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My
Sexual Orientation
by Robert Rabbin Australia
Maya
Marcel-Keyes, the daughter of conservative Republican Alan Keyes, announced
last year, that she is a "liberal queer." I don't know why,
but for some reason people in the public glare invariably are held to
account for their sexual orientation, if not for the details of their
sexual activities. I want to extend my support and affection to Ms. Marcel-Keyes
for her candor, especially when her father, 2004 Illinois Republican candidate
for the U.S. Senate, said during an interview that homosexuality was "selfish
hedonism" and that Vice President Dick Cheney's lesbian daughter
was a sinner. Ms. Marcel-Keyes will always be welcome in my home. I have
a fondness for sinners.
This news has encouraged me to likewise announce my sexual orientation.
I am not really in the public glare, though I confess to having intimations
of that most of my life. I am, as the saying goes, a legend in my own
mind. I am sure that it is only a matter of time before CNN runs a story
about my sexual orientation. I might as well make it easy for any reporter
doing a background check on me.
I am a "hetero-mystivist," and I am not ashamed to say so. Some
people, including Mr. Keyes, might need some help with this term. The
"hetero" is pretty straightforward (no pun intended.) I am a
man, and I like women. I would like to insert here (again, no pun intended)
that I have friends who are gay and friends who are lesbians. I even know
a few bisexuals. If memory serves, I may have inadvertently dated one,
but only for three years.
Now comes the tricky part, the "mystivist" part. Okay, so that's
not really about sex. But it is an important part of my coming out, and
I do want CNN to get it straight (damn, why do I keep doing that?) Keeping
in mind I am the founder of Radical Sages, an evolution of spiritual action,
I will say a mystivist is someone who, in contrast to being a "selfish
hedonist," is a "selfless altruist."
The word mystivist comes from the word "mystivism," which I
just made up and which I hereby offer to the English language, and in
translation to all other languages. Strictly speaking, mystivism is the
spiritual style and substance of a mystivist, who is the glowing golden
offspring of happy parents named "spiritual" and "activist."
I might point out such a glowing golden child can come forth from hetero,
gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender human beings--even from conservative
Republican ones.
I must digress for a moment, but in the service of further illuminating
mystivism.
It is important to say that I am a lifelong mystic, a person who is intensely
interested in the worthful aspects of reality-- its values, meaning, and
purpose... to borrow Huston Smith's phrase. Mysticism is concerned with
the nature of mind, self, and reality; with issues of identity and transconceptual
truth; it refers to an individual's struggle to attain a clear vision
of reality and the transformation of consciousness that accompanies such
a vision.
I have spent the better part of four decades pursuing such a vision and
such a transformation of consciousness. Along the way, I frequently lost
track of the world around me. I sometimes believed it wasn't that real
or important, thinking only the elevated world of spirit was important
and real. (I have, fortunately, outgrown those notions.)
Like Mr. Keyes, I have a core community, though mine is not of the conservative
Republican kind. It is a community of people who are united by a shared
experience of transcendent principles: Wisdom and love, peace and freedom,
respect and kindness. These principles represent the ethical essence and
core values of all religions and spiritual traditions. They are universally
regarded as the highest expression of our common humanity.
In my community, many people think this world is not real, or not important,
which leads them to sit in the bleachers and to watch the game of life
through binoculars. They think politics is beneath them, and beneath the
elevated plane of spiritual attainment. Some, of course, do not. Those
who do not believe this notion have created another community, which is
referred to by various names: Spiritual activism, engaged spirituality,
engaged Buddhism, and so on. I myself have often used the term spiritual
activism.
Here's the main part of my coming out announcement: Engaged spirituality
is redundant. Authentic spirituality implies embodiment, which implies
expression, which implies relationship, which implies involvement, which
implies responsibility, which implies choice--all of which implies politics,
in this meaning of the word: The inter-relationships among people in a
society.
Now, back to my main point, which I want to make to my community of mystics,
who number around 40 million people in this country alone. (Don't ask
me how I know the research methodology is secret.)
Please live fully in this world. After all, it is in this world where
we can look into the eyes of children, see exotic animals, breathe fresh
air, walk in forests, and touch each other with love and care and tenderness.
This world is our own self, our own body, and our own heart. The moment
we awaken, even just a bit, and realize we are exquisite pieces of this
puzzle of creation, the moment we experience love in our hearts, the moment
we experience beauty, the moment we experience the inner surge of passionate
life force--this is the precise moment we must make this world our true
home. This is the precise moment in which we must speak out and act out
the infinite ways of loving.
I don't want to be an alarmist, but have you not noticed our world is
in turmoil? Have you not noticed that we, as a world civilization, are
flirting with self-created catastrophes? Can you not feel distress and
disease in this world-as-our-own-body?
We can only save ourselves when all humanity recognizes that every problem
on earth is our own personal problem and our own personal responsibility,
says Sulak Sivaraksa, founder of the International Network of Engaged
Buddhism.
I think he is a mystivist.
In conclusion, I would like to respectfully offer a final word to Mr.
Keyes: I went to the dictionary to find out what "selfish hedonism"
really means, and I didn't find anything in there about homosexuality.
Robert Rabbin, founder of Radical Sages and president of SourceSolutions,
Inc., is a contemporary mystic, public speaker, writer, and SourceSolution
architect. He is a leading exponent of Silence and self-inquiry as a way
of revealing our authentic being and of living in wisdom, love and peace.
Visit his website at www.radicalsages.com.
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