Once he
had “made a name for himself,” and then rather quickly discarded it, for it was
false to him, he was false to himself, and the name that came to be on a small
but real pedestal, the personage that he now fulfilled and had to keep
fulfilling not unlike a balloon full-filled with hot air, had become an
overinflated role that he could keep fulfilling or could just let the air out
and walk away, which is what he did. As much as he enjoyed the power, the image
he now had built, had earned even, he knew it was false and no longer to be
maintained. He understood the meaning of “false images” and conceived that
perhaps all such idols in the eyes of men are false. While he didn’t
necessarily want to be invisible, he realized not been seen or known to be much
closer to the truth of things: to be empty of self is truer than to be full of
self, for self has its own way of claiming and identifying with power, thus
becoming the role it plays, the masque it wears. We all become what we think we
are, often to our great detriment, be it notable or notorious, famous or
infamous. And now, in his old age, though he regretted his invisibility at
times, he also relished it; for he could walk in the forest unseen and unheard,
like a breeze among the trees, or saunter upon the beach in the surf, watching
his footprints vanish behind him at each step he took. That was invigorating to
him. For, in looking back, he could see so clearly now all the mistakes he had
made in his life, all the hurts he had inflicted in his self-absorption. For he
had been so blind to others and their needs, never knowing or caring who they actually
were or how they cared for him. He felt this now, deeply in his heart, in his
soul. And he could not “make it right” to those others. As for the sorrow
within him, he didn’t know if it was due to his sins of omission or if it was a
reflection of the great sorrow of humanity itself in its own lostness.
At some point we can no longer be satisfied with the fragments, the pieces, but recognize the importance, the necessity, of putting together the pieces that compose the puzzle of our existence. When younger, it is youth itself that has momentum, that propels us forward in our being, our lives. But, in due time, we are faced with the necessity of giving meaning to ourselves--which is something we must do if we are to survive, and can only do for ourselves. We make and unmake ourselves.
Thursday, December 13, 2018
Sunday, November 25, 2018
THE INHERENT WHOLENESS OF BODY AND SOUL VS. THE NEED TO ADD CHEMICALS
Of course
the question is: Adding these chemicals, the drugs to my body for the purpose
of having a certain effect or a counteraction in my body including my mind,
does this actually improve my health
and functionality? What of the “pain-killers”? Am I to actually have my pain
diminished? The symptom placated, as it were? Does my experience of the pain as
it is have a “higher” or, for that matter, “natural” function that is necessary
for my human experience? Is serotonin, which reduces symptoms of sadness and depression
and their particular perspective,
actually to not be taken, so that I
might feel certain things and attain perhaps a deeper and more comprehensive
understanding and experience of myself? For the serotonin taken in this way
seems to cut my consciousness off from the pain within the depths of myself
which seems to hold certain kinds of awarenesses and revelations for me. It
seems to me that many of my bodily ills come to me as a result of a adding these noxious chemicals to my body.
In the exact same vein, as it were,
there is the world of technology that takes control, that takes over society
and culture, replacing, it seems, a vital “natural connection” within us.
People become, in many respects, as almost crazed automatons, addicted to the
electronic devices that come to control their minds and their behaviors. I can
see that this kind of monitoring and supervision could improve the human race
but that it definitely has not; it seems that this cyborgian reality has
disconnected humanity from itself and each other, at least on a deep “human”
level, far more than bringing it together.
The
body begins to fail in all its pain and in all our loss. It stops working
properly, required medical external treatments, some of which seem somewhat
effective. One never wants them for one finds oneself more and more less human.
Is this part of God’s Plan for: to us to see these meds and drugs that effect
us in the body as they do as part and parcel of God’s Work? We are much better
off if such is our experience, if our “improvement” is simply another
expression of the goodness of “what is”. Or have we become cyborgs, part
literally machine and chemical with a rather smaller claim at “being human” and
a “greater need” to see ourselves as “less human/less natural” and more
mechanical and lacking in human qualities like emotion and, in due times,
intelligence itself—as WE become worked on, manipulated, even controlled by
forces greater than ourselves. What we once called miracles are now part of the
treatment for the machine that we become.
In my mind I still find myself actually
“praying for miracles” entailed healing in my own body and in my wife’s that
enable me to endure as her companion and caregiver. This is my biggest prayer
and it seems there is much rejected of the reality of “what is” in existence
and specifically in my life and other’s lives. Most often, people who are “afflicated”
must follow their afflication “to the end” without either recourse or
alternative, though if a “still greater context” is found and experienced
dependably, the existing rules, as they were, may be alleviated if you know
how. I see myself as “somewhat advanced”, both my focus and preference, but
also by a “faith in what is” perhaps even more than a faith in God, though what
God is, or perhaps the function of God, is quite squarely present is all that
is, denoted a level of faith at least as strong—and by my criteria immeasurably
stronger than that of Christianity simply because it is not based in
sentimental, magickal, elemental theory but it foundation laws of existence.
But now I begin to tire and
consequently fade quickly, having gotten up and finally taken the meds I use to
help me get through the night with sleep and reduced pain: glips, hydro, and
zolps. I suppose they are now part of me—as much as I’d prefer otherwise. Part
of my dream now, though I think I can skip the “happy pills” and just let my
depression down dips drown me a bit before I return to a semblance of human
once more. I don’t know if “crushing the soul” on a regular basis weakens its
fabric and future performance or if has the effect of consequently keeping it “flexible”
and able to “go with the flow,” or hopefully create its own. The latter is what
I ultimately count on. “Happy pills” make too much of a buffer between myself
and myself able to be in the world; such buffer becoming a “wall.”
Sunday, November 18, 2018
PAIN: ITS WISDOM, GUIDANCE AND VIRTUE
I would
much rather believe that this excruciating pain is punishment from God for my
transgressions and that it has the effect of purifying my soul, thus washing
the karmic slate clean. Otherwise, I am to accept the pain simply as it is and
with no “productive benefit.” The medieval belief that one’s suffering purified
one’s soul and thus brought one closer to God and to Heaven helped to maintain
the status quo of the innumerable slaves of the masters who were consequently
accepting of their lot in life. The fat priests did their job of making sure the
populace were willing to keep their backs bent and their untold suffering
between them and the Lord, who was a great listener and who was waiting in
Heaven for them when they finally loosed the crushing yoke of their meager
lives. But they held their suffering and loss in this context and thus we able
to live good, even happy lives, even as they were being crushed. I only wish
that I could hold and believe that my profound physical pain held meaning and
purpose for me, that it was purifying my soul at the expense of my body. Does
this severe, crippling pain act on behalf of something sublime? Does it bring
me a certain understanding? Obviously it does—in one way in particular: it
severs my identity with my physical body, thus enabling me to be quite willing
to let go, to even look forward to it, when the times comes to pass beyond it.
This is one major benefit, for such physical pain puts one in a quite different
state of mind and being than the normal bodily state. And I suppose that this
being moved, almost against one’s bodily will, into a different, more “spiritual”
state of mind and being, is another way of explaining the benefit of such. To
be able to consciously disidentify with the physical life to a life beyond
that, more sublime, as it were, than that is a blessing, for the physical life
is inherently transitional and temporary, if not short and brutal (Hobbes?). To
disidentify with it enables one to make the transitional out of it so much
easier, and then to whatever follows so much easier as well. To be in the “proper
reality” is like being able to speak the local language and thus communicate
and relate oneself within it. To be able to speak the language of Heaven
enables one to belong in it.
Of course, I speak too metaphorically,
not literally, though some, perhaps many, would take all this quite literally.
I do wish it were as literal and as simple as the stories I have been told,
that the Loving Father will reach down and pick me, his child, up in his arms,
for we all know that he is a great giant and that we are as small dolls in his
hands, or perhaps even as grains of sand in his hand, though I knew a woman,
Roxanne, who suffered in Alaskan Outback as a child and had to beg for food at
the Salvation Army and various churches where she had to sing for her supper.
She had to sing, He’s Got the Whole World
in His Hands, but she knew she had fallen through between his great
gigantic fingers. Her younger brother, whom she took care of, stranded in a
cabin in the deep snow, where they almost starved to death, came to my
hometown, dressed himself as a clown, and went through the town putting a
nickel in the parking meters that had run out of time, thus saving the owners
of the cars from the impending parking ticket. He was soon arrested and jailed
for this act of kindness. I don’t know what became of him or of his sister, who
was a waitress and a poet of profound depth and beauty. Certain things, certain
people, certain stories stick with me, in my soul, in my heart, in my mind, and
become a part of me. Love demands this; love of our fellow human beings, who
are not only as ourselves but are ourselves.
So I seem to have answered my own
question as to what may be the benefits of this most severe pain in my body. It
may be that pain opens the heart so that the pain of others may be enabled to
flow into our own heart, that we may be able to see that there is not “your
heart” and “my heart,” but, in truth, only our
heart. When I finally had to accept that my daughter had “severe and
profound” autism and that she would be and she would be, the walls around my
own heart crumbled and I felt myself to be the father of every single disabled
child in the world. One’s heart does not usually open willingly but its walls
are destroyed by the missiles of whatever life itself brings. And so, I prefer
to believe that the gods themselves send those missiles to open us up to all
life and expand us to include all life, which, I believe, is necessarily a most
painful process since all that we have come to believe to be ourselves is
absolutely destroyed. And in our devastation, we are shattered, but learn how
to rebuild ourselves with the pieces we choose
to pick up and put together in a better way until the next time. So I find that
I am able to have this pain that is so in my body speak for itself here. I had
no idea that this would happen, though I was guided by that same pain to come
to my desk here, sit down, and write these words. In this respect, my pain has
direction and it leads me. I could speak of pleasure and that I have had a life
of profound pleasure. But pleasure wants more pleasure. Pain, I do not think,
seeks more pain, rather, pain seeks to express itself and tell us another kind
of truth about ourselves and our existence. I would like to say that in this
expression of pain through me, through this mind and these fingers, the pain in
my body has diminished. It has; I am less pained in this moment, in body and
mind and feeling. If only it were so easy as that. But time will tell.
Friday, November 16, 2018
From "fragments" to "pieces of the mosaic eternal"
I have changed the blog title. Life is no longer “fragmentary” to me; it comes in
pieces, in colors—all integral pieces of what I call the “whole,” the “mosaic
eternal,” for, in time and space, it will come to be evident, though it is
evident now only to those who are able to see it in non-time and non-space,
which I am calling “eternal.” I suppose I have my own version of my own vision,
which I do not relate to any particular belief system, though I suppose I must
credit many of them for perhaps providing passing experiences of such “vision,”
which I have consequently used in the creation of my own.
I believe that one must be able to
“find peace” in one’s life, not by self-deception but by self-revelation,
self-discovery. If you will read my previous blog, you will see that I made the
following choice: “I would much rather have gods who are “task masters” (on my
own spiritually developmental behalf) and who care (in my own mind, if such
must be the case), rather than no gods at all, because I know I so often do not
know, am so distracted (by the drama of my own mind and emotions) and may be
too hurt or too angry to care (about myself) at all.”
As a result, I am finding that I am in
fact very much in a state of peace of mind, emotion, and body—which is rather
amazing to me, for I never expected it whatsoever.
THE FAITH I POSSESS
Life
and its demands, its requirements, its rules, its regulations, even its
well-worn patterns-become-beliefs-become-traditions demand their pounds of
flesh, their money and angst and submission. It is a deadly game played, a
stupefying and numbing game, a giving up of the soul in bits and pieces until
one must not only play but be … dead. The body itself requires that it be fed, that it’s teeth be cleaned, that it be made to
survive healthily as long as possible, that its bed be comfortable, though it
is the mind the requires that the body be attired fashionably and that it
maintain an attractiveness in society. It all requires the maintenance of a
certain level of control of all external and internal forces as if there could
actually be such a thing, as if we could respond instinctively and intuitively
and most appropriately to all stimuli, like a sunflower’s trope towards the
sun. And so we end up in contrivances of all sorts that will give us the
impression and belief that we are in control and possessing the image of
success, of this control, whatever it may be. If not material wealth and social
power and fame, then at least savoir
faire, a convincing pretence of such, or perhaps a little of each, though a
small amount of pretense properly applied can cover a surprisingly large area
and last a goodly amount of time.
I once more consider “taking all my
writings and publishing them in an actual book.” At least partly so that I can
bury or otherwise hide a few copies in a redwood trunk and then find that said
redwood trunk next lifetime so that I can be further bored out of my wits. If life cannot be “tongue and cheek(s),” it has no purpose. My life has
purpose. To be able to be self-denigrating in a most humorous manner allows me
the wherewithal to successfully denigrate other selves as well. But why? Why
would that be a life purpose? To remove the one thing we are most proud of and
that we hold onto to prove that we are worthwhile in this world: self-image.
Self-image, which is false at heart, self-deceitful, usually mean-spirited
(especially in its showy, smiling, goodness), superficial and simply stupid. We
are good creatures at heart though generally know no better in mind, though
which we sin against the God of our own being, not because we are evil but
because we just don’t know what’s real, because we are so utterly ignorant of
ourselves, especially of ourselves in the world. Even the world is not evil,
though the devil best dwells in our minds and souls here. To be in bodies with
which we come to identify is utter and complete temptation to become what we
are not, and to cause a rift, if not an abyss, between our true selves and our
false selves. We make wrong choices based in wrong identity, mistaken identity,
and only life itself, or, the gods acting upon us through the exigencies and
emergencies of life, has the effect of sloughing off our false skins and our
false notions and identities, returning us to a true semblance of our being. It
is not that there is “hope”; rather, it is that truth does will out in the end
in spite of us and our stupidities. And it is not that “life is cruel”; we
cannot blame life for our own blindness: life just comes at us, as it were, and
we just respond poorly until we finally learn, by trial and error and perhaps
even by divine grace, how to respond appropriately, according to our true
nature, true being.
Sunday, November 11, 2018
SAYING WHAT IS NOT SAID
Whenever
I write something, whenever I “make a point,” I am acutely aware that I am “opening Pandora’s box,” releasing so much more which has not been said. My so-called “thesis”
releases so many anti-theses. In making a “positive” statement, so many
negative statements are instantly revealed, though unwritten. David Miller
expressed such points of view, noting also the revelation of so many
“mis-takes.” To “say something,” one must “take a point of view,” “a position,”
that, by its very nature, is de-cisive, that is, “killing,” as it were, other
points of view which are also “true in themselves.” So, is it wiser or “truer”
to not delineate anything at all, but
to keep silent? Or is silence itself a particular point of view or position
taken? It would seem that silence could be a definite statement and not
representative of impartiality or a superior moral stance whatsoever. It seems
to me that silence can be quite active, with its own inherent agency. For
instance, if one does not vote as an expression of one’s disapproval, the
absence of that vote is a vote for the “other side.” Of course, there are those
who believe themselves to be “above it all,” and of the cosmological and
metaphysical “greater context” in which time and space and humanity and history
occur, so that they may deduce that “nothing matters” in such a context. I have
been of that mind and still often am, however, it is a fatalistic and
nilhilistic perspective that perceives one’s life and oneself as inherently
insignificant, if not even invisible to the point of non-existence. It is a
view that one is fated to nothingness, to be
nothing. And it is an absolutely false view in that it holds the individual as
somehow not a part of the whole, as not a participant in the unfolding of what
happens and of what is. In fact and logically, we are a part of “it all”; we
participate in the unfolding and expression of fate, of what happens, of life,
and of our own lives in particular. What we may call “God,” “the universe,” the
“Dao,” our “ground of being,” Self, or source, is not separate from us, not only
“out there,” but also “in here,” within ourselves. Of course, this brings up
the questions, “Well, then, just what are ‘we’”? and “Just how do we define ‘inner’
and ‘outer’”? Every thought we have digresses to another perhaps underlying
thought and endlessly so. Nothing can quite ever be explained, much less
understood in the way of explanations.
To come back to my original statement
that what we say reveals in its own particular way (which is not just “reading
between the lines” and surely not necessarily oppositional or paradoxical)
releases so much more of what is not said. I read somewhere that Wittgenstein
said of his writings, something to the effect that, “the value to be found in
this book is in not what I say, but what I do not say.” Forgive me for not
being able to find the exact quote. However, Wittgenstein does reflect, in Tractatus, my own points here and
elsewhere:
The sense of the world must lie outside the world. In the world
everything is as it is, and everything happens as it does happen: in it no
value exists—and if it did, it would have no value.
If there is any value that does have value, it must lie outside
the whole sphere of what happens and is the case. For all that happens and is
the case is accidental.
What makes it not-accidental cannot lie within the world,
since if it did it would itself be accidental.
And so it is clear that ethics cannot be put into words.
If we take eternity to mean no infinite temporal duration but
timelessness, the eternal life belongs to those who live in the present. Our
life has no end…
God does not reveal himself in the world.
(John
Gardner, Mickelsson’s Ghosts, Knopf,
1982, p.479)
Everything we think, believe, and say
is out of context because we do not, at least consciously, have a knowledge or
even really a grasp of the possible vastness or simplicity of context. Our
thoughts, and the thoughts of the “great minds” of religion and philosophy and
physics (for that matter) weave in and weave out, warp and woof, ebb and flow.
That which I present in my writing tends to be that which “arises within me” implicitly (to use Giegerich’s
descriptive term in The Soul’s Logical
Life, 45), or somewhat intuitively, which I then truly attempt to make explicit. If it simply provokes thought in the
reader, I am satisfied.
Friday, November 9, 2018
SOUL, IDENTITY, "LOCATION"
Just
where are we “located”? This is a “loaded” question, requiring a
multiplicity of answers.
First, there is the “we.” The many
“I”s. Theosophy (and Hinduism, in particular) present a person as consisting of
the physical body, the emotional (or astral) body, the mental body, the soul
(or embodied spirit). There are other sub-bodies, as it were, but this is
sufficient to work with. It is said that the soul, which is “higher” or
less dense than the other “bodies,” is inclusive of them. This implies that if
the physical body is eliminated at death, the soul still includes the emotional
and mental bodies, which is to say the feelings and thoughts (mind) of the
person who did exist, which thus both “individualizes” the soul and limits its
self-awareness, for it remains “tied” to specific feelings, thoughts, as well
as memories. Just because it is now absent the physical aspect neither makes it
“enlightened” or “purified,” for it remains “tainted” and even with a
personality. It still has a long road to haul, be it purging of that which is
false through the Catholic “purgatory,” or through myriad reincarnated lives.
Second, if, in fact, we are souls
(including mind, emotion, and body), or embodied spirit, just “where” is this.
Doesn’t spirit permeate the universal? Would it be equivalent to what we refer
to as “God,” that is, if it were purified to the extent that it was free of
ego, which is to say, self and self-reference, which is to say further, from thought,
feeling, and flesh? Wouldn’t it become as “pure energy” permeating the whole
universe and even universes? There have been Hindu holy people who have stayed
coma-like in meditation, maintained by devotees, apparently connected to their
body by a thread of consciousness only, and/or not even needing normal
nourishment. I have read of such things and known a few people who knew a few
other people. I take it as true. Over the years I too have had my own “out of
body” meditational and otherwise experiences, which took me out of my body and far
out into the universe. I don’t think it was sheer imagination or a dream-state.
I believe “I,” my consciousness, my self-awareness, traveled spatially great
distances. I have also noted elsewhere in these writings that I have traveled
through time, as it were, and experienced different reincarnations of my “own,”
that is, of this soul of which “I” am the current manifestation as the person I
am.
Third, so where am “I” (or we)
actually “located”? The answer lies in which level of being that we identify
ourselves as primarily existing in and in which our living experience actually occurs. A case in point: Over the last
ten years I have “moved” my “level of being” so that it is less
physically-identified, less emotionally-identified, and more mentally
identified and probably soul-identified. Very recently, I “returned” to a
specific situation which requires greater physical and emotional beingness
after a ten-year movement away from that kind of being. In that situation,
which was a bit surreal for me, I remembered how it used to be but is not now.
It was very clear to me that I had made such a shift out of necessity and out
of love. My point here is not to be enigmatic or vague, as it may appear, but
that this identity we have of “ourself” can express and manifest on many
different levels in many different, even very distant, “locations.”
It seems to me that we have a rather
habitual bias that “we” are definitely located in the physical body, since the
physical body is our primarily apparent locus of activity, even though our
locus of feeling and thought may be even more
primary than our body, especially if we consider that perhaps we have had many
physical bodies that have “dropped away” over the eons, but the emotional and
mental bodies have evolved and continued to develop for a very long time. We
may have forgotten that this is so, believing that it has always been a “clean
slate” upon each new birth, but there are many who realize that they have
carried feelings and thoughts, if not actual memories, from previous
existences. So it is that we have a “predisposition” to our physical existence,
which is also a biological predisposition with the purpose of survival of our
species, of “ourselves,” as we see it.
At this point I could digress into the
notion that “I” do not really exist but, rather, am a figment of my own imagination,
which begins to flow more towards the Buddhist way of seeing. But I won’t go
there for now. Rudolf Steiner’s view is that upon physical death, the soul “blasts”
(if I recall correctly) out of the body into the universe, literally passing the
planets and proceeding to the “edge” before being drawn back into the next body
into which it has reincarnated. I have no idea as to the veracity of this. It
could very well be that, for a physical body to be animated by a soul, that
soul must literally focus itself within that body and thus be “contained” for a
lifetime. Given some of my own experiences and that which I have read and
heard, I don’t believe that such energy is necessarily that contained. Is not
the whole notion of “enlightenment” one of one’s consciousness or awareness
going beyond, while still including, the physical body? Don’t the various “saints”
and shamans of religion “talk to God”? Of course, this leads me to “the cloud
of unknowing” of Meister Eckhardt, which I will not pursue here and now.
If an atom bomb exploded down the
street, my body would be instantly vaporized. But that would still leave me
right where I am. That’s how I see it. We think so many things to be certain,
when they are not at all.
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