“Why is peace unprioritized?”
I shared this question with my current teacher training students over the weekend. They looked equally appreciative and puzzled.
You would think that the desire to live in harmony would be greater than the urge for affliction. Yet somehow that does not appear to be the case.
Like many noble pursuits, peace can easily be dismissed as fanciful, a hangover from the counterculture movement, or even a sign of weakness. Peace is not in keeping with the status quo, a tide of stimulation usurp its place.
“Why is that?”
Years ago, when I first met Baba Hari Dass, someone asked him “how to develop personal discipline?”
His response:
“Climbing is hard, slipping is easy.”
The words still ring true decades later and epitomize why peace is not the priority. It takes deliberate effort to develop positive qualities and the temptation to deviate can be strong.
The impulse to be impatient or disregard the needs of the whole may come more habitually and with greater urgency. It takes far more energy and thoughtful consideration to create a building than it does to destroy it.
In short, cultivating peace requires dedicated self-reflection and effort – to swim against the current shortcomings and climb towards a noble pursuit. And it can be often far more convenient to choose otherwise.