Add God Walks among Us |
For those coming from a Judeo-Christian backgroundthis sounds a bit
nutso. For those airy fairy new agers, you are not cutting edge. Your ideas
about the universe and all of us being interconnected actually are part of
Shintoism and its little bastard sister, Konkokyo, or Konko. These ideas have
been swarming around Japan since the 19th century.
I rarely went to church. My Catholic mother grew up in time when the
Catholicism was quite stern; it freaked her out enough to allow my brother and
I to pick our own spiritual paths. My brother is super devoted to Konkokyo. I
am not much for commitments so I blended Mexican Catholicism with Konkokyo. I
go to confession and pray with a pink rosary, but, I also meditate. However, I
also believe that the universe is (kami) God and not some old dude with beard
looking down on us. I also will go on daily walks so that I can be in touch
with my grandparents who are now both dead. Not a day passes where I do not
think of them.
InKonkokyo, everything is seen as in divine relation with each other.
Kami’s (god) energy is constantly bouncing off of us. In regards to the concept
of heaven and hell, we are actually right now dwelling among it. When we die,
we do not get booted to some palace or inferno in the sky. We remain in unity
in this world and with kami.
Since every religion has its core beliefs, with Konkokyo they are quite
simple: they focus on the now. They center on the betterment of humanity
through practicing gratitude, being humble, helping one another, and
meditation. The explanation for suffering and sadness is because people have
become cut-off from the interconnectedness of humanity and the universe.
The great thing for me has always been in my darkest of hours, I have
never felt completely alone. I know that my energy and my grandparents were
right there by me interlocking. It did not make the mourning and loss any
easier but it gave me another tool for coping. Having my grandparents in my
life taught me to be hard-worker, a lover, and highly creative. It through my
time with them I also am beginning to feel a little more comfortable in my own
shoes.
By: Lucy Tambara
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