I am sitting in the living room of our house. The winter sun is setting, and the rays are streaming in. Behind the money plants there is an object reflecting the light and it looks like a laser beam is headed straight for me. Occasionally a car is passing in a distance, but then, we are too much up the hill to really notice them. Outside, the bird feeder is nearly finished. A last feathered friend has seemingly fallen asleep on it. Maybe he filled up his belly too much, so he needs to rest for a little while. Thoughts? What thoughts could I possibly have other than seeing the beauty of the here and now. Drive? Well, I soon have to pick up my wife from the gym, have to help my son with his computer and attend a spiritual discussion group meeting, but these are just responsibilities that life has in store for me. Anxiety? Nothing could be further from the mind.
The “I Am” moment happens often to us. It’s fairly uneventful for our self identification, that’s why it’s hardly noticed, but it’s perceived as pleasant. The “I Am” moment is before body, mind, and even the world. It’s described as “being, consciousness, bliss” in the Indian tradition, but you have to have a knack for the whole to view it that way, because the restless mind and the biased self perception will brush right over it because there is nothing really that “we” get out of it. One may call the here and now that occasion when “we” don’t want, don’t know, don’t have. The New Testament’s “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of God” (Matthew 5:3) describes the here and now perfectly. The power of now is that without our agenda, our perspective, our experience, infinite possibilities open up, and bliss is our birthright.