It seems to me that as I go down this path toward enlightenment, there are considerable drawbacks. If they only affected me, that would be one thing, if it was serving the greater good. However, it seems that raising one's consciousness is tough on others, especially if one has a family that isn't spiritually inclined. New behaviors or lack of old behaviors are often interpreted poorly, and there's no real way to explain, when there is no common language. At least this is how it is in the short-term. I'll spare the description, as I think more than a few of you know what I'm talking about, unless you need concrete examples.
I think we'll all be okay, and I'll keep working on equanimity. We've always been a stable, happy, loving family. And a lot of progress has been made in the last 48 hours or so toward me focusing on looking deeply at me, and not them.
But, I want to make sure I'm not doing more damage than I'm doing good, to the ones I love most dearly. And to everyone, really. But I have a responsibility to my family that I won't abandon.
Here's my big question. Is enlightenment selfish? Bliss and equanimity and all are lovely and all, but what good are they if they are only for me, and if they inadvertently cause others pain, due to them not understanding the transformation? Remind me again what the gifts are that aren't self-serving?
At one point, I was considering stopping the process within me, as a sacrifice to my family. I've abandoned that idea for now, but I'm asking here, so I can come back to this thread in moments where "the greatest good for the greatest number" gets confused again.
I'm actually doing very well today, extremely well actually, but while all is quite equanimous, I thought I'd ask.
PS -- I don't know if it was purposeful, but on my darkest day a couple of days ago, I felt a lot of charisms that seemed signatures of others that seemed sent to me, as an aide. The most obvious was a very clear auditory charism, most of the day, which I don't normally experience except in meditation. I took that as a gift from you, Jhananda. Thank you for being by my side, whether it was intended or not. I was feeling very alone, and it helped to remind me that in fact I am the opposite of alone, in indescribable ways.