Now, no one can be taught to
feel. That’s impossible. However, there is a roundabout way of getting there
and that is by practicing love. And I don’t mean the crack-cocaine version of
love that has spawned the book, film, poetry and quotable quotes industries but
the real thing – altruistic love or loving kindness or metta. The Buddha is very specific on this point: “Practice loving
kindness oh monks. One becomes clever by doing so”. Of course, he doesn’t use the
word “clever”. Instead, he uses the word “Buddhi”
stemming from the word “avabuddhi or avabodha” or internalizing or (you got
it) - knowing.
Metta leads to feeling leads to knowing.
So, it doesn’t take much to figure
out that by engaging everything and everyone with equal, unreflecting love, one
acquires deep, insightful sensitization to the subtleties of their existence
and from those stem the initial asha
or desire to be one, or become one with one’s object of focus at any given
point.For the purpose of this piece, those would be musical instruments and how
they can be loved and how they can reward that love with the music they make
with one and on behalf of one.
Yet, desire is not sufficient
although it must form the basis of any instrument you wish to play. You need
the discipline, the exercise, the peer engagement. Those are provided by the
guru and the choice of the guru is crucial to progress. The Guru can be a) a
physical human being, b) a book or c) experience. A person works best, a book
is next and experience a poor last (one needs to bump one’s head on the lintel
a few dozen times before one realizes that one is an inch taller than the
lintel).
Gurus do not happen by chance.
They become a student’s guru, because a student feels sufficiency in desire.
Many students make the mistake of going for instruction to a great guru (and paying through their
parent’s noses for it) believing that excellence is a necessary outcome of
surface association. Not so. Teachers might “learn” you an instrument but gurus
don’t. Gurus won’t. Gurus can’t. Regardless of what you pay such a one, if a
guru sees no sufficiency in desire, she will merely teach you well. Remember
therefore that even if you consider such a one your guru, the guru won’t
consider you his disciple as Musila found out to his detriment.
Now, a lot of people, mistaking greed for need, lust for desire, thanha for asha, believe that learning is a process of acquiring something one lacks. Actually, it is the collateral outcome of a tripartite association, an engagement, a fornication if you may - between a student, a teacher and an instrument. In Asian traditions - all the way from what is now knows as the mid-east, through central and south Asia to the far east, students humble themselves and bow before both the teacher and the instrument for without such devotion and humility neither will look their way nor feel for them nor feel with them. Contrasting with the arrogance of the present day “student” and “teacher” where it is all “me” and “you”, all big or small, all hit or miss, the best of students finds the greatest of teachers every time and seek merely to pay homage at their feet. All else that follows is incidental.
And that which is incidental is a
factor of a student’s own sufficiency and rises from the three-way associative
engagement mentioned above. If you are sufficient, then you would already know what
I am about to tell you. You will go to a teacher for six different types of sansarga (copulation/engagement). Drushti or sight tsansarga (this is first and one goes to a teacher merely to be
thrilled by the sight of him, the voice of him, the way of him, the perfume of him). Next, Shabdha or sound sansarga (you have graduated to actually hearing what she has to
say). Next, Ghanda or iva or olfactory sansarga (you instinctively know what he is going to say before he
says it since you are now capable of literally and figuratively smelling him). Next,
Kabali or taste sansarga (you go to
her to be fed, clothed, sheltered and to bind your rasa to hers). Next, sparsha
or touch sansarga (you need to
physically copulate at which point the teacher gives of her own blood to the
disciple) and finally, chiththa or
mental sansarga (the two are
physically removed from each other, but the disciple only needs to think of the
guru and will instantly obtain the solution to any problem that vexes
her).
Truly, then, you know what
you have studied with the guru. Truly you will believe, as Barenboim tells the
young Lang Lang, that you can create a crescendo on a single note although in
theory that is impossible. Truly you will believe, as Horowitz told the 14 year
old Berenboim to believe - in the power of the will of a knowing musician.
Truly you will know, not the clinical mastery of speed play nor the beauty of subtle
ornamentation nor the technical wizardry of tricking out - and tripping up - the
metronome but of the force in you, the sensor, the knower, the seer, to unlock the potency –
and the poesy - of a single note.