Articles
The passions
Passions

As human beings developed, the thrust of our evolutionary process is contained and activated within our genetic code. Deep in our inheritance, within all of humankind are the passions that ignite life, and make us search for who we are. We use the word 'passion' to signify the force that initiates the ontogenesis of an internal spark or drive that moves us upward, hierarchical and vertical in nature, to suceed, to grow, develop, better oneself etc.

Normally we think of passion as the force of excitement, fervor, sexual lust, zeal and ardor - but you will notice from this list below a completely different 'take' on the classical definition of passion. Out of our emergent levels of being comes different resources that initiate an upward process to develop. On the other hand, these same passions can restrict us, by retaining such a force [or hold on us] that we are actually immobilized, and are held to the level of being that the passion itself emerges from.

PASSION AT THE MATERIAL LEVEL IS
PRIDE

At the base of us is PRIDE. The force of which makes us have pride of our families, our country, our race and culture. This is the force which makes us stand upright, and own who we are. It is a singular force that is the passion that we need to do better than what went before us, but also it can be a force that becomes the shadow that prevents further growth and movement out of the material state, it then may keep us in our cultural or family patterns.

PASSION AT THE VEGETAL IS
GREED

As we further develop, we become passionate for experiencing life. This inherent greed is the force that allows us to taste all that we can, to be nourished and sustained by all that life can give us, and more. It is the force that makes us taste life, and to develop our sensorial awareness of things. It wakes up the part of us that allows us to rise above the material state and begin to really come alive. Of course, it too can overshadow us and lead us into the seduction of things that nourish and fatten our lives.

PASSION AT THE ANIMAL IS
AMBITION

This rising above and becoming alive takes us into the arena of being 'top dog'. This is the passion to become successful and useful in our lives, to find our niche and talent and to be the best. This makes us work hard, and selflessly, to work with others, to be gregarious and part of a 'pack'. This will lead us in to the larger human community at the level of cooperation and shared ideals which is a more human process and brings alive the force of knowledge. When ambition, however, overshadows us, it leads us into a pattern of too much work, of selfishness, devil-may--care attitude, and muscling your way to the top.

PASSION AT THE HUMAN IS
KNOWLEDGE

Knowledge is a passion that allows us to become who we are. This force motivates us above the selfish mode into a wider appreciation of who we are. It makes us see the larger picture, to co-operate and to acquire knowledge for a more humane mode of work and life. Knowledge itself becomes the tool and the equipment to make changes, and to help not only yourself but humankind too. When persuit of knowledge becomes a shadow around us, it takes us into our minds away from the heart of things. It sends us on flights of fancy, where we may build castles in the sky, or where we may weave an exotic coat of words or ideas which can entangle us. Knowledge is so seductive that we can marry it, and it can become our partner, so that we are wedded to material ideas.

PASSION AT THE NOBLE LEVEL IS
SPIRITUAL KNOWLEDGE

The passion to rise above the ordinary and to enquire as to who we are and why we are here is motivated by this innate force within us. This is the force that makes us go on our quests, to seek higher knowledge, to find teachers and gurus to help show the way. The problem is that the human mind is not a spiritual organ, so the quest for inner understanding is always limited by our minds. However this force in us at the least takes us forward into more lofty goals, and inspires us to find and hear the Call within. The shadow of this passion is when knowledge of the spiritual becomes the clothes that one wears, rather than truly living the life from the inner Self.

Definition:

1. A powerful emotion, such as love, joy, hatred, or anger. 2a. Ardent love. b. Strong sexual desire; lust. c. The object of such love or desire. 3a. Boundless enthusiasm: His skills as a player don't quite match his passion for the game. b. The object of such enthusiasm: Soccer is her passion. 4. An abandoned display of emotion, especially of anger: He's been known to fly into a passion without warning. 5. Passion a. The sufferings of Jesus in the period following the Last Supper and including the Crucifixion, as related in the New Testament. b. A narrative, musical setting, or pictorial representation of Jesus's sufferings. 6. Archaic Martyrdom. 7. Archaic Passivity.

ETYMOLOGY:

Middle English, from Old French, from Medieval Latin passiomacr, passiomacrn-, sufferings of Jesus or a martyr, from Late Latin, physical suffering, martyrdom, sinful desire, from Latin, an undergoing, from passus, past participle of patimacr, to suffer. See pemacr(i)- in Appendix I.

SYNONYMS:

passion, fervor, fire, zeal, ardor These nouns denote powerful, intense emotion. Passion is a deep, overwhelming emotion: “There is not a passion so strongly rooted in the human heart as envy” (Richard Brinsley Sheridan). The term may signify sexual desire or anger: “He flew into a violent passion and abused me mercilessly” (H.G. Wells). Fervor is great warmth and intensity of feeling: “The union of the mathematician with the poet, fervor with measure, passion with correctness, this surely is the ideal” (William James). Fire is burning passion: “In our youth our hearts were touched with fire” (Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.). Zeal is strong, enthusiastic devotion to a cause, ideal, or goal and tireless diligence in its furtherance: “Laurie [resolved], with a glow of philanthropic zeal, to found and endow an institution for … women with artistic tendencies” (Louisa May Alcott, Little Women 1869.) Ardor is fiery intensity of feeling: “the furious ardor of my zeal repressed” (Charles Churchill).See also synonyms at feeling.