fwaggle wrote:The idea of self is something that needs be transcended if one wishes to reach the unknown.
Once the self understands that it is only one piece of a puzzle, it will stop talking to itself by an act of will.
The truth is that we remain in this reality only because we are constantly talking about it.
There are many ways to alter perception but they are needlessly crazy and so I'm not going to mention them in a public forum.
Thank you
fwaggle, you have given me much to ponder over. I love new ideas and how they create a hunger in us to further understand this mysterious universe of ours!!! It never ceases to stagger my sense of personal communicative urges, when I find brethren/sistren with closed hearts and sealed intellects, ever ready to debate any statement uttered by another. It's almost as if they have their fortresses built and shall yield no openings for the perceptions of another vantage point. Again, I thank you for being receptive to
Rising Spirit's attempts to transmit his experiences, via the use of language, however futile they may be.
With all due respect, why not mention such "needlessly crazy" methods in a public forum like the Nexus? I mean, where better to share such alternative approaches to exploring consciousness? Unless you are bound to a code of secrecy, which is another matter altogether. I think it is quite clear that most of us who frequent this wonderful oasis called the Nexus, are literally willing to take our lives into our own hands, to find deeper truth or spiritual meaning in our earthly existence. Or simply that we are curious and need to know what else there is to perceive within this bubble of consciousness we identify as self? The partaking of Scared Medicines can sometimes (rarely, thank goodness) be fatal to the novice spiritual seeker, as well as the well-seasoned Shaman. Such is the price for entering the unknown world of the Wounded Healer, the promise of freedom and we all seem willing to pay it for the pursuit of our own Vision Quest. Even if physical endangerment is unlikely, which is most of the time with psychedelic use, death of ego still takes place in breakthrough experiences. Like Timothy Leary used to say, "You have to loose yourself to find yourself."
fwaggle wrote:Other than all the crazy ways (which are temporary) there is another way to reach our true being, which is not temporary but rather arrives in degrees; it is called discipline. Discipline is total control over oneself. And the self is simply a description (of something).
A re-ordering of the description of the world can take us very far. It is the description that creates the world. The reality of the physical body as a form of cognition is brought about by a description.
Hmmm... I like the idea of this path and have also found that discipline is necessary to advance spiritually. One of my early teachers, Swami Satchidananda, loved to play word games. He would tease us with his sense of humor, most of the time. One of his favorite quips was, "Discipline is necessary when one becomes a disciple." This implies that to reach beyond one's mental fixations, as an aspiring spiritual seeker, one must utilize the power of the mind to control the data received by the physical senses. Or, "Make no appointments and you will have no disappointments." This parodies the tendency for human desire and expectation, to cause suffering, as we must release our propensity for mental projections and take life as if comes, spontaneously. For myself (whoever I am behind this illusion of mortal ego), this is interpreted as a message emphasizing the need for the human soul, to gradually attune to deeper and far subtler levels of awareness. This is hard work and it takes a whole lifetime (or lifetimes?) to embrace fully and with total commitment. In short, it requires heart and demands much patience. This is applicable to those utilizing the Scared Medicines, those who never will utilize them and those who abstaining for an undecided span of time. So, as I made reference to on another thread, "there are seasons in a person's lifetime" and we each must find our unique way into the Light and beyond the boundaries of ourselves.
fwaggle wrote:Dreaming is very strange. Even when I feel like I've understood what it is, it manages to elude me completely. Dreaming needs to be put into practice, not thought about.
Thinking works with the known, not the unknown.
-f
Yes, your choice of the word "practice" is simply perfect, for without our efforts to change the nature of our perception and silence the bulk of our assumptions about our existence, how are we to learn to be free spirits? Contemplation has gifted me with much insight, yet this revelation needs to be integrated within my heart and actualized through the forward movement of my journey through time and space. We incarnate as an expression of the creative force and our awakening is a natural part of the dance of the One, cloaked in the garbs of the many. So, we do not simply light up like a bulb and suddenly... we are completely enlightened, it seems like more of a reoccurring saturation which transforms the intrinsic nature of the Dreamer. I could never say with absolute certainty, that we need to erase all of our thoughts and live in a state of total objectivity (were it actually possible) like a blank slate, to experience the Omniself. Rather, it is in incrementally small stages that we open up our eyes to what is beyond the known. I use "eyes" figuratively, for the appropriate lens for this type of vision is the "third eye", which sees the One in all things and only the One. I won't digress into the notion that this eye has a relationship with the pineal gland, as that is another story and our scientific Nexians would debate any correlation between the two. Let me just toss out the term third eye and use the term
singular eye to clarify this idea, a touch more accurately. As our two physical eyes are designed to perceive the vast universe of duality, the psychic singular eye is designed to perceive the indivisible essence, hidden within everything which playfully manifests within this mirage of duality. The Omni-eye, which sees naught but unity in all forms.
BTW, before some of our more analytical Nexians step up to the plate and "argue" this point, perhaps I should re-word this assessment, as it smacks of mystical connotations? You see (pun intended), we are indeed gifted 3 eyes by the Creator. Often, during psychedelic journeys,
Rising Spirit can spontaneously visualize a pyramid of energy/light within the area of his own forehead. Take, as an illustrative example, the all-seeing eye at the top of the pyramid, on the back of an American dollar bill. As a visual picture, the left and right eye are the two corner points at the very base (were the pyramid existing in a 2 dimensional plane). I believe this symbolic image is prevalent in Gnostic traditions, although I may be in error? It certainly came down through the Free Masons who founded the structure of the United States (sadly, at the expense of the Native Americans). Now, as a lens-like focal point, this Omni-eye becomes a window through which we see the higher realms of reality or perhaps a doorway into higher spheres or levels of perception? In my experience it is. Contrary to popular belief, this is not solely a Hindu conception nor a phenomenon that is limited by cultural conditioning, nor facilitated because of human expectation. Nature is perfect, with or without our approval. It is no small coincidence, that the image of the Buddha is portrayed showing a pronounced third/singular/Omni-eye. But I digress... for those who have looked through this lens and voyaged through it's portal, into planes of consciousness above this one, know exactly what I am alluding to. Yes?
fwaggle wrote:P.S. Would you indulge us with your ideas, methods and experiences, Rising Spirit?
Rising Spirit is a most indulgent character, so why not? The greatest fundamental tool I have found useful is sitting meditation. Although, some of my technical knowledge is bound to secrecy, due to the fact that I have given my oath not to divulge them to any others. Frankly, it is not my place. This is the case with Kriya Yoga and also the case with nearly identical methods used by the Sufis and those within the lineage of Sikh "Perfect Masters" like Kirpal Singh. I suspect that they are kept hidden to maintain control of their use, within the working structure of such organizations? Therefore, we could say it is political but that would imply a harsh judgement. Who knows...
While I do not really agree with this type of secret society thing, I am bound by honor to keep them as unspoken of methods. That being said, I have always preferred the direct approach, anyway. As a younger man, TM was the big spiritual sensation of it's day. Having read the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi's book about Transcendental Meditation, I naturally wanted a mantra and an initiation. So, young
Rising Spirit attended a lecture near his hometown and sought enrollment in the coarse. When he came to the part about paying big bucks for the instruction (in the late 1970's it cost $200.00 for an adult and only $100.00 for students). Considering that a Toyota Corolla cost about $2000.00 in that era and a bag of good pot was just 20 bucks and microdots of LSD-25 were only $2.00 a pop... this seemed so exorbitant, that is was like blasphemy to my youthful mindset! Need I say more? That being said, what's a good boy to do? Being a kid without many funds in-hand, it seemed only logical to use the mantra
OM or Aum and proceed with the practice, solo.
Well, it has been 35 years of exploration and experimentation but I keep returning to this simple method to focus my wayward attention, expand my consciousness and activate the lens of my "singular eye". That is, when a mantra is needed to still the thoughts, as stillness is sooooooo key to genuine states of internal meditation. Truth is, I find it far, far more effective to search for the actual universal sound of Om/Aum, as can be perceived directly while in sitting meditation. Shouldn't we all know AUM is deep inside of us, always? Even so, knowing and experiencing are two different states of mind and it needs gradual cultivation to regularly hear with any clarity. In a nutshell, this is how the introduction of psychedelics can play such a pivotal role! No words can express my gratitude for the intervention of these Sacred chemicals, whereby these difficult to achieve levels of awareness are activated by the power of the plant or it's extractions. Behind the high ringing sound which takes place within each of our heads (Carrier Wave), the primordial vibration of the Sacred Word is buzzing without beginning or ending. Or should I say, from my own understanding, it appears to me to be this cosmic buzzing/whirring sound? For who am I to make such claims about the experience of others? As one wise Nexian proclaimed recently, "there are no absolutes" and also, "there is no Ultimate Truth". We all receive unique teachings and have unique minds to translate such information, so I will refrain from sweeping statements and generalities. OK? Still, from the perspective of the Omniself, there is only one indivisible being existent and only a singular center of consciousness, despite the illusion of multiplicity.
In this light, the sound is always droning deep within the axiom of each individual soul and center. Decades of surrender has gifted me with an ease and consistency in this realm of experience. Before anyone else raises the notion, that one needn't
try not to try, for the Divine is always within us and our spirit is awaiting the moment of merging (ask and ye shall receive)... consider that human beings fall in and out of focus and in and out of sleep. We are organic centers of polarity and we have a pendulum-like variance in our awareness of reality. Sometimes techniques help us to attune to higher planes of being, sometimes they are a very moot point. Right? Spontaneous awakening is a beautiful example of this idea. :idea:
Essentially, this is why I have been more drawn to Zen and Taoism, for the last 20+ years. Yeah, there is something so sublime about the emptiness and formless nature of the Void. I feel Zen meditation releases the need for mantras and secret techniques of breathing and what not. My personal interpretation of this way is based on a most direct approach, that being to meditate on the space between breaths and the empty silence between heart beats. We needn't always ascend to an immeasurably high frequencies of causal manifestation, to experience union with God/Unified field of energy/Indivisibility. Sometimes we must surrender and admit that residing within the physical form is practically unavoidable, as we are born organic entities, after all. But we yearn for so much more!!! So too, by embracing the flow of our breath and searching for that silent pause between heart beats, we unite ourselves with this great force we refer to as
God. In so dong, the circle becomes understood as being complete, as it has forever been, unbeknownst to ourselves. It has been said, that we are all bound for the awakening from our finite, sentient, dreaming selves. In so doing, to become wedded into union with the Divine.
Sweet!!! Err... forgive me if I come across as one who is preaching. Words are often inadequate to convey the intentions of the psychonaut. No preaching was intended. That is really, really annoying, huh? My bad if it comes across that way, as this overly verbose cluster of words was culled from my heart's sincere desire to communicate my two cents worth to my fellow Nexians. Please forgive me if it has caused any undue optical strain, navigating through it's lengthy expanse.
Peace, light & love There is no self to which I cling, for I am one with everything.