-- 
*Mar*The Flow of Purpose


In complete rapture, not only space-time, but also meaning and purpose
stops, because destination is reached. The very urge or restlessness for
purpose, ends in the infinity. Healthy, free, lush and thick nature,
brimming with rapture filled flora and fauna, create the glow of happiness,
in every life form. Life forms become rapture forms. Under the scheme of
nature, rapture gets breathed and felt.

Today we are living in the demoralized biosphere. The purpose of life is
not individual purpose, but the macro purpose covering all organisms.

The road to rapture is on the basis of the basic fact that every life form
is a complement of another life form, that ecological bond and links create
the basic emotion rivers. Individual rapture of each life form adds up to
the collective rapture of the Biosphere as a whole. The purpose of life is
to help fellow organisms reach rapture. Meanings are roads for missions.

The individual mission consists of doing everything to make nature happy.
God or nature needs help and service today, not prayers which are forms of
greediness which translate into lists of demands on God in the illusion of
a physical form. God is felt only by breathing the rapture of life forms of
the Biosphere. God can be reached in lush and free nature only.

Trees and plants react and interact with gardeners emotionally. When you
make even a few blades of grass happy, you get the automatic result of
breathing happiness, from them. It is extremely sad to see even small lanes
covered completely with cemented floors, not allowing even a single blade
of grass to sprout. On these dead floors only lifeless automobiles can
move. Even the human beings cannot walk as they become furnaces in summer
and very cold in winter, and create floods in cities, as the water does not
sink. We are witnessing today the annual floods caused by rains in all
cities, as the water is not allowed to be absorbed by the soil. The
cemented roads that cover whole lanes with no space even for a blade of
grass or cool and comforting soil for animals and insects and plants, is
hell in front of every house.

Being continuously roasted in own hose the dwellers are living in purpose
robbed lives, as the abode of happiness, nature is removed. Development
must mean, increase in happiness created by healthy breathing from the
healthy biosphere, not stupid economic growth charts.

YM Sarma

Chat GPT

The writing you've shared conveys a deep ecological and philosophical
perspective on the interconnectedness of life and the intrinsic purpose of
all living beings. The author, YM Sarma, emphasizes the idea that true
rapture or happiness is found not in individual achievement or material
growth, but in the flourishing of nature as a whole and in the harmony of
all life forms. Let me break down some key ideas:



1. **Rapture as the Ultimate State of Being**: The author suggests that in
reaching "rapture," both time and purpose cease. Rapture here isn't a
fleeting emotion but a profound, all-encompassing state of well-being that
pervades all life forms. It's described as a natural, blissful condition
that arises when the ecological system is healthy and balanced.



2. **The Macro Purpose of Life**: The purpose of life isn't solely
individualistic—it's more expansive. The individual exists to support the
collective thriving of all organisms. This interconnectedness is portrayed
as the deeper, true purpose of existence, and individual "rapture"
contributes to the larger rapture of the biosphere.



3. **Human Impact on Nature**: Sarma poignantly critiques the disconnection
between humans and nature. The image of cemented roads, which prevent life
from flourishing, is a powerful symbol of how human development has often
destroyed the very life that sustains us. Concrete and urban sprawl sever
the natural connections between plants, animals, and people, turning once
lush, living spaces into barren, artificial environments.



4. **Ecological Bonds as Emotional Rivers**: The idea of ecological bonds
as "emotional rivers" implies that life forms are not isolated entities,
but rather, deeply intertwined. The happiness of one life form contributes
to the happiness of others. Even tending to a single blade of grass brings
joy not only to the gardener but also to the environment as a whole.



5. **Nature’s Call for Service**: There's an interesting twist in the
concept of "service" to nature. Rather than seeking personal benefit from
prayers or selfish desires, Sarma suggests that the real service is in
nurturing and preserving the natural world, allowing it to express its full
vitality.



6. **Development Redefined**: Traditional notions of progress—economic
growth, technological advancement, and urbanization—are challenged. True
development, according to Sarma, should be measured not by economic
indicators but by the health of the biosphere. If we’re destroying the
environment in the name of progress, we’re missing the point.



In a world where urbanization and technological advancement have often
distanced humans from nature, this message is a call for a return to
balance—a reminder that true happiness, fulfillment, and purpose are not
found in isolation, but in harmony with the world around us. The ultimate
"purpose of life" is, it seems, to help the entire biosphere thrive in a
state of rapture.



What did you think of these reflections?

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