The other day, a dragonfly found its way into my office. I first heard it—that distinctive papery whisper of wings beating against glass. There it was, pressed against the window, its iridescent body catching the afternoon light as it zipped frantically from one corner to another. Outside, just beyond that invisible barrier, my garden waited in full bloom, the kind of sun-drenched paradise a dragonfly dreams of. But the creature couldn't find its way out. It darted left, then right, exhausting itself against the transparent wall that made no sense to its ancient instincts.
I watched for several minutes, feeling an unexpected kinship with its struggle. Finally, I grabbed a piece of paper and gently coaxed it into my cupped hands. Its wings tickled my palms. When I stepped outside and opened my hands, it paused for just a heartbeat before launching itself into the garden, disappearing into the vibrant green. The relief I felt was immense—a shared sense of liberation that surprised me with its intensity.
Later that evening, I couldn't stop thinking about that little dragonfly. Its desperate search for home, its confusion in unfamiliar territory, felt strangely familiar. It reminded me of something I'd read in the Bhagavad-gita: "The living entities in this conditioned world are My eternal fragmental parts." The text describes us as spirit souls, fragments of something infinite, often finding ourselves in places that don't quite feel like home. We push against invisible barriers, seeking happiness and meaning in temporary circumstances, yearning for a freedom we can't quite name.
We flail around trying to escape what the Gita calls the "ocean of birth and death"—that endless cycle of seeking, struggling, and starting over. We want lasting peace and purpose, but we keep hitting walls we can't see, feeling frustrated and lost without understanding why.
Just as I had to intervene to help the dragonfly, the Gita suggests that divine grace waits to help us too. There's a verse that says: "To show them special mercy, I, dwelling in their hearts, destroy with the shining lamp of knowledge the darkness born of ignorance." But here's the thing—we have to make ourselves visible. We have to signal that we're ready for help. A dragonfly beating its wings catches your attention; a motionless one might go unnoticed.
So what does it mean to "signal" for help? What makes us visible to that grace?
1. Create Daily Rituals of Connection
Whether you call it prayer, meditation, or simply quiet reflection, regular moments of intentional connection matter. For me, this includes chanting—repeating sacred phrases that quiet my racing thoughts and tune me into something larger than myself. But it doesn't have to look like that for you.
It might be morning journaling where you express gratitude, evening walks where you reflect on your day, or simply pausing before meals to appreciate the food and the hands that prepared it. The form matters less than the consistency and sincerity. These small acts of remembrance throughout the day are like breadcrumbs leading us home.
I've also found that reading wisdom literature—like the Bhagavad-gita, poetry, philosophy that lifts your perspective—acts like a compass when you're disoriented. It reminds you what direction "home" is.
2. Become the Person You're Seeking
There's an old idea that we become like what we contemplate. If the divine represents the highest qualities—compassion, honesty, humility, courage—then cultivating these in ourselves is like tuning a radio to the right frequency.
This isn't about perfection or moral superiority. It's simpler than that. When I practice patience with a difficult colleague, when I choose honesty over convenience, when I forgive someone (including myself), I feel more aligned, more at peace. These aren't just ethical choices; they're homecoming practices. They remind me who I really am beneath all the noise and confusion.
I'm not always good at this. Some days I fail spectacularly. But the trying itself seems to matter—the intention to grow toward light rather than shrink into bitterness or cynicism.
3. Find Your People
I used to think spirituality was a solitary pursuit, something you figured out alone in mountaintop meditation. But the truth is, we need each other. Being around people who are also searching, also trying to live with integrity and meaning, makes an enormous difference.
It's like having traveling companions when you're lost. They might not know the exact route either, but together you can share observations, encourage each other when the path gets steep, and celebrate small victories along the way. Last month, when I was going through a particularly dark time, it was a conversation with a friend—someone who understood this spiritual homesickness—that helped me see clearly again.
Your companions might be found in a faith community, a book club, a volunteer organization, or just a handful of friends who ask deep questions over coffee. The point is to not walk alone.
That dragonfly taught me something that day. We're not meant to stay trapped in confusion and struggle indefinitely. Somewhere within us is a homing instinct, a sense of where we truly belong. And when we make the effort—through small daily practices, through growing our character, through walking alongside others on the path—help comes. Grace notices us. The window opens.
I see dragonflies differently now. Each one is a small reminder: keep searching, keep signaling, keep trusting that the garden is real and that you'll find your way back to it.
The question I'm left with is this: What are the invisible windows in my own life? Where am I exhausting myself against barriers I can't quite see? And am I making the kind of effort that will catch the attention of whatever force might gently guide me home?
Interesting thought process.
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