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Sally Kempton

Spiritual IQ: Is there Such a Thing?

Growing up, I thought that the capacity for spirituality was a rare and special gift, like musical genius or natural charm. I knew only one person who seemed to have it: my parents’ friend Ned, an Irish poet who regularly traipsed off to meditate with the Trappists and volunteer at the Catholic Worker’s soup kitchen on New York’s lower east side. People like Ned, I figured, had been born with an ability to experience the mystical underpinnings of things, to feel oneness with others, to be nice all the time. The rest of us were stuck with our basic ordinariness and selfishness, though like piano students stumbling through the scales, we could work at being spiritual, doing our best to act ‘as if’ we actually felt agape, spiritual love, or trying to sense a connection with the sacred.

Then, in my twenties, I had my first conscious openings into expanded awareness, and decided. with some self-satisfaction, that I must be one of those spiritually intelligent people. After all, I had experiences in which (for at least a few hours at a time) I felt love for all beings, in which I ‘saw’ lights moving in my inner body, in which I became the witness of my own mental processes. The confusing part, however, was that these experiences didn’t seem to make me less angry, or more compassionate, or less prone to make judgments about myself and others. In fact, it took years, and a great deal of what is sometimes called inner work, for my character to catch up to my spiritual insight. It was the humbling experience of learning how to close that gap that made me question my own assumptions about what it means to be spiritually gifted, or spiritually intelligent.

We use the word ‘spiritual’ to refer to a range of interests and traits, from having faith in a higher power, to channeling messages from dead people, to practicing yoga and meditation, to sensing our kinship with all life, all the way to the state of oneness with God. And as for assessing it—well, we know that the Dalai Lama is spiritual, but what about the girl you met at the gym, who channels a being she claims is an ascended Himalayan master, and gives intuitive financial advice over the telephone?

In fact, there are several reasons to be uncertain about what we mean by spiritual intelligence. Here’s one: while spiritual experiences, insights and states seem to be available to people of every age, culture, and moral/ethical condition, these experiences don’t always translate into the way we live our lives. Philosopher Ken Wilber makes a useful distinction here between spiritual states, which come and go, and traits, qualities of character that appear only when these states have been integrated into our lives. An example of how this works would be Eric, who is an awesome energy healer, but who never sees his kids and is so shifty with money that his friends won’t do business with him.  Eric has no problem accessing high spiritual states; yet his level of ethical development is arrested somewhere in adolescence.

Wilber makes another very helpful point: the way we interpret our spiritual experiences, depends on our cultural framework and on our stage of social and ethical development. A prayerful Southern Baptist might dream about a realm of light, interpret the brilliance as the light of Christ, and take it as a sign to embark on an evangelical ministry. A young jihadist could have the same dream and see it as a sign that he’ll go straight to paradise if he follows his plan to blow himself up on a crowded bus. A TM meditator would see it as a sign that he’s touched into a subtle plane, while a biological determinisst might wonder if its time to check herself into the local psychiatric hospital.  And it’s the conclusions they draw from their experience that will determine how their spiritual insight affects their lives.

So, with these caveats, and acknowledging that a truly workable spirituality needs to be tempered with a good helping of practical common sense, ethical intelligence, and a willingness to question our assumptions, let me offer a working definition of spiritual intelligence as:

a) an ability to sense and connect to the presence of spirit/love/God in yourself, in others, and in the physical world,

b) access to feelings of compassion, to peace, and to insightful awareness

c) a tendency to ask questions like “Who am I?” “Where am I going in my life?” and “What is the ultimate value of what I’m doing?”

Someone with a particularly high SQ (spirituality quotient) is attentive to the presence of spirit, (or, you might say, pure Beingness or love), not only during moments of meditation, in prayer or in nature, but also at the breakfast table and in the middle of a family argument or a looming deadline.  More important, he or she is willing to take responsibility for his or her own state of mind, regardless of the outer circumstances. That tendency might not give her an easier life, but, in the long run, it will tend to make her wiser and more peaceful in the face of loss and change.

This is NOT a Spiritual IQ Test!

What follows is not a quiz, but rather a set of criteria that you might use as a kind of mirror, reflecting back to you where you are in your own spiritual life.

You know that your spiritual IQ is climbing when you

This is by no means an exhaustive list. But when you’re questioning your life’s direction, or wondering how to find out what really matters to you, this checklist might hold some clues. Spiritual intelligence, at its core, is our instinct for knowing what is really important.  Some people are born with that knowingness, the rest of us get to develop it through of trial and error. Any moment can be the moment when we wake up to one of life’s great secrets: that our spiritual intelligence is the part of us that knows what it really takes to be happy.

© Copyright 2003-2006. Sally Kempton/Dharana Institute. All Rights Reserved.

Date Last Modified: 8/3/06