Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmailby feather

 

Welcome to the Kali Yuga, the age darkness and ignorance.

The Kali Yoga has been ongoing for millennia, and while there is debate as to when it began and when it will end, we are in it. It is characterized by an absence of Dharma, right behavior and order, where Yama and Niyama, morals and ethics, are absent. It is an absence of truth, compassion, and cleanliness.

It is also a time when enlightenment is easier to attain than ever before. There are many explanations for this, one is that God is so lonely in this age that any sincere worship will be rewarded.  Another, (and the one I believe makes more sense), is that we are so disconnected from our higher selves, any effort to make contact will result in exponential progress. Our everyday responsibilities and struggles are all-consuming, so much so that any spark of the divine and transcendent Self shines not like a spark, but a bonfire in the darkness. After all, enlightenment is moving from the darkness of ignorance to the light of knowledge and wisdom. And that is knowledge of the Self.

We can take this philosophy of the Kali Yuga literally, or figuratively. Either way we can apply it to the world around us and to ourselves. In the outer world, it manifests as a moral decay: hatred, anger, and violence. In ourselves, it manifests as our own moral decay of not aligning and living our values. The hatred, anger, and violence is that which we hold and perpetrate against ourselves. Self-hatred is the source of misanthropy (a hatred of humanity), which is in itself the source for violence perpetrated on a global scale.

The Kali Yuga is not just an age of darkness and ignorance, but also of alienation.

We are disconnected from one another and our higher Self. This manifests as division in our communities, and makes our communities weaker, less resilient and more prone to distrust and corruption. In ourselves, it brings about feelings of helplessness, a lack of purpose, anxiety and depression.

Either way, self-knowledge is a concept that transcends any one philosophy. “Γνῶθι σεαυτόν” (Gnōthi seautón), meaning “Know Thyself,” was famously inscribed at the Temple of Apollo in Delphi, a temple dedicated to the god of the sun, truth, prophecy, and healing. Much like the concept of enlightenment in yoga philosophy where Moksha is our liberation from our own ignorance, so too did the Greeks understand that our greatest achievement was in truly knowing ourselves.

The darkness of the Kali Yuga is undeniable, but it is also an opportunity. If a single spark can illuminate the dark of night, then even the smallest effort toward self-knowledge can have profound effects. The work of knowing ourselves, through yoga, meditation, self-reflection, and more, is an opportunity for us to know and live our values, aligning with our Dharma. Any effort to improve ourselves is vital to our personal growth, while also a way to restore harmony in the world around us.

By turning inward, we create the strength to turn outward with compassion. When we know our higher selves and live in accordance with our Dharma, we can begin to counteract the disorder and ignorance that defines this age. In this way, the great challenge of the Kali Yuga also contains its greatest gift, the potential for transformation, both within and without.