 2019.

One of the many things I like about Ram Dass is his emphasis on the individual’s primacy in the spiritual journey. Too many spiritual traditions demand an “our way or the highway” dogma that diminishes the individual.

Not Ram Dass. This was his take:

“The spiritual journey is individual, highly personal. It can’t be organized or regulated. It isn’t true that everyone should follow one path. Listen to your own truth.”

This is huge. Why? Because many traveling the spiritual path are too quick to outsource the captaincy of their ship. They look to others to tell them what to do. And to tell them what is truth and what isn’t.

The teachers I follow

In my case, I pursue ideas and concepts that resonate with me. That make sense to me. I’ve written extensively about Mickey Singer, Eckhart Tolle and Ram Dass…because their teachings resonate the most with me.

Not all teachers resonate with me. Yogananda is one of the most influential Indian saints of the 20th century. He lived in America from 1920 until his death in 1952. He had a big hand in popularizing meditation in America. His book, Autobiography of a Yogi, is one of the most influential spiritual books ever written.

Mickey Singer is a Yogananda devotee

If my favorite teacher, Mickey Singer, had to choose one teacher that has influenced him above all others, I would bet that he’d choose Yogananda. He certainly mentions him the most frequently in his talks, along with Meher Baba.

Me? Not so much. Yogananda’s teachings focus mostly on the active and ardent pursuit of knowing God. His autobiography didn’t move me as it did so many millions of others.

Ram Dass floats my boat

Ram Dass’s book, Be Here Now, on the other hand, hit me like an earthquake. I tend toward the Ram Dass/Bhakti yoga teachings that stress compassion towards others. Ram Dass’s guru, Neem Karoli Baba, had a simple summation of the purpose of life: Love everyone, serve everyone. That resonates with me.

I just took the Ananda course in meditation, which is the beginning phase of the ancient method of Kriya yoga that Yogananda practiced. There were precise exercises that had to be done a certain way, followed by meditation that had to be done in a precise way. I found it all too forced and inflexible.

But that’s just me. There are millions of adherents to Yogananda and Kriya that swear by it. It totally works for them. I want to stress that I don’t think there’s anything wrong with Kriya, just that it’s not for me.

The takeaway

The point of all this is that spiritual seekers need to follow their own noses. If some teaching or teacher rubs you the wrong way, move along to something else.

As Ralph Waldo Emerson so eloquently put it:

“Trust thyself. Every heart vibrates to that iron string.”

Nobody knows the course of your spiritual path better than you do. You just need to listen to your insides.

And captain your ship.

Try my simple, free meditation program at davidgerken.net.

Spirituality
Life
Self Improvement
Self
Life Lessons
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