“Blessed are the poor in spirit,” Jesus said, “for theirs is the
kingdom of heaven.”1 What does “poor in spirit” mean? No inner baggage,
no identifications. Not with things, nor with any mental concepts that
have a sense of self in them. And what is the “kingdom of heaven”? The
simple but profound joy of Being that is there when you let go
of identifications and so become “poor in spirit.” This is why
renouncing all possessions has been an ancient spiritual practice in
both East and West.
The ego tends to equate having with Being: I have, therefore I am.
And the more I have, the more I am. The ego lives through comparison.
How you are seen by others turns into how you see yourself. If everyone
lived in a mansion or everyone was wealthy, your mansion or your wealth
would no longer serve to enhance your sense of self. You could then move
to a simple cabin, give up your wealth, and regain an identity by
seeing yourself and being seen as more spiritual than others. How you
are seen by others becomes the mirror that tells you what you are like
and who you are. The ego’s sense of self-worth is in most cases bound up
with the worth you have in the eyes of others. You need others to give
you a sense of self, and if you live in a culture that to a large
extent equates self-worth with how much and what you have, if you cannot
look through this collective delusion, you will be condemned to chasing
after things for the rest of your life in the vain hope of finding your
worth and completion of your sense of self there.
How do you let go of attachment to things? Don’t even try. It’s
impossible. Attachment to things drops away by itself when you no longer
seek to find yourself in them. In the meantime, just be aware of your
attachment to things. Sometimes you may not know that you are attached
to something, which is to say, identified, until you lose it or there is
the threat of loss. If you then become upset, anxious, and so on, it
means you are attached. If you are aware that you are identified with a
thing, the identification is no longer total. “I am the awareness that
is aware that there is attachment.” That’s the beginning of the
transformation of consciousness.
Excerpted from Eckhart Tolle’s A New Earth, pages 43-46. For more from this book, click here. To access more of Eckhart’s teachings on discovering stillness, click here for this month’s episode of Eckhart Tolle TV.
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