Suggestions for how to receive guidance from within
Mapping
Your Own Spiritual Journey
by Amy Biddle
Here's an
important installment in the story of King Arthur and the Knights of
the Round Table, as adapted from Joseph Campbell. It's a wonderful
story of humanity's spiritual journey. The Knights and their King
were challenged to find the Grail in the midst of the woods that
grew outside the borders of Camelot. This mission sounded easy
enough, except that when they all rode into the woods as a group,
the Knights got hopelessly lost and somehow ended up right back when
they started.
After this
happened several times, someone had a light bulb moment, and the
Knights realized that each should enter the woods at a different
point. No longer would they crash through the woods as an army, as
if the Holy Grail could be taken by force. Each man was to make his
own journey to find the Grail.
This led to a
number of other adventures, of course. Anytime a knight was in the
woods and came upon a path cut by another knight, he couldn't just
follow it for that reason. If he tried to do that, the knight would,
once again, become hopelessly lost. And then he'd find himself back
where he started. The knights who found the Grail were the ones who
followed their own path, which was determined by prayer, intuition,
and courage - not by others' paths.
This is not to
say the Knights lived lives of isolation. They gathered around their
Table regularly, to enjoy the camaraderie of other braves souls.
They shared their adventures and celebrated what they found.
That's the way
is it is with our spiritual journey, too. Throughout history, people
have been trying to explore the mysteries of life in the safety of a
pack. Again and again, that leads to confusion and disappointment,
because the spiritual journey is one that must be taken alone. We
can take heart from knowing that fellow seekers are in the same
woods, and that at times our paths will cross. But if we try to rely
on another's light, we soon find ourselves in darkness and
confusion.
You have your
own light for your own spiritual journey. Sometimes you have just
enough light to take the next step (then the next, and then the
next), but as you come to trust that light, you find that this is
enough. Sometimes you will share a path with others, but the light
within you has the map for your own way.
So how can we
see the map, even if all we're supposed to see is the next step?
"There's a guidance for each of us," Emerson wrote, "and by lowly
listening we shall hear the right words." He didn't mean that we
have to "lower ourselves" to listen, as if listening were something
less-than. He meant that we have to get quiet, get close to the
ground of our own being. We breathe and focus, and we find that even
in the midst of adventures, there is a quiet place deep within us,
from which our guidance speaks.
You can still
learn something from other seekers, though. If you pay close
attention to the stories they share, you'll hear which "knights" are
skilled in lowly listening. You can't follow their path and expect
to find your own spiritual awakening, but they can teach you to
recognize the hallmarks of a genuine path. And when you recover your
own Grail from deep in the woods, they'll rejoice with you and
listen to your stories.
About the
author: Amy Biddle has been a lifetime student and teacher of
spiritual principles. Spiritual Healing Secrets is a fast-growing
resource for anyone who wants to improve her or himself, or simply
to learn practical spiritual principles. Let Amy help you improve
your life! Discover the secrets at
http://www.spiritual-healing-secrets.com
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