Saturday, December 13, 2014
Eloratea - Light of the Soul
I am soul of your soul.
Heartwarming emotions are reflections of my unconditional love
Heartwarming emotions are reflections of my unconditional love
and overwhelming feelings of fullness are my unspoken words to you.
Yes, I also know your feelings of lack and incompleteness;
Yes, I also know your feelings of lack and incompleteness;
but they are just misunderstood signs that lead to me.
Don’t worry, keep going!
And confusing thoughts and sensations
Don’t worry, keep going!
And confusing thoughts and sensations
of tension and sadness too, yes –
they are just short, dark passages
on this way of light to the heart of heart.
Keep going despite the shadows and storms!
Don’t think and interpret too much.
Don’t close your heart,
Keep going despite the shadows and storms!
Don’t think and interpret too much.
Don’t close your heart,
but keep going in trust
and inner sky of your awareness will soon open and merge
with unconfined space of all that is.
Please, stay calm, unafraid and undisturbed
Please, stay calm, unafraid and undisturbed
as I keep your heart in my hands of eternal light.
I keep it safe till the dawn dawns for you,
I keep it safe till the dawn dawns for you,
till the clear light shines in,
through and out and reveals again
total perfection and completeness of everything.
Than you will know this Great Love
Than you will know this Great Love
without any shadow and doubt.
Eloratea 's blog:
Friday, December 12, 2014
John O'Donohue - Inner dedication
art H.Kopp-Delaney
If you could imagine the most incredible story ever, it would be less
incredible than the story of being here. And the ironic thing is that story
is not a story, it is true. It takes us so long to see where we are. It takes
us even longer to see who we are. This is why the greatest gift you could
ever dream is a gift that you can only receive from one person. And that
person is you yourself. Therefore,the most subversive invitation you could
ever accept is the invitation to awaken to who you are and where you have landed.
incredible than the story of being here. And the ironic thing is that story
is not a story, it is true. It takes us so long to see where we are. It takes
us even longer to see who we are. This is why the greatest gift you could
ever dream is a gift that you can only receive from one person. And that
person is you yourself. Therefore,the most subversive invitation you could
ever accept is the invitation to awaken to who you are and where you have landed.
Plato said in The Symposium that one of the greatest
privileges
of a human life is to become midwife to the birth of the soul in another.
When your soul awakens, you begin to truly inherit your life.
of a human life is to become midwife to the birth of the soul in another.
When your soul awakens, you begin to truly inherit your life.
You leave
the kingdom of fake surfaces, repetitive talk and weary roles and slip
deeper
into the true adventure of who you are and who you are called to become.
The greatest friend of the soul is the unknown.Yet we are afraid of the
unknown because it lies outside our vision and our control. We avoid it
or quell it by filtering it through our protective barriers of domestication
and control. The normal way never leads home.
Once you start to awaken, no one can ever claim you again for the old
patterns. Now you realise how precious your time here is. You are no
longer willing to squander your essence on undertakings that do not
nourish your true self; your patience grows thin with tired talk and dead language.
into the true adventure of who you are and who you are called to become.
The greatest friend of the soul is the unknown.Yet we are afraid of the
unknown because it lies outside our vision and our control. We avoid it
or quell it by filtering it through our protective barriers of domestication
and control. The normal way never leads home.
Once you start to awaken, no one can ever claim you again for the old
patterns. Now you realise how precious your time here is. You are no
longer willing to squander your essence on undertakings that do not
nourish your true self; your patience grows thin with tired talk and dead language.
You see through the rosters of expectation which promise
you
safety and the confirmation of your outer identity.
safety and the confirmation of your outer identity.
Now you are
impatient for growth, willing to put yourself in the way of change.
You
want your work to become an expression of your gift.
You want your
relationship to voyage
beyond the pallid frontiers to where the danger of transformation dwells.
You want your God to be wild and to call you to where your destiny awaits.
You have come out of Plato’s Cave of Images into the sunlight and the
mystery of color and imagination. When you begin to sense that your
imagination is the place where you are most divine, you feel called to
clean out of your mind all the worn and shabby furniture of thought. You
wish to refurbish yourself with living thought so that you can begin to see.
As Meister Eckhart says: Thoughts are our inner senses. When the inner
senses are dull and blurred, you can see nothing in or of yourself; you
become a respectable prisoner of received images.
beyond the pallid frontiers to where the danger of transformation dwells.
You want your God to be wild and to call you to where your destiny awaits.
You have come out of Plato’s Cave of Images into the sunlight and the
mystery of color and imagination. When you begin to sense that your
imagination is the place where you are most divine, you feel called to
clean out of your mind all the worn and shabby furniture of thought. You
wish to refurbish yourself with living thought so that you can begin to see.
As Meister Eckhart says: Thoughts are our inner senses. When the inner
senses are dull and blurred, you can see nothing in or of yourself; you
become a respectable prisoner of received images.
Now you realize that ‘eternal vigilance is the price of liberty’and you undertake
the
difficult but beautiful path to freedom. this journey, you begin to see
how the sides
of your heart that seemed awkward, contradictory and uneven are the
places where the treasure lies hidden. You begin to become true to
yourself. And as Shakespeare says in Hamlet: To thine own self be true,
then as surely as night follows day, thou canst to no man be false.
The journey shows you that from this inner dedication you can reconstruct
your own values and action. You develop from your own self-compassion
a great compassion for others. You are no longer caught in the false game
of judgement, comparison and assumption. More naked now than ever,
you begin to feel truly alive. You begin to trust the music of your own soul;
you have inherited treasure that no one will ever be able to take from you.
of your heart that seemed awkward, contradictory and uneven are the
places where the treasure lies hidden. You begin to become true to
yourself. And as Shakespeare says in Hamlet: To thine own self be true,
then as surely as night follows day, thou canst to no man be false.
The journey shows you that from this inner dedication you can reconstruct
your own values and action. You develop from your own self-compassion
a great compassion for others. You are no longer caught in the false game
of judgement, comparison and assumption. More naked now than ever,
you begin to feel truly alive. You begin to trust the music of your own soul;
you have inherited treasure that no one will ever be able to take from you.
art Parablev
Tuesday, December 9, 2014
Jiddu Krishnamurti - The Pilgrim and his Holy Pilgrimage
Part 1. The Pilgrim and his Holy Pilgrimage
Chapter 1. Krishnamurti describes his long journey towards attainment and perfection and of finally entering into that sea of liberation and happiness which is the fulfilment of life.
I would show you how I have found my beloved, how the beloved is
established in me, how the beloved is the Beloved of all, and how the
Beloved and I are one so that there can be no separation either now or
at any time. Naturally, I did not think of all these things while I was
young. They grew in me unconsciously. But now I can place all the events
in my life in their proper order and see in what manner I have
developed to attain my goal and have become my goal.
Ever since I was a boy I have been, as most young people are, or
should be, in revolt. Nothing satisfied me. I listened; I observed; I
wanted something beyond the mere phrases, the maya of words. I wanted to
discover and to establish for myself a goal. I did not want to rely on
anyone. I do not remember the time when I was being moulded in my
boyhood, but I can look back and see how nothing satisfied me.
EUROPE
When I went to Europe for the first time I lived among people who
were wealthy and well-educated, who held positions of social authority,
but whatever their dignities or distinctions, they could not satisfy me.
I was in revolt also against Theosophists with all their jargon, their
theories, their meetings, and their explanations of life. When I went to
a meeting, the lecturers repeated the same ideas which did not satisfy
me or make me happy. I went to fewer and fewer meetings; I saw less and
less of the people who merely repeated the ideas of Theosophy. I
questioned everything because I wanted to find out for myself.
I walked about the streets, watching the faces of people who perhaps
watched me with even greater interest. I went to theatres. I saw how
people amused themselves trying to forget their unhappiness, thinking
that they were solving their problems by drugging their hearts and minds
with superficial excitement. I saw people with political, social or
religious power, and yet they did not have that one essential thing in
their lives, which is happiness.
I attended labour meetings, Communist meetings, and listened to what
their leaders had to say. They were generally protesting against
something. I was interested, but they did not give me satisfaction. By
observation of one type and another I gathered experience vicariously.
Within everyone there was a latent volcano of unhappiness and
discontent.
I passed from one pleasure to another, from one amusement to another,
in search of happiness, but found it not. I watched the amusements of
the young people, their dances, their dresses, their extravagances, and
saw they were not happy.
I watched people who had very little in life, who wanted to tear down
those things which others had built up. They thought that they were
solving life by destroying and building differently and yet they were
unhappy. I saw people who desired to serve going into those quarters
where the poor and the degraded live. They desired to help but were
themselves helpless. How can you cure another of disease if you are
yourself a victim of that disease?
I saw people satisfied with the stagnation which is unproductive,
uncreative -the bourgeois type who never struggles to be above the
surface or falls below it and so feels its weight. I read books on
philosophy, religion, biographies of great people, and yet they could
not give me what I wanted.
INDIA
Then I came to India and I saw that the people there were deluding
themselves equally, carrying on the same old traditions, treating women
cruelly. At the same time they called themselves very religious and
painted their faces with ashes. In India they may have the most sacred
books in the world; they may have the greatest philosophies; they may
have constructed wonderful temples in the past, but none of these were
able to give me what I wanted. Neither in Europe nor in India could I
find happiness.
USA
Still lacking the fixed purpose from which comes the delight of
living, I went to California. Circumstances forced me there because my
brother was ill. There among the hills we lived in a small house in
complete retirement, doing everything for ourselves. If you would
discover Truth, you must for a time withdraw from the world. In that
retired spot my brother and I talked much together. We meditated, trying
to understand, for meditation of the heart is understanding.
There I was naturally driven within myself, and I learned that as
long as I had no definite goal or purpose in life, I was, like the rest
of mankind, tossed about as a ship on a stormy sea. With that in my
mind, after rejecting all lesser things, I established for myself my
goal. I wanted to enter into eternal happiness. I wanted to become the
very goal. I wanted to drink from the very source of life. I wanted to
unite the beginning and the end. I fixed that goal as my Beloved and
that Beloved is life, the life of all things. I wanted to destroy the
separation that exists between man and his goal. I said to myself that
as long as there is this void of separation between myself and my goal
there is bound to be misery, disturbance and doubt. There will be
authority which I must obey, to which I must yield. As long as there is
separation between you and me there is unhappiness for us both. So I set
about destroying all the barriers that I had previously erected.
I began to reject, to renounce, to set aside what I had gathered and
little by little I approached my goal. When my brother died, the
experience it brought me was great -not the sorrow- sorrow is momentary
and passes away, but the joy of experience remains. If you understand
life rightly then death becomes an experience out of which you can build
your house of perfection, your house of delight. When my brother died,
that gap of separation still existed in me. I saw him once or twice
after death but that did not satisfy me. How can you be satisfied alone?
You may invent phrases; you may have great knowledge of books, but as
long as there is within you separation and loneliness, there is sorrow.
So I have walked and struggled towards that light which is my goal,
which is the goal of all humanity because it is humanity itself.
You cannot separate life from any expression of life and yet you must be able to distinguish between life and its expressions.
Before I began to think for myself, I took it for granted that I,
Krishnamurti, was the vehicle of the World Teacher because many people
maintained that it was so. But when I began to think, I wanted to find
out what was meant by the World-Teacher, what was meant by the taking of
a vehicle by the World-Teacher, and what was meant by His manifestation
in the world. When I was a small boy, I used to see Shri Krishna, with
the flute, as He is pictured by the Hindus, because my mother was a
devotee of Shri Krishna. When I grew older and met with Bishop
Leadbeater and the Theosophical Society, I began to see the Master K. H.
-again in the form which was put before me, the reality from their
point of view- and hence the Master K. H. was to me the end. Later on,
as I grew, I began to see the Lord Maitreya. That was two years ago, and
I saw Him then constantly in the form put before me. Now lately, it has
been the Buddha whom I have been seeing, and it has been my delight and
my glory to be with Him.
To me 'the Beloved' is all -it is Shri Krishna, it is the Master K.
H., it is the Lord Maitreya, it is the Buddha, and yet it is beyond all
these forms. What does it matter what name you give? You are fighting
over the World Teacher as a name. My Beloved is the open skies, the
flower, every human being. I said to myself: until I become one with all
the Teachers, whether They are the same is not of great importance;
whether Shri Krishna, Christ, the Lord Maitreya are one is again a
matter of no great importance. I said to myself: as long as I see Them
outside as in a picture, an objective thing, I am separate, I am away
from the centre; but when I have the capacity, the strength, the
determination, when I am purified and ennobled, then that barrier, that
separation, will disappear. I was not satisfied till that barrier was
broken down, till that separateness was destroyed. Till I was able to
say with certainty that I was one with my Beloved, I never spoke... I
never said: I am the World-Teacher; but now that I feel I am one with
the Beloved, I say it, not in order to impress my authority to you, not
to convince you of my greatness, nor of the greatness of the World
Teacher... but merely to awaken the desire in your own hearts and in
your own minds to seek out the Truth.
If I say, and I will say that I am one with the Beloved, it is
because I feel and know it. I have found what I longed for. I have
become united, so that henceforth there will be no separation, because
my thoughts, my desires, my longings -those of the individual self- have
been destroyed. Hence I am able to say that I am one with the Beloved
-whether you interpret it as the Buddha, the Lord Maitreya, Shri
Krishna, the Christ, or any other name... I have always in this life,
and perhaps in past lives, desired one thing; to escape, to be beyond
sorrow, beyond limitations, to discover my Guru, my Beloved -which is
your Guru and your Beloved, the Guru, the Beloved who exists in
everybody, who exists under every common stone, in every blade of grass
that is trodden upon. It has been my desire, my longing, to become
united with Him so that I should no longer feel that I was separate, no
longer be a different entity with a separate self. When I was able to
destroy that self utterly, I was able to unite myself with my Beloved.
Hence, because I have found my Beloved, my Truth, I want to give it to
you... My purpose is not to create discussions on authority, on
manifestations in the personality of Krishnamurti, but to give the
waters that shall wash away your sorrows, your petty tyrannies, your
limitations, so that you will be free, so that you will eventually join
that ocean where there is no limitation, where there is the Beloved.
World Teacher
The term World Teacher is only a name and as a label it has no value.
But it has great value to those who are held in bondage by labels, by
the maya, the illusion of words. For the creation or the coming into
being of the flower of humanity, for the attainment of that fullness of
life everyone is responsible. By that I mean that for the creation of
the individual who attains the life eternal, without beginning or end,
in which the source and the goal have their being, all conditioned life
has helped. By its longing to be free, conditioned life has helped to
produce this Flower. As the lotus makes the waters beautiful and as the
waters are necessary for the beauty of the lotus, so the bondage of
every individual and the cry of every individual in bondage helps to
create the one who is eternally free. Hence when that being, individual
or life -do not make it concrete and personal- when that life which has
been separate, held in bondage, attains to that life which is as the
ocean without limitation, then that conditioned life becomes the World
Teacher. I am using words that you can twist and utilize according to
your belief or non-belief, but Truth has nothing to do with belief or
with non-belief. The fragrance of the flower of the lotus does not
depend upon the passer-by. The beauty of the Flower is created by the
tears of the world.
Life is eternal and when after many centuries there is a being who
attains and fulfils that life, it is his delight and glory to make that
unconditioned life understood by those who have not yet attained.
Whether you call that being the World Teacher, the Buddha, the Christ
or anything else, is not of importance. To give waters to the thirsty,
to open the eyes of the blind, to call out the prisoners from their
prison and to give light to those who sit in the shadow of their own
creation, is the delight of the one who has attained. And whether the
waters that shall quench that thirst are contained in a particular
vessel or the voice of him who calls is sweet or musical is of very
little importance. So long as there is the awakening desire within each
one to answer, to take to their lips the waters that shall quench their
thirst, to tear away the covering from their eyes, and to hear the cry
in their prison -that is of value. Life is the fulfilment of all things,
and in the freedom of that life is the attainment of Truth. And the
individuals who have attained that life are life themselves. It is
humanity that places a limitation on that life, and looks at that life
through its limitations.
This life which is the flower of humanity, which is the freedom of
humanity, which is the attainment of humanity, which is the beginning
and the end of humanity, this life which is the eternal Truth, cannot be
described in words. This world has no words, it is and it is not. And
from the point of view of limitation from which every one of you is
looking, there cannot be an understanding of the immensity which is
without limitation. When a being enters into that life, he is life, he
is the flower of humanity. I hope I have made it as vague as possible
because if I made it clear for you, I should have placed a limitation on
truth, I should have betrayed truth.
CONTINUE READING HERE
Jiddu Kishnamurti - Wanderer
I have been a wanderer long
In this world of transient things.
In this world of transient things.
I have known the passing pleasures thereof.
As the rainbow is beautiful
But soon vanishes into nothingness,
So have I known,
From the very foundation of the world,
The passing away of all things
Beautiful, joyous and pleasurable.
As the rainbow is beautiful
But soon vanishes into nothingness,
So have I known,
From the very foundation of the world,
The passing away of all things
Beautiful, joyous and pleasurable.
As the moon is full and serene,
In the day of harvest
So am I
In the day of my Liberation
Simple as the tender leaf am I
For in me are many winters and many springs.
As the dew drop is of the sea,
So am I born
In the ocean of my Liberation.
In the day of harvest
So am I
In the day of my Liberation
Simple as the tender leaf am I
For in me are many winters and many springs.
As the dew drop is of the sea,
So am I born
In the ocean of my Liberation.
As the mysterious river
Enters the open seas,
So have I entered
Into the world of Liberation
This is the end I have known.
Enters the open seas,
So have I entered
Into the world of Liberation
This is the end I have known.
Robert Frager - Transforming the Self
The goal of all mysticism is to cleanse the heart, to educate,
or transform, the self, and to find God. The lowest level of the self
is dominated
by pride, egotism, and totally self-centered greed and lust. This level
is the part within each person that leads away from Truth. The highest
level
is the pure self, and at this level there is no duality, no separation
from
God.
The self is actually a living process rather than a static
structure in the psyche. The self is not a thing. The Arabic term is
related to words for "breath," "soul," "essence," "self," and "nature."
It refers to a
process that comes about from the interaction of body and soul. When
the soul becomes embodied, it forgets its original nature and becomes
enmeshed in material creation. This creates the self.
The lowest level of the self, the ego or lower personality, is
made up of impulses, or drives, to satisfy desires. These drives
dominate reason or judgment and are defined as the forces in one's
nature that must be
brought under control. The self is a product of the self-centered
consciousness - the ego, the "I." The self must be transformed - this
is the ideal. The self is like a wild horse; it is powerful and
virtually uncontrollable. As the self becomes trained, or transformed,
it becomes capable of serving the individual. Sheikh Muzaffer has
written,
The self is not bad in itself. Never blame your self. Part of the work of Sufism is to change the state of your self. The lowest state is that of being completely dominated by your wants and desires. The next state is to struggle with yourself, to seek to act according to reason and higher ideals and to criticize yourself when you fail. A much higher state is to be satisfied with whatever God provides for you, whether it means comfort or discomfort, fulfillment of physical needs or not.
According to many Sufi teachers, there are seven levels of
the self. They are seven levels of development, ranging from absolutely
self-centered and egotistical to purely spiritual.
The Commanding Self
The first level has also been described as the domineering
self or the self that incites to evil. The commanding self seeks to
dominate and to control each individual. At this level there is
unbridled selfishness and no sense of morality or compassion.
Descriptions of this level are similar to descriptions of the
id in psychoanalytic theory; it is closely linked to lust and
aggression. These have been called the swine and the dogs of the self -
the sensual traits are like swine, the ferocious ones like fierce dogs
or wolves. Wrath, greed, sensual appetites, passion, and envy are
examples of traits at this level of the self. This is the realm of
physical and egoistic desires.
At this level people are like addicts who are in denial. Their
lives are dominated by uncontrollable addictions to negative traits and
habits, yet they refuse to believe they have a problem. They have no
hope of change at this level, because they do not acknowledge any need
to change.
The Regretful Self
People
who have not developed beyond the first level are unaware and
unconscious.
As the light of faith grows, insight dawns, perhaps for the first time.
The negative effects of a habitually self-centered approach to the
world become apparent to the regretful self.
At this level, wants and desires still dominate, but now the
person repents from time to time and tries to
follow higher impulses. As Sheikh Muzaffer points out,
There is a battle between the self, the lower self, and the soul. This battle will continue through life. The question is, Who will educate whom? Who will become the master of whom? If the soul becomes the master, then you will be a believer, one who embraces Truth. If the lower self becomes master of the soul, you will be one who denies Truth.
At this second level, people do not yet have the ability to
change their way of life in a significant way. However, as they see
their faults more clearly, their regret and desire for change grow. At
this level,
people are like addicts who are beginning to understand the pain they
have
caused themselves and others. The addiction is still far too strong to
change. That requires far stronger medicine.
The Inspired Self
At the next level, the seeker begins to take genuine pleasure
in prayer, meditation, and other spiritual activities. Only now does
the individual taste the
joys of spiritual experience. Now the seeker is truly motivated by
ideals
such as compassion, service, and moral values. This is the beginning of
the real practice of Sufism. Before this stage, the best anyone can
accomplish is superficial outer understanding and mechanical outer
worship.
Though one is not free from desires and ego, this new level of
motivation and spiritual experience significantly reduces the power of
these forces for the first time. What is essential here is to live
in terms
of higher values. Unless these new motivations become part of a way of
life, they will wither and die away. Behaviors common to the inspired
self
include gentleness, compassion, creative acts, and moral action.
Overall,
a person who is at the stage of the inspired self seems to be
emotionally
mature, respectable, and respected. (about
dangers
at this stage)
The Contented Self
The seeker is now at peace. The struggles of the earlier
stages are basically over. The old desires and attachments are no
longer binding. The ego-self begins to let go, allowing the individual
to come more closely in contact with the Divine.
This level of self predisposes one to be liberal, grateful,
trusting,
and adoring. If one accepts difficulties with the same overall sense of
security with which one accepts benefits, it may be said that one has
attained the level of the contented self. Developmentally, this level
marks a period of transition. The self can now begin to "disintegrate"
and let go of all previous concern with self-boundaries and then begin
to "reintegrate" as an aspect of the universal self.
The Pleased Self
At this stage the individual is not only content with his or
her lot, but pleased with even the difficulties and trials of life,
realizing that these difficulties come from God. The state of the
pleased self is very different from the way we usually experience the
world, focused on seeking pleasure and avoiding pain. A Sufi story
illustrates this:
Sultan Mahmud of Ghazna once shared a cucumber with Ayaz, his
most loyal and beloved companion. Ayaz happily ate his half of the
cucumber, but
when the sultan bit into his half, it was so
bitter he immediately
spit it out.
"How could you manage to eat something so bitter? the sultan
exclaimed, "it tasted like chalk or like bitter poison!"
"My beloved sultan," answered Ayaz, "I have enjoyed so many
favors and bounties from your hand that whatever you give me tastes
sweet."
When a person's love and gratitude to God reach this level, he
or she
has reached the stage of the pleased self.
The Self Pleasing to God
Those who have reached the next stage realize that all power
to act comes from God, that they can do nothing by themselves. They no
longer fear anything or ask for anything.
The Sufi sage Ibn 'Arabi described this level as the inner
marriage or self and soul. The self pleasing to God has achieved
genuine inner unity and wholeness. At earlier stages, people struggle
with the world because they experience multiplicity. A broken mirror
creates a thousand different reflections of a single image. If the
mirror could be made whole again,
it would then reflect the single, unified image. By healing the
multiplicity within, the Sufi experiences the world as whole and
unified.
The Pure Self
Those few who attain the final level have transcended the
self entirely. There is no ego or separate self left, only union with
God. At this stage, the individual has truly realized the truth, "There
is no god but God." The Sufi now
knows that there is nothing but God, that only the Divine exists, and
that any sense of individuality or separateness is an illusion.
Rumi illuminates this state for us:
If you could get rid
Of yourself just once,
The secret of secrets
Would open to you.
The face of the unknown,
Hidden beyond the universe
Would appear on the
Mirror of your perception
Of yourself just once,
The secret of secrets
Would open to you.
The face of the unknown,
Hidden beyond the universe
Would appear on the
Mirror of your perception
\
Monday, December 8, 2014
John O'Donohue - A Blessing
For Equilibrium, a Blessing:
Like the joy of the sea coming home to shore,
May the relief of laughter rinse through your soul.
Like the joy of the sea coming home to shore,
May the relief of laughter rinse through your soul.
As the wind loves to call things to dance,
May your gravity by lightened by grace.
May your gravity by lightened by grace.
Like the dignity of moonlight restoring the earth,
May your thoughts incline with reverence and respect.
As water takes whatever shape it is in,
So free may you be about who you become.
As silence smiles on the other side of what's said,
May your sense of irony bring perspective.
As time remains free of all that it frames,
May your mind stay clear of all it names.
May your prayer of listening deepen enough
to hear in the depths the laughter of god.”
― John O'Donohue, To Bless the Space Between Us: A Book of Blessings
May your thoughts incline with reverence and respect.
As water takes whatever shape it is in,
So free may you be about who you become.
As silence smiles on the other side of what's said,
May your sense of irony bring perspective.
As time remains free of all that it frames,
May your mind stay clear of all it names.
May your prayer of listening deepen enough
to hear in the depths the laughter of god.”
― John O'Donohue, To Bless the Space Between Us: A Book of Blessings
Rupert Spira - Suffering
Suffering is to the mind what pain is to the body.
When you put your hand in the fire, you experience pain.
The pain is not a mistake, it’s not something that’s wrong.
The pain is the intelligence of the body, telling you:
take your hand out of the fire.
So pain is working on behalf of your wellbeing.
The pain is not a mistake, it’s not something that’s wrong.
The pain is the intelligence of the body, telling you:
take your hand out of the fire.
So pain is working on behalf of your wellbeing.
Suffering is exactly the same at the level of the mind.
It is cooperating with your desire for happiness.
It’s telling you, you’ve got your hand in the fire.
In this case suffering is telling you:
You have mistaken yourself for a seperate limited awareness.
Take a look.
It is cooperating with your desire for happiness.
It’s telling you, you’ve got your hand in the fire.
In this case suffering is telling you:
You have mistaken yourself for a seperate limited awareness.
Take a look.
That’s what suffering is. It’s a wakeup call.
It’s saying:
You have mistaken yourself for an object, a limited self.
Have another look!
It’s saying:
You have mistaken yourself for an object, a limited self.
Have another look!
Mirabai Starr, in Teresa of Avila, The Interior Castle
There is a secret place. A radiant sanctuary. As real as your own kitchen. More real than that. Constructed of the purest elements. Overflowing with the ten thousand beautiful things. Worlds within worlds… This magnificent refuge is inside you.
...No one else controls access to this perfect place. Give yourself your own unconditional permission to go there. . Believe the incredible truth that the Beloved has chosen for his dwelling place the core of your own being because that is the single most beautiful place in all of creation.
Artwork Castle: Remedios Varo, Spanish-Mexican, surrealist painter, influenced by a wide range of mystic and hermetic traditions and was as fascinated with sacred geometry, alchemy and the I-Ching.
Sunday, December 7, 2014
Gilbert Schultz - Already so
Contemplate your Spiritual Heroes for a moment.
Before any of those so-called ‘great men or women’ appeared in this world, the natural perfection of pure being was ‘already so’.
Words divide and separate. Nothing can be added to consciousness. Nothing can be taken away from consciousness. The mind divides the oneness and then tries to add the conceptually divided, believing that something profound has been achieved. All illusion of mind.
Words are pointers. Words are empty…..just like a wooden signpost is empty of any special meaning other than its pointer. The value of the pointer is in its accurateness but the goal cannot be found in or around the signpost. Worshiping the signpost is a very common error. No matter how glorified the signpost is dressed up with bangles and beads, the only value it has is in its accurate pointing.
This wakefulness has not come along after some idea registered. Ideas come and go. The ‘self-knowledge’ of all the great sages came and went. One must not confuse the pristine qualities of consciousness-awareness with any formalised being, great or small. Being is spontaneous and the form that it appears as is secondary. No separation exists in reality.
As each new individual (being) comes into this world, the nature of pure being is ‘already so’ already present (presence). As each being leaves this world the ‘already so’ nature of pure being is present (presence) and in the pure reflection of a lifetime, it is obvious that nothing has altered the clarity of awareness.
All of what you call your ‘experiences’ register in their own immediacy as a mind translation of sensations – a subtle narrative using learned words. Without those learned words you could not say anything about anything. The un-interrupted experiencing is naked wakefulness.
You cannot claim any ownership of wakefulness. Its presence is pre-sense. Before words. Even the word ‘wakefulness’ can only point to its (normally unrecognised) presence.
As soon as you think about it, it is reduced to a series of concepts, which cannot truly re-present this wakefulness.
It is perfect like a shining mirror.
All that you perceive is the content of wakefulness. Like a mirror, all you see is the content of the mirror.
All things register ‘upon’ this wakefulness and nothing touches it.
It cannot be altered and it cannot be reduced to a personal acquisition.
All sentient beings appear and disappear leaving no trace.
Even though it is your own true nature it is foolish to claim any ownership of this wakefulness. Since everyone is that, to whom would you make such a claim?
Who would be impressed?
No one can define what wakefulness is.
No one can define what consciousness is.
No one can define what awareness is.
Words divide and separate. All of it is nothing more than illusion of mind.
There are no levels to reality and there can only be one reality.
When all beliefs and conceptual limitations are lifted off this wakefulness the silent wordless essential nature of all things is self-evident.
http://seeing-knowing.com/
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