
heh
Moderator: Fist and Faith
The Fist wrote:I see what you're getting at. My (and Av's) problem is that, eventually, there must be an awareness that did not come from something that also is aware. Otherwise, the endless progression back. If the Big Bang was aware, it must also have come from an aware source. And that source must have come from yet another aware source, etc, etc, etc. An infinite chain of aware sources does not fit my idea of logic and reason. I am much more comfortable with the thought that something aware did not come from an aware source. And I'm not nearly convinced that this first awareness isn't us.
The Esmer wrote:I see what you're getting at. Yours, (and Av's) problem is that, eventually, there must be matter that did not come from something that also is matter. Otherwise, the endless progression back. If the Big Bang was just matter, it must also have come from a matter source. And that source must have come from yet another matter source, etc, etc, etc. An infinite chain of matter sources does not fit my idea of logic and reason. I am not very comfortable with the thought that something aware did not come from an aware source. And I'm convinced that this first awareness isn't us.
Ah! You're actually convinced? That's interesting. I don't yet know enough about what you're talking about, as far as actual procedures go, but it gets us back to this:The Esmer wrote:The Fist wrote:I see what you're getting at. My (and Av's) problem is that, eventually, there must be an awareness that did not come from something that also is aware. Otherwise, the endless progression back. If the Big Bang was aware, it must also have come from an aware source. And that source must have come from yet another aware source, etc, etc, etc. An infinite chain of aware sources does not fit my idea of logic and reason. I am much more comfortable with the thought that something aware did not come from an aware source. And I'm not nearly convinced that this first awareness isn't us.The Esmer wrote:I see what you're getting at. Yours, (and Av's) problem is that, eventually, there must be matter that did not come from something that also is matter. Otherwise, the endless progression back. If the Big Bang was just matter, it must also have come from a matter source. And that source must have come from yet another matter source, etc, etc, etc. An infinite chain of matter sources does not fit my idea of logic and reason. I am not very comfortable with the thought that something aware did not come from an aware source. And I'm convinced that this first awareness isn't us.
As you probably know, what you're talking about is the actual (i.e., pre-SRD) definitions of the words samadhi, turiya, and moksha. Yoga basically means joining with the Brahman (the Absolute - the Hindu God, if you will), and the different kinds of yoga (the weird poses we are most familiar with are only one type of yoga) are paths to this. (Many similarities to Buddhism, but I don't feel I have a good enough handle on Buddhism to discuss it much. But the Ch'an [Zen] master Ma-tsu Tao-i "knocked his students to the ground, pinched their noses, and shot sudden questions and paradoxical answers at them in order to shake them out of the routine of 'everyman's consciousness,' liberate them from well-worn ruts of conceptual thinking, and enable them, through a collapse of their habitual feeling and thinking brought on by a sudden shock, to come to the experience of enlightemnent.") What is a person without any thoughts or perceptions? All that's left is the true core of us, the atman, the "shard" of the infinite Brahman. When we achieve this complete absence of our worldly human-ness, we are the infinite Brahman. Since we are in this human form, we cannot maintain this state indefinitely, but we remember it when we're back to our familiar physical selves.The Esmer wrote:but it is my stand that now there is a way to accept this "explanation" thru "direct observation". You are able to be "aware" of It, you just can't "comprehend" It. Thinking logically cannot solve this, and DJM, and others, have stated that you must "act illogically" in order to "apprehend" this "state of being", which is defined as "not being", or "letting go" of the "self". This implies a direct seperability between "self" and "awareness", and "knowledge" and "thought".
If your explanations of this stuff are not hazy, then you're clearly not close to the Truth. (Did ya see how I used "clearly" to oppose "hazy" there???The Esmer wrote:(I'm a "little slow" tonight, forgive me if I wander or things are "hazy", heh.)
I feel the same way. (About that aspect of SiaSL, not food.) But Heinlein couldn't ever help himself in that, could he. Ursula has some stuff that often gets a chuckle and shake of my head. I guess they were hippies, eh?Syl wrote:Pretty good, but the orgy/wife-swapping towards the end kind of queered it for me (I'm the kind of guy that doesn't like it when his food touches other food on the plate).
As you probably know, what you're talking about is the actual (i.e., pre-SRD) definitions of the words samadhi, turiya, and moksha. Yoga basically means joining with the Brahman (the Absolute - the Hindu God, if you will), and the different kinds of yoga (the weird poses we are most familiar with are only one type of yoga) are paths to this. (Many similarities to Buddhism, but I don't feel I have a good enough handle on Buddhism to discuss it much. But the Ch'an [Zen] master Ma-tsu Tao-i "knocked his students to the ground, pinched their noses, and shot sudden questions and paradoxical answers at them in order to shake them out of the routine of 'everyman's consciousness,' liberate them from well-worn ruts of conceptual thinking, and enable them, through a collapse of their habitual feeling and thinking brought on by a sudden shock, to come to the experience of enlightemnent.") What is a person without any thoughts or perceptions? All that's left is the true core of us, the atman, the "shard" of the infinite Brahman. When we achieve this complete absence of our worldly human-ness, we are the infinite Brahman. Since we are in this human form, we cannot maintain this state indefinitely, but we remember it when we're back to our familiar physical selves.
I have, as DJM recommends, pitted his description against my (our)description. I have "studied" myself and "society" on an individual basis, me and "everybody else" to attempt to verify his statements and ideas, and clarify the meanings of those statements and ideas. Nothing else has come close, IMHO, to rendering the "universe" in a more cogent, substantial, and complete manner in all of my previous and current "influences", those being just about every religion and philosophy that is "commonly known". They all appeared to have certain things in common, they just went about describing it in different and "confusing" ways. Now, after 20 years of intense scrutiny, I believe I have "just begun" to understand his teachings, and not having the benefit of his "direct intervention", I am pretty much left to "my own devices" to verify these incredible "possibilities", but the force of habit engendered after 39 years of "indulgence" has rendered me "currently unable" to "experience" this "way of knowing" as a bonafide "ability". I must say Syl described a peculiar habit of his, and mine, and he saidFist and Faith wrote:Ah! You're actually convinced? That's interesting. I don't yet know enough about what you're talking about, as far as actual procedures go:convinced, yet still pacing at the door.In order to arrive at seeing one first has to stop the world . Stopping the world is indeed an appropriate rendition of certain states of awareness in which the reality of everyday life is altered because the flow of interpretation, which ordinarily runs uninterruptedly, has been stopped by a set of circumstances alien to that flow. In this case the set of circumstances alien to our normal flow of interpretations is the sorcery description of the world.
The precondition for stopping the world is that one has to be convinced; in other words, one has to learn the new description in a total sense, for the purpose of pitting it against the old one, and in that way break the dogmatic certainty, which we all share, that the validity of our perceptions, or our reality of the world, is not to be questioned.
After stopping the world the next step is seeing . By that I mean what could be categorized as responding to the perceptual solicitations of a world outside the description we have learned to call reality.
All these steps can only be understood in terms of the description to which they belong; a description that I'm endeavoring to give you. Let, then, this teaching be the source of entrance into that description.
But the Ch'an [Zen] master Ma-tsu Tao-i "knocked his students to the ground, pinched their noses, and shot sudden questions and paradoxical answers at them in order to shake them out of the routine of 'everyman's consciousness,' liberate them from well-worn ruts of conceptual thinking, and enable them, through a collapse of their habitual feeling and thinking brought on by a sudden shock, to come to the experience of enlightemnent.") What is a person without any thoughts or perceptions? All that's left is the true core of us, the atman, the "shard" of the infinite Brahman. When we achieve this complete absence of our worldly human-ness, we are the infinite Brahman. Since we are in this human form, we cannot maintain this state indefinitely, but we remember it when we're back to our familiar physical selves.I imagine that's a lot like what Don Juan says?“The art of the warrior is to balance the terror of being a man with the wonder
of being a man.”sounds alot like it.“We talk to ourselves incessantly about our world. In fact we maintain our world with our internal talk. And whenever we finish talking to ourselves about ourselves and our world, the world is always as it should be. We renew it, we rekindle it with life, we uphold it with our internal talk. Not only that, but we also choose our paths as we talk to ourselves. Thus we repeat the same choices over and over until the day we die, because we keep on repeating the same internal talk over and over until the day we die. A warrior is aware of this and strives to stop his internal talk.”![]()
And since you don't simply like all of this, as Av and I do, but are convinced of it, does this mean you have gone through Don Juan's process, and had the direct experience yourself? Or have you become convinced of that method by other means?
heh, he couldn't have been any closer in describing my daily life. I have had "random experiences", usually in "dream states", but nothing "concrete". I once "dreamed" I was playing with a bunch of kittens I had, and we were in the kitchen, and we were all "balls of light". Well, I "told" one of the kittens to go "wake me up", and I followed him and heh, well, the dream ended when I woke up with that same kitten licking my face. That same instant the 5 others came romping into the room and jumped on the bed and we all started playing with each other "again". The "electrical" feeling of pure joy and awe at that moment has never left me, and reminds me constantly that "there is more" to life than "commonly believed". "Little things" like that happen sporadically, as well as a "sort of" deja vu, but different, in that sometimes I just "know" things, with no "obvious" prior knowledge of any subject or circumstance related ot a current situation. Useful to me, gibberish to others, so be it. *shrug*"I do just a little bit more than just enough to get by".
and then asks,I once "dreamed" I was playing with a bunch of kittens I had, and we were in the kitchen, and we were all "balls of light". Well, I "told" one of the kittens to go "wake me up", and I followed him and heh, well, the dream ended when I woke up with that same kitten licking my face. That same instant the 5 others came romping into the room and jumped on the bed and we all started playing with each other "again". The "electrical" feeling of pure joy and awe at that moment has never left me, and reminds me constantly that "there is more" to life than "commonly believed". "Little things" like that happen sporadically, as well as a "sort of" deja vu, but different, in that sometimes I just "know" things, with no "obvious" prior knowledge of any subject or circumstance related ot a current situation.
But would my "direct experiences" even mean anything if I hadn't been "pre-disposed" to "interpret" them in "spiritual" terms? I f I didn't already "believe", they all would be totally "meaningless" and "coincidental", don't you think?
The Conditions of a Solitary Bird
The conditions of a solitary bird are five:
The first, that it flies to the highest poinT;
The second, that it does not suffer for company,
not even of its own kind;![]()
The third, that it aims its beak to the skies;
The fourth, that it does not have a definite c olor;
The fifth, that it sings very softly.