
Raphael Cushnir is an emerging voice in the world of contemporary spirituality. He shares his unique approach to personal growth and fulfillment with millions of readers as a popular contributor to O, The Oprah Magazine. In addition, he presents lectures and workshops around the world and at renowned retreat centers such as the Esalen Institute and the Omega Institute. His first book, Unconditional Bliss: Finding Happiness in the Face of Hardship (Quest), was nominated for the year 2000 Books for a Better Life Award. It introduced a simple yet profound process called Living the Questions, which helps us become fully present at even the most difficult times, and can also break through virtually any personal block.
Cushnir's second book, Setting Your Heart on Fire: Seven Invitations to Liberate Your Life (Broadway Books/Random House), was published in 2003 and is currently used as a major teaching text in churches around the country. The book’s Seven Invitations comprise an invigorating, step-by-step process for reopening and reawakening even the most wounded of hearts, and for accessing love's transformative radiance amid the dullest routine or the scariest challenge.
In September 2005 Chronicle Books released Cushnir’s How Now: 100 Ways to Celebrate the Present Moment, a gift book with 20 full-color photographs and a highly accessible version of his core principles.
BOOK ACCOLADES:
How Now: 100 Ways to Celebrate the Present Moment (2005) was a Winner: Best Spiritual Books of 2005, Spirituality & Health magazine
Unconditional Bliss: Finding Happiness in the Face of Hardship (2000) was nominated for the Books for a Better Life Award
Two Questions That Can Change
Your Life
By Raphael Cushnir
Six
years ago my wife at the time attempted suicide. It was one of the worst days
of my life. After receiving the news, I drove to the hospital with sweaty palms
and a racing heart. Yet, at the same time, without denying or minimizing the
severity of the situation, I was also radiantly happy, at home in a state of
abiding love.
To
many this seems inappropriate, perhaps even impossible. And I would’ve felt the
same way, before coming to know, firsthand, what the essence of love really is.
For
me, love emanates from the core of life itself. It’s a dynamic, primal force,
the universe’s urge for inclusion, for union, for the dissolution of that which
separates. But here’s the amazing part – it requires absolutely no cause
whatsoever. Nothing is necessary to bring it about, and nothing can take it
away. Love simply is, and it’s up to us whether we want to choose it.
Consciously,
most of us would give anything to experience this endless, transformative love.
Yet unconsciously, we turn away from it all day long. Why we do that, and how
to reverse that behavior, is the topic of all my talks and workshops at
schools, prisons, churches and retreat centers. It’s also the message of my two
books, Unconditional Bliss: Finding Happiness in the Face of Hardship, and
the brand new Setting Your Heart on Fire: Seven Invitations to Liberate Your
Life.
In
this brief space I’d like to share the heart of this message. Not as an expert
or authority of any kind, but instead as an observer, a questioner, a voice
that calls you to assess your own experience.
In
my experience, bliss comes to us when we’re in a state of expansion.
This means we’re open, receptive, flowing with ourselves and our surroundings.
For some of us this happens when we sing, or see a great film, or play with our
children or walk in nature. The point is that we’re available. And the more
available we are, the more delightful our experience.
Unfortunately,
however, we’re often anything but available. Instead we’re in a state of contraction.
Contraction is a mental, physical and emotional reaction to anything we don’t
like or want. From small annoyances like a rotten apple to great tragedies like
the death of a loved one, we touch the pain of the moment and instinctively
recoil from it. There’s nothing wrong with this, it’s completely natural. In fact,
all of life is a great dance of contraction and expansion.
The
problem is that it’s almost impossible to fully un-contract unless we’re aware
that we’re contracted in the first place. And when we remain contracted, long
past the experience that brought it about, we’re living in a state of resistance.
Resistance
is the key. Becoming aware of our resistance allows us to let it go, allows us
to experience whatever we’ve contracted against. This is acceptance. And
as soon as we make it through to acceptance, we’re free to expand once more and
reap the benefits.
But
letting go of resistance isn’t so easy. As much as some parts of us want to let
go, other parts want to hold on for dear life. This is where the two questions
come in, two simple questions designed to bring us fully, radically into the
present.
The
first question is What is happening right now? It’s what we ask whenever
we’ve become aware that we’re contracted, always focusing first on the sensations
in our bodies. We focus on our bodies because that’s where all feelings occur.
The more we ask the question, the more natural and automatic is becomes. In
fact, it begins to occur at a level deeper than language.
The
second question is Can I be with it? To be with something means
accepting it fully, no longer fighting its undeniable reality. Once we do that,
once we’re willing to feel everything that this acceptance may bring about,
we’ve laid the groundwork for renewed expansion.
I
call this process of inquiry Living the Questions, in honor of the great
poet Rainer Maria Rilke. Living the Questions is simple, straightforward, and
doesn’t require you to change anything about your beliefs or your lifestyle. I
encourage you to try it for awhile and see what happens. Try it in a traffic
jam, during a fight with your friend, when your head is aching, or when your
checkbook’s overdrawn. It requires persistence and real courage. The rewards,
however, are extraordinary.
Just by asking and answering two questions we go from
being a spectator of life to truly living it. We’re there, one hundred percent.
And, more often than we’d ever expect, so is joy, fulfillment and love.
***
Raphael
Cushnir was recently featured in O, The Oprah Magazine. His first book, "Unconditional
Bliss: Finding Happiness in the Face of Hardship" (Quest, 2000)was twice
nominated as Best Personal Growth book of the year. His new book, Setting Your
Heart on Fire (Broadway), has just been released. It has been endorsed by Sharon
Salzburg, Byron Katie, Lama Surya Das, and Tara Bennet Goleman. In addition to
his spiritual work, Raphael is also an award winning screenwriter and
filmmaker. His film, "Sexual Healing," was nominated for two Ace
Awards and won Grand Prize at the Houston Film Festival. For more info:
livingthequestions.org