Me too! Can't wait to see your findings,
Psybin. Please share some pics!
jamie wrote:This reality is not an illusion. It is real. You are here to testify this.
Yes, I am. We all are here to testify to this life we live and to our being existent. The I am Principle is all around us and within us each. This was never contested in my ramblings, rather, an attempt was expressed to suggest accessing the spiritual essence therein, intentionally peeking behind the curtain of presumed appearance and conditions of a static reality (perceived via the material senses and mind, if you will). Reality is many things to many people, animals, plants, minerals, gases, liquids and fundamental elements... so it is happening everywhere and is diversified beyond the scope of finite human understanding.
Some wisely suggest an ultimate reality cannot even exist, within the sentient mind conceptually or outside of the self parameters, cosmologically. Hence the ego-death undergone, as the seeker experiencing the Sacred, melts into the Clear Light of the Void and due to the fusion, an understanding blooms even as it loses the confines of a separate witness to the blooming effulgence of Divine Light, as naught truly exists that is not Sacred and within such a still vacuum. Ergo, I am. But despite the gravity of a clearly defined sense of self... I also, am not. Just whose dream is this, anyway?
This is the paradox and the nature of Maya or "illusion". That source of transparency and illumination remains eternally unborn and despite this truth, manifests immanently as the
All in All, refracting endlessly within the very same moment dawning. And this is not just an eastern idea, it is wholly universal. In western thought occurring simultaneous with the utterances of Gautama Buddha, Plato describes Socrates bold assertion about the nature of reality and illusion.
Greg Giles wrote: The Greek philosopher Plato, in his commentaries about the cave, attempts through allegory to explain the perception of most of the members of humanity who he saw as living their lives with no conception and no thought of what is truly behind the nature of our reality, or our illusion. Though Plato never alludes to the word "illusion", his provocative allegory of the cave surely demonstrates his philosophy that it is indeed an illusion what many perceive as their reality.
Plato describes the nature of our reality through the allegory of a cave where prisoners of the cave are chained so they may only view what is directly in front of them. What is only viewable to these prisoners are mere shadows on a wall and is not the true nature or secret of their reality.
Christopher Phillips wrote:The Socratic method is a way to seek truths by your own lights. It is a system, a spirit, a method, a type of philosophical inquiry an intellectual technique, all rolled into one. Socrates himself never spelled out a "method."
However, the Socratic method is named after him because Socrates, more than any other before or since, models for us philosophy practiced - philosophy as deed, as way of living, as something that any of us can do. It is an open system of philosophical inquiry that allows one to interrogate from many vantage points.
Wise ole Socrates. Where then, can any reality be found or any paradigm experienced that is not impermanent and cloaked in the veiled mirage of the subjective comprehension of one's own relative perception? John C. Lily and
gibran2 believe that there cannot be a fixed ultimate state of reality, as we understand it in human terms To quote Dr. John,
"Each paradigm of reality is superseded by the next, more expanded paradigm and level of reality. It's endless. There is no ultimate state of reality because such a state would by necessity, be ever-changing, limitless and therefore, immeasurable." Reality is a measurement of what is truly REAL and is tangible to oneself, yet, said "reality" is but a tiny fraction of the total realm of potentiaty, which curiously remains quite ineffable... while it symbiotically, exists on multifarious planes of conscious-awareness and within a seemingly limitless explosion of an infinity of parallel existential possibilities. So, yes I also agree wholly here,
reality is real. Just as
unreality is unreal. Therefore, to have
reality being real, there must also exist the aspect of illusion masquerading as reality. Here is where the dance of semantics come fully into play.
As illusion and reality seem somewhat at odds with one another, you can't feasibly have one without the other. Much like the seamless balance within the dynamic human field of individual consciousness, there is undeniably the presence of a juxtaposition of reason and intuition, the quantifiable known and the Grand Mystery, the relative phenomenon and the deeper movement which eludes our mortal grasp.
And the earlier parable presented about there being an awakening to the interior reality within the exterior reality, this world being the material reality. Within this vibratory field lies the astral, the causal and the indivisible plane of one's epicentrical mind-self. I honestly feel that it is of utmost importance to accept that as we dream-out our own bloom of existence, we also have the innate power to shift our own attention, to change our perception and to perceive of myriads bands of direct knowledge. And while it can come off as negating the concrete concept of the physical plane's solidity... granted, this is no reason to stand so firm to what may well indeed be but a passing dreamscape, that the immersion into the Oneness remains a subjective experience.
Reality is like a mirror. Each of us sees something entirely unique when we glance into the reflection of what we have become conditioned to believe our mortal body is. So we each get a different picture. But on a minute, microscopic level, what exists lies unseen to the self inhabiting the dream-body or our personal, earthly self. We exist on many levels simultaneously and this is proven by science every day in clinical research.
So yes, regardless of the personal earthly self's total obviousness of the microscopic, atomic and sub-atomic states inside of themselves, collective being is what we are, meanwhile we are fundamentally the very surface part of the miracle of our own existential paradigm... And on it's own terms, it too is real. Essentially, the mirror is "reality" for everything and yet, it is not the same for everything. Thus, "illusion" shadows the known and this hardly makes one lose appreciation for the play of nature and the dance of the cosmos. It only heightens, wihtou limiting it, the interconnection that everything inherently shares, being a reflection of the singularity of the whole.
jamie wrote:A state of mystical union does not cancel out the relevance of this reality of cause and effect, even if the cause remains present within the effect, and vice versa.
Agreed. We still spend a considerable part of our experience maintaining our material shells and throughout this process, the eternal resides therein. We eat, sleep, clean ourselves, feed our emotions, educate ourselves, procreate and work hard to earn our living. Why so? Because it's natural and simply happens automatically, unfolding in waves, sprouting rhythmically within the universal pulse. Sure, survival is both instinctual and a leaning process but upon entering the vortexial fulcrum of the whiteout experience, all is seen as Brahman. This oneness makes every relative phenomenon also That. Atman is Brahman and internal harmony is the only way to be buoyant within this ever expanding field of direct immersion, the eclipsing of the observer and the observed.
This is the crux of Gnosis, to my small understanding... getting lost in the merging or the "enlightenment". Emptiness in fullness is emptiness, ad infinitum. We are blessed to so touch the place where all distinctions vanish and God or The Unified Field, hums along resplendently. Ideally, we then become what Sakyamuni implored of us,
being lights unto ourselves. Here in the blinding power of the light, there is no true individualized self. 'Tis beyond the mesmerizing phantom of impermanence and/or Mayic illusion. It cannot be divided, as it is pure Sacred Being. Only the separate self was the illusion.
Lord Buddha spoke of Anatman or no truly separate, isolated self. Everything is interconnected. It was just a dream. Chang Tzu reiterated this parable about dreaming. Thus, the scope is simply expanded and exponentially so. But in practical terms we don't walk into rush hour traffic or put our bare hands into the flame. Our journey is one of balanced integration. Thus finite houses the infinite. It's bones are eternal. Samadhi reveals that they are one and the same. We are quintessentially all the same energy. There is no real other. And admittedly, without returning to the individuated frequency of oneself, the direct knowledge of this experience is also remains unknowable and most unreal (illusory), for without duality present nothing makes any sense, right?
So we rise into the blinding source of all that is and are erased by the journey. Thus, we are reborn to a clear remembrance of always having been ONE, of having been the very cause and the effect of choosing to be conscious of existing. We create "reality" with every thought, feeling and action. Witness and witnessed fuse into a euphoric silence. At least it appears as so from my windowsill, effulgently shimmering frequencies of Divine light, pouring into all that exists but never being caught for long within the web of becoming, the game of manifestation. Retaining the absolute freedom and substantiating everything else simultaneously.
Mystical experiences only nurture the balance betwixt the mortal and the immortal aspects of oneself. This may be a dream but despite its' inherent impermanence, the infinite shows a trace of joy from the sheer merging, the keen attunement to this moment, the only moment there has been, now exists and will ever be. It's really good to be here now. Awakening to this timeless constant, itself constantly changing into something new, forevermore free of any bondage or clinging to self suffering. Instead of Namaste, let me just say that you folks totally rock!!!
There is no self to which I cling, for I am one with everything.