Sunday, December 28, 2008

The Talmud, the Yogic Edge and Death

In the workshop I teach called 'The Yogic Edge' I assert that 'business is the most spiritual of pursuits'. This morning, reading this post by teacherken, which references this article about the Madoff scandal I came upon this writing about the Talmud. I think it makes the point....

The Talmud teaches that when we die and account for our lives before our Creator, each of us will be asked four core questions that determine whether we have lived a worthy life.

Were you honest in business? The first question we are asked in heaven is not a ritual question, but an ethical one: How were you in the marketplace? In this age of financial scandal, an ancient voice rings true: Business integrity is of paramount importance.

Did you make time to study sacred texts regularly? Our own instincts for authenticity, integrity, and compassion need to be recharged and renewed by studying, regularly, the words of the greatest ethical minds.

Did you do your part to nurture the next generation? Raising children affords us the grace of loving somebody more than we love ourselves.

Did you do your part to make the world a better place? Home and hearth, our own health and happiness, are crucial. But they are not enough for a worthy life. The broken world beckons. At the end of our days, what can we say we did to fix it?

Even if we can answer each question "yes," the Talmud teaches that there is still one last element to a worthy life: yirat hashem, a sense of God's presence. What does this mean in 2008? That we wake up in the morning and realize: it is not about us. We are not the center of the universe. We are not even the center of our own universe. There is God. However much we wrestle with God, however much we argue with God, however much we doubt God, it is God to whom we turn in the depths, and it is God whose service gives our life meaning.

I've been taking the chance to slow down and reflect these last few days as the year comes to an end. These words remind me that the values I have come to embrace as I've engaged the marketplace, the values that I seek to live into as I engage the marketplace, these are values worth living into. While I am surrounded by the 'din' of 'money is all that matters', I am grateful to be one of many who is engaged with the deeper integrity of the marketplace, the integrity of community as important as oneself, in balance. Teacherken's diary is about death. As he notes, more and more of those we have shared this path with are now finding themselves at the end of this journey. For me, as one of those still in our bodies, I am present to the beauty, the importance and the significance of paying attention to how we live, how we might answer these 4 questions. For me, it is not that I will answer them before God, so much as I must live with the fruits of the answers each day.

Raghurai (Rich)

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Money. Dehumanization, and the 'Healthcare' System

As some who read this blog know, one of the writers I consider most enlightening is John Bloom, who writes 'Reimagine Money'. John posts infrequently, and I am always eager to read what he has to say. This last post is no exception. Here's how it concludes, in a way that I think we all must take to heart with regard to how we relate to all systems, and most definately as we relate to the 'healthcare' system.

Any invention of the mind (in this case money and debt) that is managed in order to dehumanize its users needs a new set of ethical practices that might take a cue from the ancient temples and the origins of money in Western civilization. There can be a quality of offering in and through every financial transaction. I can become more conscious of the intentions in my financial behavior, or more aware of the work and economic efforts of others to make the transactions possible at all. But first I, and others who have not already suffered enough, have to wake up to the pain and inequity that have grown within the system even as I have participated willingly, if not wisely, in it.
If you replace the references to finances and the financial system with the healthcare system you will see how clearly we have allowed ourselves to be blind and numb to the inequities we live with. Why should someone who is less fortunate than one of us suffer the consequences of no health insurance, and hence often less care, simply because our culture has chosen to capitalize the profit of delivering health care, but socialized so many of the costs. A chosen few profit, yet as a society we all bear the costs, both financial and energetic of allowing reactive care to prevail over prevention in virtually every circumstance in our healthcare system.

We have alot of work to do!

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Back at it!

As has been the case time and again as I've written this blog, I have been through a slow writing period. What's interesting to me, is that there seems to be a direct relationship between how busy I get at Yoga Yoga, and how little time I have to write. Of course, it really isn't that I don't have the time, its more that the kind of time that this sort of writing takes is just more than I can do when I am way full in my 'day job'!

Well, much has been happening!

We opened a new yoga center in over the course of 6 weeks, Yoga Yoga 360. Its seems like this was ages ago, but in fact it was only 7 weeks ago that we actually opened our doors!

We're also going to start classes in partnership with Seton/ Good Health Commons in Round Rock in January.

And our newest project, YogaSolve(tm) is going to roll out shortly.

For us at Yoga Yoga this time has been challenging and exciting. We've managed to get the new center open, and really not 'miss a beat' with our end of year plans, projects and actions. The team is fabulous, and I'm learning what it really can be to work with a group that has begun to 'find itself'....what a pleasure!

More to follow as we head into '09!
Raghurai