BOOK SUMMARY 268
The Five Dharma Types
·
Summary written by: Carol-Ann
Hamilton
"It is hard enough to do what you were
born to do; why complicate it by trying to be someone else?"1
- The 5 Dharma Types, page 105
Just how different is Simon Chokoisky’s The 5
Dharma Types: Vedic Wisdom for Discovering Your Purpose from other
volumes in this vein? Like many books on “types”, self-scoring tests are
provided to determine yours – along with benefits, challenges, learning styles
and more. Beyond such similarities, its uniqueness derives from knowing
your purpose (dharma) – and how key this is to creating a fulfilling life.
The Golden Egg
The 5 Dharma Types
"There is one thing that you do better than anyone
else in the world, and your dharma type is the key to finding it!"- The 5
Dharma Types, page 386
In the West particularly, we’re familiar with terms like
karma (“what goes around comes around”). What we have less understanding
of is dharma, our purpose in the world. Yet, without knowing “who am I”
or “why am I here”, life can become quite meaningless.
Are you curious to learn the “operating system for your
identity”? Here we go:
Strongly idealistic; all about self-improvement; noted
for wisdom; solid counselors and confidantes; motivated by truth.
Adopt foreign ideologies plus concepts; incredibly
adaptive; resent the establishment; keenly aware of societal injustices.
Motivated to protect those who cannot protect themselves;
respond to defiance and competition; value others’ innocence.
Feel best when giving to family followed by community;
feel lonely or empty without company; wish to secure personal and family
interests.
Capable of great service and self-sacrifice; powerful
work ethic; deep sense of belonging; loyalty; strong likes and dislikes.
Gem #1
The Path to Evolution
"Knowing your dharma in any area of life you can
weigh your decisions and ask yourself, ‘does this serve my highest purpose or
detract from it’?"- The 5 Dharma Types, page 71
From an extensive elaboration of each type, the author
goes on to describe some natural pairings by which we can continuously grow and
evolve:
Warrior-Educator. While
Warriors and Educators are in many respects opposites, their divergent
strengths balance one another. For example, the Educator’s compassion is
juxtaposed to the Warrior’s forcefulness.
Merchant-Laborer. Laborers
are completed by family and community, whereas Merchants feed off strangers’
gratitude. The synergy occurs because Laborers nourish their families while
Merchants nourish the world.
Outsider-All. Nothing
new comes into existence without the Outsider’s touch. They are everyone and no
one. When Outsiders find their purpose through others, they become potent
forces for change (Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Gandhi).
To fully step into your dharma’s essence, here’s a next
step for each:
·
Educators – Will get better ideas and inspiration through
energy movement (fitness activity, walking) rather than sitting before a
computer all day.
·
Warriors – Study deeply about an issue (cause) that is
important to you and list/post goals you will implement in this arena.
·
Merchants – Needing to be needed, find a way to benefit your
community this week (volunteer at a soup kitchen, donate old appliances).
·
Laborers – Because you love your routines, take a new spin on your
day (drive a different road to work, brush your teeth with the opposite hand).
·
Outsiders – Often greeted by blank stares when you speak your
truth, ask for feedback on how you can make your wisdom more “relevant”.
Gem #2
The Path to Devolution
"There are no good or bad people, only resourceful
and un-resourceful states."- Anthony Robbins, quoted in The 5 Dharma
Types, page 153
Conversely, when the types devolve, they become oblivious
to alternative intelligences and unable to speak languages other than their
own. Here’s what to watch out for:
Warrior-Merchant. Warriors
decline when they focus upon the pursuit of money to the exclusion of ethical
considerations. When Merchants can’t succeed with persuasiveness, they must
guard against applying the Warrior’s strength
Laborer-Educator. Educators
regress when they become “stuck” in a particular way of being instead of
inspiring. When Laborers take on Educator values, they begin to assume they
know it all, which can lead to fundamentalism.
Outsider-All. For
Outsiders, the path to destruction lies in seeing themselves as victims of the
world, thus stopping their own progress. To grow, they must have an inner
revolution before imposing external change.
Naturally, the danger with any “system” is to
stereotype. Rather than pigeon-hole, strive to understand those around
you.
Think back to times you went against the grain of your
nature and later suffered. Were there also periods you pushed to develop and integrate
skills that ended up benefitting you immensely? In the latter instance, you
were (intuitively) playing to strengths.
Now, supported by ancient Vedic wisdom, you can
proactively attain fulfillment. Everything you need is already on the inside.
For, self-improvement is really self-actualization.
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