Clear Path to Peace




May 22, 2008

The Guide

I recently had the great blessing of traveling to the Indonesian island of Bali. It was the fulfillment of a lifelong dream to be there, and I came home deeply moved by the beauty and spiritual depth of the Balinese people.

One day while I was in Bali, I had a wonderful stretch into new territory for myself. I was learning how to scuba dive, and I asked my teacher, “How many dives have you done?” He had to think about it and then he said, “Well, within the last 20 years I’ve probably done at least 4,000 dives.”

Here I was in the pool, basically a raw beginner. I admitted to myself that I didn’t know what I was doing, and my gratitude for his experience, trust, and confidence went very deep. I thought, “How wonderful to have someone who’s had the experience of 4,000 dives to guide me.”

My dive master held onto my body, anchoring me while I floated around, explored my equipment, and tentatively began to relax into trusting that I could breathe under water.

Like my aptly named dive master, Siddhartha, I hold onto people and guide them through emotional waters. At the same time, I, too, am learning.

I came to understand that my gratitude for this man and his expertise is also the gratitude that others have for me in my work. I felt soul satisfied at the thought.

I began to think about what I do and how I am a guide for people in the deep tides of our emotional lives. Knowing how much I have committed my life to this work and how much I’ve done it on my own, I realized, “I’m a dive master!”

I’m an inner dive master, demonstrating the connection between our Spirit and how we live in our emotional bodies, and of course, our mental and physical bodies as well.

We dive in all of these bodies, and very often we’re in denial of the depths to which we need to go in order to find the truth about ourselves. It can take a while to realize how much sincerity is required in order to dispel what is not true, to see what we have been holding as a veneer, and impressing it upon the world.

When people ask me, “What do you do?” I use this metaphor and it helps explain the territory and the journey. I help people to dive within. I guide and support; I hold their hands.

I learned to scuba dive as a gift to myself, so that I could have my own experiences with the animals and plants of the sea.

I help my clients to have their own experiences in their interior, personal aquatic environment, given as a gift to themselves. They learn to accept and include all of it - the amazing corals, the tropical fish and the Loch Ness monsters that may be living down there.

Once we’ve learned to dive, we may then return to the light, into the Oneness that we are. Just traveling around under the water is not the full picture.

Offering what we discover on our journey to the One Life Essence…to the One that creates us, and gives life…this is the full picture.

When I told my dive master about my realization, he said, “Yours is a much bigger ocean.” He’s a wise man. That’s why they call him Siddartha.

Thank you, Siddhartha, for showing me the way.


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2 Comments »

  1. Ana, your post “The Guide was wonderful and your Scuba dive a fitting metaphor for the dive you have taken into the sea of Infinity. Siddharta’s 4000 dives is fantastic in the material plane and he is a great guide, but your guidance cannot be measured in terms of numbers however many figures there may be, You are guiding immortal souls in the Sea of Infinity.

    Comment by randall butisingh — June 3, 2008 @ 2:58 am

  2. Ana,over the past year I have had my share of shipwrecks..in each shipwreck something valuable was lost to the seas of my emotions, yet you helped give me hope and courage to not only dive, but to dive deep and find..find the treasure chest filled with unknown parts of myself. Though I love the water, I must admit, I am not a very good swimmer, especially in shark infested waters, but you have helped me float, backstroke, and tread water during rough seas and most importantly, you have helped me make friends with my “sharks”. Your blog is comforting to my tender heart, and your words of wisdom help me see the beauty at the bottom of my sea.

    Comment by Farrrah Cano — October 5, 2008 @ 2:21 pm

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