kindred_logo
transshopping cart   
trans
 
articles_heading
Kindred strives to adhere to strict advertising guidelines. Please help us keep our Google Ads in alignment with Kindred's values. Contact us with the URL of any ad on this page if you think it is contradictory to our content.Thank you.

Motherhood as a Bodhisattvic Path

ADD / ADHD / Autism |  Attachment Parenting / Bonding |  Babies |  Birth |  Breastfeeding |  Bullying |  Child development |  Childcare |  Circumcision |  Culture |  Education |  Environmental Justice |  Fatherhood |  Featured Articles |  First world peoples |  Food |  Gentle Discipline |  Health and Wellbeing |  Media and Children |  Men's Issues |  Mothering, early years |  Natural Parenting Articles |  Pregnancy |  Psychology / Self-help |  Relationships |  Sleep |  Social Justice |  Spirituality |  Sustainability and Ecology |  Thinking Global |  Vaccination |  Youth |  Youth Culture | 

Alfie Kohn |  Alok O'Brien |  Anna Jahns |  Helena Norberg-Hodge |  James Prescott, PhD |  John Breeding |  John W Travis, MD |  Joseph Chilton Pearce |  Kali Wendorf |  Lisa Reagan |  Marion Badenoch-Rose |  Meryn Callander |  Nancy Blakey |  Peter Cook |  Robin Grille |  Sarah J. Buckley | 
 
Motherhood as a Bodhisattvic Path

by Sherry Dawn

During the birth process, we transform at the cellular level and become the archetypal bodhisattva. The process of being aware as we conceive, gestate and open our wombs to the creative force or the all that is, becomes our attunement as woman healer, giving rise to the higher functioning that we need to mentor our children into their vast potential and greatness. Parenthood is a spiritual path and awareness is the practice.  As mothers, we have great honor and great responsibility.  The consciousness and tone with which we conceive, gestate, birth and parent our children, becomes the fabric from which they create their very lives. We come to conscious awareness through mindfulness meditation, although it often looks different for the householder. “Householders are challenged to watch our natural attachments to our children and let them be manifest in their fullest and purest sense. It is a goal to revision this attachment with eternal eyes, not just with temporal sight”. (Jeannine Parvati Baker). On the spiritual path of parenthood, we do not go to the ashram or to the monastery. We instead make our homes a Sacred Space and the practice most often looks like kneading bread, shelling chickpeas or washing dishes and sweeping the floors. We sit in awareness for 15 minutes at a time, rarely longer with little hands just begging to pull us off the meditation mat. We breathe deeply when we notice our self about to rote respond to the discomforts, whining or misbehaviors of our children; instead we stop in that moment of awareness and we respond to a child, rather than to a behavior.  We know that our relating to them comes first and that right action follows, never the other way around. We are connected so deeply to our children that we feel their pain to greater degrees even than we feel our own; and our love for them is eternally unconditional.

The actual process of opening to give birth is a gateway for complete transformation on all levels of our being. Inherent in this transformative process is the awakening of dormant capabilities that give rise to expanded states of being and self empowerment that include knowing how to raise this child. We come back to relating, just as we come back to our breath. This relating informs our way of being with our children. As mothers we give up the freedom to live by our impulses, yet what arises in its place, is awareness and expanded states of being that could not be experienced by any other means or path! No other practice but motherhood could conjure up the sensation of a heart beating inside our wombs or the experience of feeling love again as though for the first time; and even again with the subsequent birth of each new child coming thereafter. From feeling the life force move through our yonis as we give birth, to the awe that comes with seeing our babies for the first time outside of our bodies and simultaneously getting that, it was this baby that we nurtured in our womb for nine moons. There are so many altered states of consciousness inherent in co creating, carrying and birthing a child; right from the time of conception and before that, as a women’s climax coaxes the sea-Men into her watery depths. The whole journey of Motherhood is an altered state of consciousness that is informed by the birth process; just as the birth process is informed by who we are, that life is. The altered states that we experience are unique to motherhood; there is no other path by which to attain such incredible states of being and awareness.

As pregnant women and mothers who have taken great care to nurture the souls that gestate or have once gestated within our wombs; we are privy to the very sacred task of mentoring the evolved souls who come to us disguised as children. Yet in the modern context of motherhood, we are often not acknowledged or celebrated and rarely apprenticed and finally initiated into the bodhisattvic path of service called motherhood.

Mother as bodhisattva, is a very real, honoring and empowering archetypal image in which to view motherhood in the modern context. The path no longer chooses us, for today we have the freedom to choose not to mother a child. Let us acknowledge ourselves and one another for putting aside our own personal nirvanas, to instead merge in service for the highest good of our children, and subsequently for our planet. As we choose to offer ourselves up to mother in awareness, we consciously raise the consciousness of our children, and ultimately we generate the enlightenment of humanity as a whole.


Sherry Dawn is a professional mother of two, who enjoys writing between changing diapers and camping out in the kitchen. She is also a Calm Birth® certified childbirth educator, Holistic Doula and Natural Nutritionist, with a special interest in the health and well-being of women and children. email.


 

 

Back to Home

Current Issue
rlink_sep
Back Issues
rlink_sep
Kindred Toolbox
rlink_sep
Kindred Blog
rlink_sep
Children's Wellbeing Manifesto
rlink_sep
Where To Buy
rlink_sep
Get Your FREE Introductory Copy
rlink_sep
Community Market
rlink_sep
Get Active!
rlink_sep
Kindred Calendar Of Events 2008
rlink_sep
Editor's Keynotes & Presentations
rlink_sep
Advertise With Kindred
rlink_sep
Newsletter Sign Up
rlink_sep
Recommended Sites
rlink_sep
Writers and Photographers Guidelines
rlink_sep
Update your details
rlink_sep
View Cart
articles_heading
Kindred strives to adhere to strict advertising guidelines. Please help us keep our Google Ads in alignment with Kindred's values. Contact us with the URL of any ad on this page if you think it is contradictory to our content.Thank you.
articles_heading
undefined I’m An Individual!
Children have a unique constitutional type. According to the Ayurvedic theory of doshas everything in the universe is comprised of different proportions of space, air, fire, water and earth.
seperator
undefined The Fluoride Debate - Are We Poisoning Our Children?
Contrary to most of the scientific studies undertaken with regards flouridation of our water supplies, our governments seem committed to overriding democratic rights and poisoning the water supply. Cursory examination of the facts reveals this policy to b
seperator
undefined Masquerade: Magic Potions and Cures
In the name of removing wrinkles and lines, not only are most cosmetics not good for you, reports Alf Orpen; in fact, they may even speed up the ageing process. Out of Paris, New York, London and Rome continuously come sensational ‘new’ claims of substan
seperator
undefined Masquerade: The Breast Cancer Link
Breast cancer is the most common invasive cancer diagnosed in females in Australia. It is also the leading cause of cancer death in females. It is estimated that 13,261 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer in Australia this year. Links have been fo
seperator
undefined Down with Homework!
Do bulging backpacks mean learning? With his new book, 'The Homework Myth', expert Alfie Kohn says no. Here’s why.
seperator
 
Home | Kindred Subscriptions | Natural Parenting Products | Current Issue of Kindred Magazine | Kindred Magazine Back Issues | Natural Parenting Articles | Kindred Mission Statement | Where To Buy Kindred Magazine | Kindred Calendar Of Events 2008 | Advertise With Kindred | Editor's Choice Links | Writers and Photographers Guidelines | Other Resources | Editor's Choice Books | DVD's Music & More | Digital Kindred Subscriptions | About the Editor | Featured Articles | Kindred Letters | Birth Stories | Kindred Editorials | Parenting Ourselves | Health & Wellbeing | Activities & Games | Pet Care
  Copyright © 2007 Kindred Natural Parenting Magazine. All rights reserved Another site and search engine optimization (SEO) by Webko (Byron Bay) Web Design Australia