Guest guest Posted August 1, 2008 Report Share Posted August 1, 2008 the whole nature of ego and no-ego has been confusing to me. my former teacher Swami G was all about no ego no ego no ego, you do not exist, and that confused me. it made no sense to me. Chrism's article here really helped me to understand http://www.kundaliniawakeningsystems1.com/kundalini-death-of-ego.html I recently was reading Ken Wilber and found this chapter to be an awesome and poetic description of what egoloss really means. hope you guys don't mind the long read its worth it! " Precisely because the ego, the soul, and the Self can all be present simultaneously, we can better understand the real meaning of " egolessness. " A notion that has caused an inordinate amount of confusion. But egolessness does not mean the absence of a functional self (that's a psychotic, not a sage); it means that one is no longer exclusively identified with that self. One of the many reasons we have trouble with the notion of " egoless " is that people want their " egoless sages " to fulfill all their fantasies of " saintly " or " spiritual " , which means dead from the neck down, without fleshy wants or desires, gently smiling all the time. All of the things that people typically have trouble with – money, food, sex relationships, desire – they want their saints to be without. " Egoless sages " are " above all that " , is what people want. Talking heads is what they want. Religion, they believe, will simply get rid of all baser instincts, drive, and relationships, and hence they look to religion, not for advice on how to live life with enthusiasm, but on how to avoid it, repress it, deny it, escape it. In other words, the typical person wants the spiritual sage to be " less than a person " somehow devoid of all the messy, juicy, complex, pulsating, desiring, urging forces that drive most human beings. We expect our sages to be an absence of all that drives us! All the things that frighten us, confuse us, torment us, confound us: we want our sages to be untouched by them altogether. And that absence, that vacancy, that " less than personal " is what we often mean by " egoless " But " egoless " does not mean " less than personal " it means " more than personal " Not personal minus, but personal plus – all the normal personal qualities, plus some transpersonal ones. Think of the great yogis, saints, and sages – from Moses to Christ to Padmasambhava. They were not feeble mannered milquetoasts, but fierce movers and shakes – from bullwhips in the Temple to subduing entire countries. They rattled the world on its own terms, not in some pie-in the sky piety. Many of them instigated massive social revolutions that have continued for thousands of years. And they did so, not because they avoided the physical, emotional, and mental dimension of humanness, and the ego that is their vehicle, but because they engaged them with a drive and intensity that shook the world to its very foundations. No doubt, they were also plugged into the soul (deeper psychic) and spirit (formless Self) – the ultimate source of their power – but they expressed that power, and gave it concrete results, precisely because they dramatically engaged the lower dimensions through which that power could speak in terms that could be heard by all. These great movers and shakes were not small egos; they were, in the very best ssense of the term, big egos, precisely because the ego (the functional vehicle of the gross realm) can and does exist alongside the soul (the vehicle of the subtle) and the Self (the vehicle of the causal). To the extent these great teachers moved the gross realm, they did so with their egos, because the ego is the functional vehicle of that realm. They were not however identified merely with their egos (that's a narcissist); they simply found their egos plugged into a radiant Kosmic source. The great yogis, saints, and sages accomplished so much precisely because they were not timid little toadies but great big egos, plugged into the dynamic Ground and Goal of the Kosmos itself, plugged into their own higher Self, alive to the pure Atman (the pure I-I) that is one with Brahman' they opened their mouths and the world trembled, fell to its knees, and confronted its radiant God. Saint Teresa was a great contemplative? Yes and Saint Teresa is the only woman ever to have reformed an entire Catholic monastic tradition. Gautama Buddha shook India to its foundations. Rumi, Plotinus, Bodhidharma, Lady Tsogyal, Lao Tzu, Plato, the Baal Shem Tov – these men and women started revolutions in the gross realm that lasted hundreds, sometimes thousands of years, something neither Marx nor Lenin nor Locke nor Jefferson can yet claim. And they did not do so because they were dead from the neck down. No, they were monumentally, gloriously, divinely big egos, plugged into a deeper psychic, which was plugged straight into God. There is certainly a type of truth to the notion of transcending ego; it doesn't mean destroy the ego, it means plug it into something bigger. As Nagarjuna put it, in the relative world, atman is real, in the absolute, neither atman nor anatman is real. Thus in neither case is anatta a correct description of reality. The small ego does not evaporate; it remains as the functional center of activity in the conventional realm. As I said, to lose that ego is to become a psychotic, not a sage. Transcending the ego thus actually means to transcend but include the ego in a deeper and higher embrace, first in the soul or deeper psychic, then with the Witness or primordial Self, then with each previous stage taken up, enfolded, included, and embraced in the radiance of One Taste. And that means we do not " get rid " of the small ego, but rather we inhabit it fully, live it with verve, use it as the necessary vehicle through which higher truths are communicated. Soul and Spirit include body, emotions, and mind' they do not erase them. Put bluntly, the ego is not an obstruction to Spirit, but a radiant manifestation fo Spirit. All Forms are not other than Emptiness, including the form of the ego. It is not necessary to get rid of the ego, but simply to live with it a certain exuberance. When identification spills out of the ego and into the Kosmos at large, the ego discovers that the individual Atman is infact all of a piece with Brahman. The big Self is indeed no small ego, and thus, to the extent you are stuck in your small ego, a death and transcendence is required. Narcissists are simply people whose egos are not yet big enough to embrace the entire Kosmos, and so they try to be central to the Kosmos instead. The integral sage, the non dual sage, is here to show us otherwise. Known generally as " tantric " these sages insist on transcending life by living it. They insist on finding release by engagement, finding nirvana in the midst of samsara. Finding total liberation by complete immersion. Indeed, the whole point is to be fully at home in the body and its desires, the mind and its ideas, the spirit and its light. To embrace them fully, evenly, simultaneously, since all are equally gestures of the One and Only taste. To inhabit lust and watch it play; to enter ideas and follow their brilliance; to be swallowed by Spirit and awaken to a glory that time forgot to name. Body and mind and spirit, all contained, equally contained, in the ever present awareness that grounds the entire display. In the stillness of the night, the Goddess whispers. In the brightness of the day, dear God roars. Life pulses, mind imagines, emotions wave, thoughts wander. What are all these but the endless movements of One taste, forever at play with its own gestures, whispering quietly to all who would listen: is this not you yourself? When the thunder roars, do you not hear your Self? When the lightning cracks, do you not see your Self? When clouds float quietly across the sky, is this not your very own limitless Being, waving back at you? " The Essential Ken Wilber pgs 31-35, original chapter from One Taste Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 1, 2008 Report Share Posted August 1, 2008 At 02:54 PM 8/1/2008, you wrote: But egolessness does not mean the absence of a functional self (that's a psychotic, not a sage); it means that one is no longer exclusively identified with that self. There is not a single living teacher who has completely overcome their own ego - it is the ones who claim to have done so that I am most skeptical of. Brandi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 1, 2008 Report Share Posted August 1, 2008 According to Vedanta, Ego or Ahamkar is one identifying oneself with the body-mind complex. If one realises on an experiential level, that one is a spiritual being, immortal and eternal, then the Ego disappears forever. --- On Sat, 2/8/08, Brandi Jasmine <jazztalk wrote:Brandi Jasmine <jazztalkRe: Ego? No ego? whaaaaaaaaat? Date: Saturday, 2 August, 2008, 8:56 AM At 02:54 PM 8/1/2008, you wrote: But egolessness does not mean the absence of a functional self (that's a psychotic, not a sage); it means that one is no longer exclusively identified with that self. There is not a single living teacher who has completely overcome their own ego - it is the ones who claim to have done so that I am most skeptical of. Brandi Unlimited freedom, unlimited storage. Get it now Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 2, 2008 Report Share Posted August 2, 2008 Besides, having an ego makes the cheeseburgers ever so much tastier. Seriously, the ego is there for a reason and cannot be annihilated without losing connection with reality. Spirituality must be balanced by ego, or it cannot be shared. Peter , Brandi Jasmine <jazztalk wrote: > > At 02:54 PM 8/1/2008, you wrote: > >But egolessness does not mean the absence of a functional > >self (that's a psychotic, not a sage); it means that one is no longer > >exclusively identified with that self. > > There is not a single living teacher who has completely overcome their own ego - it is the ones who claim to have done so that I am most skeptical of. > > Brandi > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 2, 2008 Report Share Posted August 2, 2008 At 12:59 AM 8/2/2008, you wrote: According to Vedanta, Ego or Ahamkar is one identifying oneself with the body-mind complex. If one realises on an experiential level, that one is a spiritual being, immortal and eternal, then the Ego disappears forever. As a philosophical exercise limited exclusively to that definition, yes, I can accept this, up to the " forever " part. In the real world, I just haven't ever encountered such a being. Everyone I have met claiming this seems to have been quite egotistical in proclaiming it. I have had experiences where I realized I am an immortal, spiritual being, part of the Universal One, and I retain that belief, but my experience of being free of ego was quite temporary. Had I stayed in that state, I don't know that I'd be capable of communicating with you now. In any case, that was not the meaning which was conveyed when the word " ego " was used here. " Ego " as defined by Wikipedia (in part) is " The Ego comprises that organized part of the personality structure which includes defensive, perceptual, intellectual-cognitive, and executive functions. " The word " ego " was used in this thread initially, and it is often used as an insulting pejorative epithet to indicate a form of narcissism (as in " egotistical " or " selfish " ). I found this particular charge rather bizarre, as I find him to be a quite agreeable, humble guy who has gone out of the way to assert his ordinary human status. The way I see it, claiming to be utterly free of ego is an act of ego. Accusing another of egotism ... is an act of ego. Every time I use the word " I " in a sentence, my ego is engaged. Every act of perception is an act of ego. Transcending ego is not the same as eliminating ego. It's the same process with fear. There are some things it is wise to fear. Ego is a necessary part of consciousness, we would not be self-aware without it. What I can do is transcend it. Chose to act with love despite fear. Chose to act with love despite ego. This for me is the meaning of transcending ego. Brandi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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