I remember graduating from Engineering School and getting excited about my first job. Within a year, I landed a better paying job and with the naive understanding of the corporate world, I was mostly motivated to climb the ladder similar to my peers. To fast forward the track they were on, many decided to go for an MBA right out of undergraduate school.
In my early days of college, I remember having an enthusiasm to attend my classes not because I thought my destiny was to be an Engineer but because I enjoyed the science and Math classes I took. There was also a swaggering satisfaction of sitting in a Chemical Engineering class knowing that you were one of the 19 women in the entire graduating class.
As preparation for climbing up the corporate ladder, while not focusing much on learning or enjoying the scientific or mathematical principles of Engineering I once did, I decided to pursue an MBA.
The interesting thing about life is God knows when we need a change in our direction but we can only hear and feel this shift in silence. At the time, I knew nothing of silence. I was always too busy asking God to fulfill all my earthly wishes and ignorant to the idea of being still and knowing.
As I began studying for GMAT in 2000, I found out I was to become a mother. My career, as I saw it at the time, took a back seat. Looking back I would not have it any other way. I feel blessed to have had the opportunity to stay home every single day in their younger days; playing with them, being able to pick them up from and drop them off to preschool, taking them to the recreation center, and my all-time favorite (which I believe most moms would agree), taking naps with them on top of my chest.
My kids started school full time and I was ready to get back into my ‘career’. Going back to work after a long break, I felt like a recent college graduate; however, what felt like starting over quickly turned into acquiring a senior position at a Pharmaceutical company within 4 years time frame.
My first engineering job was also at a Pharmaceutical company as most Chemical Engineers did after graduation. I thought I had it made as we all know the power of Pharmaceutical industries in this country.
Around the same time I was promoted to a senior position, I had started the practice of Meditation and Yoga to cope with certain events in my life. An interesting fact about Yoga is, you may begin the practice to release stress but that I believe, is just the tip of the iceberg. It truly is a transformative experience because in these practices of stillness we begin to know.
Right Livelihood
n my search to make sense of confusion and suffering in my personal life at the time, I began dabbling in the Noble Eightfold Path of Buddhist Philosophy. As I stated earlier, one may begin meditation and Yoga to find peace with a broken heart or a loss of a loved one, but gradually it will begin to touch all aspects of your life.
One day in meditation, as I contemplated one of the Eightfold path known as ‘Right Living or Right Livelihood’, I began to question what “Right Living” truly meant.
Which industry I worked in and where I was placed as a result of my degree in Engineering began to trouble me. Drugs are tested on animals in clinical studies, as money gets poured into researching for a new drug. No industry shows much interest in researching the benefits of meditation or water fasting. It would be lovely to see FDA regulating ‘junk food’ which I believe will cure half of all our chronic illnesses, but I digress…
The word engineer (Latin: ingeniator) is derived from the Latin words ingeniare (“to create, generate, contrive, devise”) and ingenium (“cleverness”). The work of engineers forms the link between scientific discoveries and their subsequent applications to human and business needs and quality of life.
Unsure whether or not I was part of a system that enhanced a human’s quality of life, I left the industry. As a yoga instructor, I felt safer. I was under the impression, in teaching Yoga I am only helping everyone. I also learned a new skill learning to develop websites; once again in the hopes that I will be able to share my new skill only in a positive manner. As I concluded ‘This’ must be Right Living, I also hoped to be a role model for my kids; to contemplate the consequences of our choices on other fellow humans, other species and our planet.
Without trying too hard, I was offered an engineering job almost a year and a half ago back in the industry by a wonderful person I had kept in contact with. I couldn’t help wondering why I was being pulled back in. I began to wonder if it was Karma; perhaps there was no escaping a recurring situation, I had heard, until you have learned from it.
I love the principles of Engineering, the driving force of so many amazing changes in this world; yet I wanted to run away from the corporations and industries that applied the principles of Engineering.
Then one day, it occurred to me; I am no different than a religious monk trying to run away from civilization, not that there is anything wrong with that if that is how you wish to live your life.
As you get wiser, you realize you will never have the Absolute answer to most questions.
Yet, I contemplated: What is ‘Right Livelihood”?
Pharmaceutical companies are alleviating the suffering of many. Perhaps the system is not perfect, but I have met many in this industry who genuinely have concerns and compassion for their fellow humans and the planet. Is there really an ideal ‘Right Living’ for a human? Perhaps not; and I don’t mean that in a discouraging way. This perception only encouraged me to dig deeper.
A farmer on the outside seems to be helping those who need food, yet many living organisms die in farming. Just by placing my Yoga mat on the floor, I am unaware of the many insects I perhaps kill. I will never know the true intention of a person’s website I am building. We drive, walk, clean our sheets, cook our food, all the while constantly harming many microorganisms.
All is Yoga
Although I cannot stress the importance of inner peace one begins to experience with Yoga, I couldn’t help wondering why I enjoyed reading about the recent scientific research and findings on Yoga more than perfecting an asana. I had created a Self-Love Quiz that ended with a Self-Love Development Life cycle similar to a product development life cycle in the world of Engineering.
I realized there is no running from the way my mind works; it is analytical, perhaps that is why I loved Buddhist Philosophy because the teachings are mini experiments I get to work on and come to conclusions.
I decided to stop running away from my analytical mind and embraced it one day in meditation. And it occurred to me after many days of sitting in stillness; the word ‘Yoga or Yug’ is translated as Union. We are ALWAYS in union but most of us only feel the union when we are alone in a church, temple, in nature or on our yoga mat.
Perhaps we don’t have to attain perfection in “Right Livelihood” to experience the union. When we awaken to the union, it doesn’t really matter whether we are washing dishes, checking a pulse or verifying the pressure in a vacuum oven. All is Yoga!
Whether we are an instructor in a Yoga class, a cook at home, a janitor or an engineer in a company, with the right intention, we all are in the process of teaching and learning Yoga.
On some level, I think I now grasp Michael A Singer’s life and his book – The Surrender Experiment. I now embrace my analytical engineering mind-set with much joy and fulfillment, but no longer to climb the ladder but to be a part of the engineers who dream to design a world optimal for our planet and all beings in it.
As I continue to teach Yoga even more purposefully now than before, I suppose my testimony here with this blog post is, Yoga can lead to an enlightened way of living; the kind of joyful living you may think is impossible. It is possible!
Love & Light,
The Engineer Yogi 🙂
Give a Reply