You're welcome everyone, glad it was thought provoking (or the opposite).
First off, just wanted to give my own background. The first time I ever sat down to meditate, about a year and a half ago, this started happening to me spontaneously. It scared the living HELL out of me. Thought I was going nuts or that the universe was gonna suck me out of my skin at any moment. Eventually I got the guts to try it again and started meditating regularly. These sorts of experiences started happening every one or two months. And sometimes I would go there during daily life.
I've had a few periods where I've "rolled up the mat" out of frustration, but every time so far, I've returned to sitting and worked through it. Those are some of the most beautiful times, when you say, "The hell with it," but then, grudgingly, go back and dissolve once again.
But I'm not a guru. I thought I was for a little while, but fortunately life has a way of humbling you. I have a lot of things to work through (A LOT), and I question the whole guru game in the first place. Mostly because there are a lot of desperate people out there who cling to an authority figure's every word, and this can become very unhealthy very quickly.
WarriorSage:
Quote:I try my best to even live by silent thought,
Beautiful.
Life is an amazing (and sometimes ferocious) sandbox to play around in, and daily life is the perfect place to keep putting the blocks together and see how many different ways they'll fit.
Daedaloops (great name by the way, tho I don't know if it's a reference to anything):
You're absolutely right. Every single human being is completely different and comparison can be very stressful and silly. A good way to smash the tendency to compare oneself (especially in the case of "gurus" or "authorities" ) is to see that there's no way to know what anyone else's experience is like. Even if you're standing right next to someone, there's no way to know what it's like to see through their eyes, there's no way to know if they're seeing the same color blue that you are. And even if they describe their experience to you, all that you have to interpret their words is your own experience thus far. You can never get beyond your own experience. Some people take that to the point of solipsism, some people, myself included, are more agnostic.
But either way, every way I look at it, I am alone as the universe I experience. This can be incredibly relaxing. It means I don't have to consider anyone else's beliefs or "shoulds" or "shouldn'ts", no matter what authority they claim to have. No one else can blow my nose for me or scrub my armpits.
daedaloops wrote:
The thing is I have reached some kind of vibrational states, or it was more like synchronized body chills combined with vibrations and the feeling of falling, but it's scary as hell when there isn't that psychedelic to keep forcefully pushing you further. And I can't even remember what I did to induce those vibrational states, so everytime it's like starting from scratch. But from what I read , I guess it should get easier to memorize the mental cues and such.
I'm there with you. I can't do this on command and there's no map for how to "get there." That's why it's tricky to try and write up a cheat sheet, because it's just something you feel your way into. What you describe (body chills, vibrations, and the feeling of falling) sounds right on the money to me. But, I know for myself, I can't go lusting after those sensations, I have to take time, maybe an hour or more, to slow myself down and then those things start happening spontaneously when I start to focus harder on the "I," my identity.
A great way to slow down is also to place all of your attention on the feeling of the breath passing through your nostrils, in and out, and then every time anything distracts you from it, don't freak out, but patiently return the attention to the breath. . . over and over and over and over and over and over. Try it until the breath becomes the entire universe. THEN look for the "I" who is looking.
Anyway, the reason why I continually stressed that none of it can be put into words is because. . . well, I know what it's like to be seeking so hard that you hang on every word some "guru" or whatever says, and you get totally caught up on the description. As you know, words are not the experiences they point to. In fact, if you take a step back, what's really mind blowing is that language as a whole is a self-contained thing (and it's what the ego is made out of, "memory/language"
.
Here's a fun experiment. Sit or stand in a room and ask, "What isn't a word?" Watch every time thoughts try to answer it. Thoughts are language, so the nature of the question destroys itself and. . . _________.
...
Oh and Adyashanti was one of the speakers I used to listen to a lot a year ago when I first discovered meditation.
My favorites though are Alan Watts, J. Krishnamurti, U. G. Krishnamurti (sometimes
), and my biggest inspiration (who I steal everything from) Benjamin Smythe. But I've learned to be very careful because it can be easy to fall into the trap of thinking someone else has "found the truth" or "knows the way," which IMO is ridiculous. There is no "way." Obviously we can share, but, as I said before, communication is tricky, and no words can ever
really be true.
I'm very happy that I started such a fun thread (if you couldn't tell by my word explosions).
Peace, cheers, and all that!
EDIT:
I want to add one more thing to everything I have said so far. This is sort of the "other side of the coin" to everything above.
While vibrations and intense experiences are incredible, they don't always happen. . . . The truth is that there is no ego, never has been and never will be. There's nothing really to obtain or do in any kind of ultimate, urgent way.
Life, fundamentally is not a problem to be solved or a question to be answered. Language invents the question, so then it's assumed that there must be an answer, and the organism goes looking. But the question is really just nothing. After the search wears you out enough, remember that you can relax without any answers, or knowledge, or realization, or attainment, or special state, or purpose, or path, or understanding, or truth, or experience, or any of it.
It's relaxation for it's own sake, without any cause or reward or justification. But who wants that?
And that is maybe what some people call enlightenment, I don't know or really care.
Everything, including what we think of as "me," is just happening, even the most personal, seemingly "egoic" stuff, is synonymous with the impersonal movement of "god," being, the universe, the big bang, whatever.
But again, I say this at the same time, paradoxically, as I say, meditation is highly, highly recommended.
An hour a day is what I stick to.
Quote:I have come to believe that in the world there is nothing to explain the world.
―Loren Eiseley