The spiritual path is the path of the ordinary hero, and it sees the world very differently to the outlook that is promoted by pure science. The entire spiritual journey is one in which the individual learns by degrees to see and read the world as an all-nurturing miracle of guidance in which we have a role as co-creators. It is a path that teaches us – deeply, deeply teaches us – that the state of no effort is our greatest strength, for it is also the seamlessly integrated state of Being that enables us to harmonize with the strength of the world. Eventually that teaching leads us to the understanding that the world itself is enlightened; to join the world is to die to the endarkened ego and give yourself to the supreme light of intelligence all around you. Enlightenment is not something any individual can possess, any more than someone could possess the Logos or Buddha consciousness. Spiritual enlightenment in an individual is nurtured by a profound dissolution of the anxiety that separates us from the world, so that we can at last join it, seeing and understanding “the real as the play and work of love”, as Andrew Harvey put it.
To join the enlightened world is to awaken to a place of ceaseless renewal and revelation; a place of companionship in which you are fully known in everything you do, even as you sensationally discover and serve the world in everything you do; a place in which alienation and existential isolation are seen to be creaky illusions, because in fact you know yourself to be an indivisible part of all Being, intimately and companionably sustained by it; a place in which endless gifts arise from the deep mystery that suffuses everything ordinary.
In the ancient mythological world of Greece there existed a Thessalian tribe of chimeric kentauroi, or centaurs -creatures who were half human and half horse. They were generally a savage and untamable lot, but one among them, Chiron, son of the Titan Cronus, was exalted and recognized as having special status as possessing insight, knowledge and wisdom. The wisest and most just of all centaurs, he was also known to be a skilled healer of remarkable ability and was sought as a physician and teacher of the medical arts by the likes of Heracles, Achilles and Asclepius. Chiron is specifically known for a severe injury he received whilst in battle with Heracles where he was accidentally shot with a poisoned arrow. For mere mortals the poison, coming as it did from the Hydra, meant certain and immediate death. However, being the spawn of a Titan meant he was an immortal. So Chiron was condemned to live on, though having to endure the incessant agony of his unhealable injury. He is still recognized to this day in Western astrological systems and he symbolizes the archetype of the ‘wounded healer’.
I doubt that there is a single gifted healer who is truly called to the healing path who cannot identify with this motif. Indeed, as healers we are called upon with a unique urgency to find our own journey of self-inquiry through seeking and addressing the deepest wounds we have received, both in this life as well as previous ones. Not only do we discover a most profound type of intimacy with ourselves but we also come into contact with the very root of what it means to be wounded, to be abused or broken by this path of being human; and by doing so we also touch upon the meaning and fragility of mortality. As with Chiron, it also brings us to the heart of an existential dilemma…
Ultimately, one who attains spiritual liberation heals the deepest wounds of all.
Accessing and working with our own wounds gives us a self-knowledge that is primarily experiential and it provides a number of significant effects. One is that we have the opportunity to come to know the nature of illness or disease at the vibrational/intuitive level which gives us a kind of sensing that aids and supports assessing medical conditions that may otherwise only be done through rational or suppositional thought processes. Without the ability to ‘feel’ the disease, knowledge becomes theoretical and abstract. It may well be effective but it is nonetheless superficial. Another effect is that as we come to appreciate the vulnerability of being alive, we thereby have the opportunity to develop profound compassion for others who are being challenged on their own healing path. Without the ability to identify as self with a client (either quite literally or at the very least, by extension) we run the risk of mere objectification. Therefore, the effect we may have on those we seek to help will again be at the surface, as if simply treating and abating symptoms is sufficient.
Furthermore, there is a kind of angst that is innate to existence and most people go through their entire lives avoiding it or, worse, never becoming aware if it in the first place, such is the degree of ignorance and distraction within which we find ourselves -these so-called modern times. Our ability to know ourselves is based in that organ of reflexive self-awareness and expression, which here we will provisionally call an ego. The ability to know the difference between I and you is central to the function of the ego. Furthermore, the ego is also the way by which we express agency and thereby map and plan out our course through life. But the marriage of this awareness and the ability to make abstractions about the future comes at a terrible cost -that, ultimately, is the knowledge of mortality and death. Having no mere insignificant vested interest in self-preservation the ego positions itself in such a way as to model and predict life so as to optimize survival while at the same time adroitly side-stepping having to come to terms with the the ultimate wound; the inevitability of death. For the ego the possibilities boil down to ending tenure in annihilation, insanity, or death. Since none of these are acceptable options the ego will forever avoid them (often nonchalantly, the master magician and past master of misdirection)… sometimes aggressively (through addictions or other forms of obsessive-compulsive behaviors). All the while our avoidance mechanisms sweep a compounding anxiety of that inevitable fate underneath the proverbial rug.
Central to the Mahayanist Buddha Dharma is the notion of the Bodhisattva -a being who forsakes his or her own ultimate emancipation in order to be of compassionate service to others, ultimately to the point of forestalling complete enlightenment until all other beings are themselves enlightened. From the Buddhist perspective, the very nature of being embodied in a material dimension entails ‘struggle’ and is therefore a realm where suffering is intrinsic to existing. Chiron’s unhealable injury can be seen metaphorically as the suffering endemic to human life. In Chiron’s case, this struggle is made even worse for he is the master healer who is possessed of an intractable malady. The agony of his wound is inseparable with his existence, compounded by the fact that, despite his mastery as a physician, as an immortal his fate was apparently cast to suffer without end. For us normal people this predicament appears outrageous indeed, yet as mortals we all face our individual (sometime collective) poisoned arrows. Life crushing illness is a reality for many. There are numerous pathologies such as trigeminal neuralgia (known as the ’suicide disease’), TMJ, burn victims, and untreatable cancers which cause unimaginable pain, and from which death is a welcome release.
One of lessons embedded in Chiron’s archetype is that there is no excuse for not taking our art to the highest levels. At the same time we should not overlook that Chiron finally resolved his predicament and chose to forsake his immortality. Zeus honored him and placed him amongst the stars as the constellation Centarus, or Sagittarius as we call it today. Seeing that kind of beauty interwoven with tragedy is germane to the Greek way of seeing life. We all have potential to master and share great gifts, yet there are are limits to what we can not only do but, ultimately, endure. How that plays out is up to us, each to their relative capacity to perceive, understand, serve, endure and ultimately transcend. These processes of self-exploration can be honed to a fine edge through the Buddhist heuristic. Through the Dharma, the existential dilemma resolves in the now, and this brings us to the notion of addressing the deepest wounds of all: being confronted with insanity, annihilation, or the purity of the destruction of death. Not every client interaction is life and death, but spend enough time in service and you will inevitably come face to face with the most challenging issues of being alive. The depth and degree of how you address your own challenges will determine your capacity to be of genuine service to others. Ultimately, one who attains spiritual liberation heals the deepest wounds of all. Chiron transcended his dilemma through death. But if, like the Buddha, such a being were able to do so and still walk the Earth, that healing would be spread out like ripples over a vast ocean of space and time, ultimately touching and easing the suffering of uncountable others. May it be so.
“It’s important to be clear and honest here: by its very nature, shadow work is not fun or pretty. It takes courage and fortitude to see parts of our being that are not as we wish then to be, and that mess with our self image. It takes enormous resilience and dedication to transform these parts of ourselves into something healthy and beneficial. And once we decide to meet the shadow’s darkness, it inevitably moves toward greater and greater light.
The energies locked in the shadow elements now get released and can be directed toward supporting transfiguration through integration. This is both beautiful and exciting. Significantly, it is also the beginning of the end of suffering.”
-from Wasteland to Pureland; Reflections on the Path of Awakening [D. Duncan/C. Pawasarat]
In order to anchor ourselves to higher frequencies (and align with Divine Will), we need to consciously engage in the process of embodiment. To be embodied doesn’t mean to simply be in “touch” with the physical body. Nor does physical exercise, working out, running, doing yoga, etc. automatically result in being “embodied”. If that would be the case, any athlete would be embodied. This is true within the physical sense of these techniques as well: being flexible doesn’t mean that one is a better “yogi” – or more “spiritual” – than others, for there is far more to yoga than the positional practice.
You can be in touch with your physical body – and indeed, have “mastery” over it – without being embodied. In fact, many people engage in a lot of physical exercise to get “in shape” (often times due to a socially-conditioned body-image program, which oftentimes results in emotional insecurities), but are not embodied in the true meaning of the word. Some people also tend to use physical work-outs and exercise as a means to disassociate and build armor (muscles) in order to avoid “feeling” the world around them, like a “buffer”. It can also become an addiction, getting hooked on both the endorphins that are released during exercise and the compliments of others. However, it’s not a black and white issue. Exercise is a good thing, if done consciously and holistically, beyond identification with the body. But the key point is to become sensitive and aware, and listen to/experience the world THROUGH the body.
The root word of embodiment stems from ‘embody‘ (v.): in reference to a soul or spirit invested with a physical form; em – “in” + ‘body’ (n.); ‘ment’: suffix forming nouns.
Synonyms for Embodiment are: incarnation, avatar, manifestation. Avatar: a manifestation of a released soul in bodily form on earth. From Sanskrit avatāra ‘descent,’ from ava ‘down’ + tar ‘to cross.’ Incarnation: a person who embodies spirit in the flesh.
Embodiment (from a spiritual/esoteric perspective) is the process of soul integration, connecting to one’s “higher self” and becoming a conscious vessel for spirit to work through; it relates to the alchemical marriage of the inner male and female.
Based on various esoteric teachings, the soul is something human beings need to develop or grow from a consciousness seed (see Gurdjieff, Aurobindo, Castaneda), and to embody it via spiritual/esoteric work. In the average person in today’s post-modern maze, the soul remains in an embryonic state and is thus not fully individualized. Until the soul has matured, one’s identity lies in the mechanical false personality (which most people mistake for their “true self”, most often with the not-so-subtle ego-pride fueling it, confusing healthy self-love with narcissism/self-importance) and is open to manipulation on all levels. An embodied soul, on the other hand, becomes the seat of the real self’s creativity and dynamism, and the personality blossoms as an expression of one’s higher (immortal) identity, connected to spirit and the Divine within.
Embodiment – reconnecting with one’s wholeness, fusing the separate aspects of the inner male and female energetic expressions – is, in my experience, the process of what is commonly called “ascension” or “awakening”. It is the “philosopher’s stone”, the “holy grail”, the story of “the hero going into the underworld, saving/marrying the princess/bride” (his own feminine aspect of Being) as depicted in many mythological traditions. It connects us with the wholeness of nature/the world, our inner guidance system and personal divinity, as well as our own individual purpose for being here, something the reasoning head/logical mind can never ever grasp. It re-connects us to our original blueprint prior to genetic manipulation, activating our dormant/decommissioned DNA.
– from TIMELINE-REALITY SPLIT, FREQUENCY VIBRATION, AND THE HIDDEN FORCES OF LIFEveilofreality.com
This is a video I recently watched that explores the differences between existence and subjective experience in the 3rd, 4th and 5th vibrational dimensions. For anyone who is engaged on path and finds perspective on these differences helpful, this video may be worth watching [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RW75MaUS1lY]. Peace.3rd, 4th, & 5th Dimensional Consciousness
Ever feel overwhelmed by the world? Sometimes it feels like it is all just hopelessly crazy, doesn’t it? But maybe we don’t have to ‘make sense’ of the world. Reconciling sane from the insane, right from wrong, good and bad is work for that part of the mind that can only experience the world in terms of duality. That is what the brain does -the hemispheres collect, interpret, and express sensory information dualistically, so it seems that everything is black and white which is forever folding into itself (think of the yin/yang symbol). But when we shift the source of our awareness from the head to the heart something wonderful begins to happen.
Unlike the brain, the ‘heart-mind’ is mono-polar -that is to say, it can only experience and interpret the world as a holon. This is the source of the so-called ‘holistic’ way of looking at things: the heart sees the world as ‘black AND white’, and all the shades of gray in between. Knowing this, however, is different as doing it. Most of us are stuck in thinking about and experiencing the world through the cerebral part of the body. Finding the way back into the heart can be tricky because many of us don’t have a lot of skill in heart-centered living, have been traumatized and therefore walled off the heart center, or simply have not been shown that path back into holistic realization.
Finding that peace that ‘passeth understanding’ can be quite simple. Remember the teaching, ‘…when Thine eye be single, then Thy whole body shall be filled with Light’? Allow your sense of ‘I’ to move away from your physical eyes and let is settle gently and easily in the center of your chest. Just let it be. Don’t let the world pull your awareness away from your heart. No matter what it is that you experience there, just feel it. Allow it. It may take some time but you will get the hang of it. Practice ‘seeing’ the world through the single ‘I’ of the heart and bless everything with Love. Sooner or later, you will come to know the true meaning of, ‘Thy whole body being filled with Light’.
Ever wanted to take the ultimate vacation? Radiant unperturbed mind is closer than you think, closer to you than even your thinking. When you are able to access pure witness consciousness, it is like having a great holiday from the relentless burden of having to nbe you all the time. How do you do this? It’s easy. Just take a mental step back. Move from the state of mind that experiences itself as the subject of an objective universe to one that simply sees. In witness consciousness one ceases the need to comment, or label, or categorize, or struggle with… whatever it is that appears in the present moment. Try it. Take a mental step back and look at the world as an unbroken totality -even the act of ‘looking’ falls away and all that is present is the undefinable presence of reality. What a relief!