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Let Each Shine By Their Own Light

Brief philosophical and spiritual oriented essays written from the mindset that ultimately each person must seek within for their own answers.

June 27, 2008

Mediation Part Two (The Secret of Meditation)

Filed under: Meditation, Uncategorized — Tags: — evette @ 5:21 am

Do you want to become more spiritually enlightened; feel more connected to the people and things around you; or even relieve yourself of mental and physical stress? One of the top recommendations for all of the above aspirations is meditate. But what does this mean exactly? What is meditation? Images of some tranquil faced person, donned in relaxed attire, sitting in the lotus position is a commonly conjured impression when thinking of the idea of meditation. And while such an image may indeed be apt, it unfortunately does very little to actually convey an understanding about what meditation really is. Pictures may only hint at meditative techniques (or rather strategies which might make your mind more conducive towards meditation). And while a lot can be said for the benefits of any number of different meditative techniques, meditation is strictly an internal activity. Which means pictures have very little to offer as far as offering an explanation as to what takes place in meditation. Never confuse technique with intent; for though there may be numerous methods of meditation, the intent of meditation is always the same. Be present. Of all the many definitions of meditation (and yes there are plenty of them), the intent that underscores them all is actually one. Be present.

For example, let’s look at the following definitions of meditation:

Meditation means “consciously directing your attention to alter your state of consciousness.”
Question: What is this state of consciousness to be realized?
Answer: To be present.

“Meditation is a discipline in which one attempts to get beyond the conditioned, ‘thinking’ mind into a deeper state of relaxation or awareness.”
Question: What is this deeper state of relaxation and / or awareness?
Answer: Being present.

Meditation means “continuous thought and reflection” or “intent observance.” Question: Continuous thought and reflection or intent observance to what end?
Answer: To being present.

Be present. Be present Be present. That truly is all there really is to meditation. Simply be present. But how does one go about being present? Now this I cannot really explain to you. I’m actually of the opinion that trying to teach someone how to meditate by telling them what to do is like trying to teach someone how to swallow or inhale by employing the same approach. Words are inadequate to the task. Being present is just one of those somethings that you will only understand by getting a natural feel for it. What’s more, it is only by recognizing the experience of what being present is that you grow in your ability to induce the meditative state at will. And even though words may be inadequate to the task of explaining how to be present, words are extremely valuable in describing what it is to be present.

Being present is just as natural a tendency as swallowing or inhaling. You fall into and out of this state of consciousness all the time while washing the dishes, drifting off to sleep, walking in the park, riding a roller coaster, using the bathroom… You do not need to be taught how to be present. You merely need to learn to recognize what being present is in order to become a proficient meditator. And to that end, consider this…

Think of a time in your experience when you felt wholly engrossed in the moment. When you felt completely engaged in whatever event was before you for no other motive than you loved just being. You didn’t care about how things were going, you weren’t trying to make anything happen, you had no agenda, you were worried about nothing, expecting nothing, regretting nothing, you weren’t dwelling wistfully over times gone by or trying to distract yourself from the experience of an unpleasant feeling. You were quite simply and unconditionally enraptured with the moment; emotionally engaged in what was going on before you yet mentally impartial about the outcome. You were just content to be.

Can you recall such a moment in your experience? True these moments may be fleeting, they often whisk by us unappreciated, but I assure you we do all experience these flashes. They occur everyday. The thing is to get in the habit of noticing of them, acknowledging them. These are the moments which show us what it is to be present. Meditation is about deliberately producing these moments. How do you do this? The answer may seem vague, but it’s the one that’s most proper. You just do it.

When you meditate you are making a conscious commitment to think in terms which will evoke the experience of being present. Again, I cannot tell you how to do this, but I can assure you that in your learning to recognize these moments as they involuntarily occur, you will instinctually become aware of what you need to do to voluntarily make these experiences occur.

There is definitely no shortage of ideas on meditative techniques “out there.” I say go ahead and experiment with them to your heart’s content. If you need to feel grounded in a process of focusing on your breath or on chanting or whatever have you, that’s quite okay. Ritual is a good way to get yourself in the mood for meditation. Ritual is good practice for meditation because practice is a precursor to actually living out a desired experience. But in all your experimentation with these different meditative techniques, might I suggest that you always remain mindful of the underlying intent of what meditation is. Always be mindful that the objective is to be present. Also, as you are going about your day, from this moment forward might I also suggest that you resolve to be diligent about consciously acknowledging those moments in your experience where you have unconsciously slipped into a period of being present. These acknowledgements will go a long way towards teaching you the secret to meditation. They will do more to this end than any amount of words could ever do. That’s what makes it such a good secret.

June 19, 2008

Meditation

Filed under: Meditation, Uncategorized — Tags: — evette @ 1:19 pm

How can I become more spiritually aware? Is there anything that I can do to facilitate my spiritual growth? The time-honored advice in answer to these questions is meditate. But what exactly does this mean, I used to wonder. What is meditation? I was bothered by this question for a long time before I finally decided to devote the time to realize a deeper answer than what I then understood. I had had some vague notion of meditation involving setting aside some time each day to be still and quiet my mind but I had always felt unsatisfied with this shallow understanding. I’m a person who likes depth. And for me, this idea of meditation was too broad and too thin to be meaningful to me. It seemed only to give way to more questions such as well what does it mean to quiet the mind? And does quieting the mind mean I’m supposed to try not to think? And how would not thinking even be possible? And even if not thinking was possible, where was I supposed to find the massive amount of inspiration that I was sure would be necessary to motivate me to repeatedly subject myself to (even temporarily) live in such a state? Life without thought sounded mind-numbingly dull and uninteresting to me. If this was what meditation involved, I saw no hope for my taking a serious interest in it no matter how time-honored the advice was. To my relief, however, I eventually came to realize that “being still and quieting the mind” actually has nothing to do with a cessation of thought.

In meditation the objective is to take your focus off of any thought which is colored by memory (past experience) or tainted by expectation (future speculation) and simply be present. Meditation is not about ridding the mind of all thought, but rather about ridding the mind of all destructive thoughts (thoughts polluted by the consideration of past and future as true features of reality). Meditation is about changing the terms of your thinking as opposed to trying to suspend all thinking. When you commit yourself to not bringing along, but instead setting aside, limitation, this is meditation. And it is by abandoning your preconceived notions, that you set aside limitation. It is by abandoning your expectations, that you set aside limitation. It is by abandoning your labels and suppositions and simply observing reality without bias and without attempting to usurp control over whatever is before you, that you set aside limitation. And it is only when you do set aside limitation that you then enter into the meditative state. This state effectively creates an unbound, uncluttered space where You (the Spirit) may consciously commune and communicate with you (the personality). It provides the space for a meeting of yourselves (so to speak). The only thing that is required of you in meditation is that you give yourself over to freethinking. In meditation you must assume nothing, lay aside all memory and drink in your present experience as if everything is completely brand new to you. In short, you must be present. You must, for a moment at least, stop dragging around your baggage of past hurts, past regrets and present moment measuring sticks based on past experiences; you must, for a moment at least, stop formulating your laundry list of worries about the future, hopes about the future and present moment measuring sticks based on future expectations; you must, for a moment at least, simply let be and allow whatever may be to be. This is meditation.

It doesn’t matter what the subject of your meditation is, the objective is always the same. Whether you choose to meditate on your breath, on an idea, on an object, on a sound, on whatever, all subjects of meditation invariably lead to the same unbound, uncluttered space where You (the Spirit) may consciously commune and communicate with you (the personality). The subject of your meditation is merely a starting focal point, one of countless currents that flow into the same infinite expanse. When meditation is the method used to reach this expanse, the objective is to be present with your chosen idea, or to be present with your chosen object, or to be present with your breath or to be present with whatever have you. Just be present. This is meditation. Just be present.

June 12, 2008

A Brief Reflection (4) Patience - Contentment - Acceptance

Filed under: A Brief Reflection, Uncategorized — Tags: — evette @ 2:06 pm
Patience is the practice of finding contentment exactly where you are
Contentment arises from the application of acceptance
(in being where you’re at)
Acceptance antecedes any manner of tempered change

June 7, 2008

Faith and Intuition

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: — evette @ 3:25 pm

Two years ago actress Gabrielle Union, in an interview with Oprah, spoke about the day she had been raped. She was 19 years old at the time and was working at a shoe store. One evening, around closing time, a man came into the store. “Within seconds, Gabrielle says she knew something was wrong…but she stayed silent. ‘As women, we’re raised to be polite and you don’t want anybody to feel bad…but my body, my instinct, everything in my being was saying, ‘Run. Just run out of the store,’ she says. Moments later, the man had her co-worker at gunpoint.” He later raped Gabrielle.

“In her well research and documented book, Psi Trek, sociologist Laile Bartlett gives a number of examples of how intuition has saved lives. She tells the story, for example, of a nineteen year old girl, Elaine, getting ready to board a bus for an important trip. Suddenly Elaine had an overwhelming urge to visit her mother instead. She switched buses and headed in the opposite direction, toward her parents’ furniture store. All the way on the trip she found herself anxious to get there. When she arrived, she found her parents sitting in some chairs near the store’s front window. She felt silly about her bizarre feeling of apprehension. Yet she managed to convince her surprised parents to leave the store to get some lunch with her. As they left through the back of the store, a car crashed through the front window, demolishing the chairs where her parents had been sitting.”
-An excerpt from Henry Reed’s book entitled Edgar Cayce on Channeling Your Higher Self

Jennifer Baltz writes in an article about intuition of a woman she met while on board a flight to Phoenix. She was having a conversation with this woman who was a former flight attendant. This woman told her that, “she had been on an international run for many months, traveling from San Francisco in a loop with overnight stopovers in several destinations, then back to San Francisco again. One night at one of the stopovers, she became sick to her stomach and decided that she wasn’t up to continuing on the flight the next morning. In fact, she decided that she was going to quit flying, period–which she had been thinking about doing for some months. Her crewmates continued on without her, and the plane crashed–killing everyone on board.”

What do all of these stories have in common? All of the people in these stories experienced an intense feeling that was urging them to act in a way which, at the moment of their having the feeling, probably seemed to defy reason. The flight attendant in Jennifer’s story had felt the sensation so acutely that she literally became sick to her stomach which resulted in her not boarding the flight of a fatal plane crash. The woman Laile Bartlett spoke of felt so unnerved by the intensity of the feeling she felt that she was willing to overlook both her embarrassment and logical assessment of the situation that was probably telling her that she was simply letting her imagination run away with her. And because this woman was willing to set logic aside and follow her intuition, she saved the lives of her parents. Gabrielle Union chose to dismiss the intense feeling she felt in favor of heeding to a value that she had been taught since childhood – that it’s not polite for young ladies to be rude. The result was a personal tragedy.

Many of us, all too often, make the same mistake Gabrielle did. Most of the time this failure to act on a feeling (which at the time seems in opposition to reason) doesn’t lead to such dramatically tragic ends, but some degree of adversity is always the result. We too often choose to be led, first and foremost, by reason. In doing this we effectively deny the value of faith - faith being knowing without reason. “For faith is not a product of reason; faith is the (very) foundation of reason (faith transcends reason)…Reason always falls into place behind faith,” - Divine Heritage. With faith, the why always comes after the what. And if we didn’t so frequently insist on knowing the why of everything first we could probably prevent ourselves from introducing an enormous amount of unnecessary complication into our lives. If we didn’t so concern ourselves with how foolish our actions might appear in the eyes of others if it does indeed turn out that our feeling is in err, then we would probably act on our faith all the time. If you learn not to stress yourself about how you might appear in the eyes of others and choose to act on faith you will find that “miracles” do occur everyday (not just in the world in general, but directly to you specifically). If you learn not to rely on reason to substantiate your feelings, you will come to know that there is indeed a wise Something that is not only watching over you, but is constantly offering you guidance (if you would only choose to heed it).

Things don’t have to make immediate sense. This is faith. It’s okay if the wisdom of an action follows the actual action. This too is faith. Be careful, however, not to confound the idea of faith with the notion of wishful thinking. There is a world of difference in pursuing a certain course of action (even though it may fly in the face of any reasonable justification which you may be presently aware of) because you are desperately wanting something to be true; and pursuing a certain course of action (even though it may fly in the face of any reasonable justification which you may be presently aware of) just because… When you have a vested interest in the outcome of your actions, you are not acting out of faith; you are acting out of hope. Not that there is anything wrong with hope (without hope we would be all incurable pessimists) – but hope and faith are not synonymous expressions.

Learn to have confidence in this light that guides you and you will be a follower of faith.

Come Back Anytime








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