Guest guest Posted March 1, 1999 Report Share Posted March 1, 1999 Gloria; We can examine this matter from two perspectives: one's experience and nondual philosophy. Experience goes first, cause it is most important. One goes to the opera. One cannot understand, perhaps, the words, but one loves the beauty of the voices. The divine music sends thrills through the body. It is much like this when experiencing the world as the Voice of the Mother. One loves the Voice but one may not understand the words. What is most real about reality? The Mother's Voice is Permanent, universal, Real. The words of Mother's song are transitory. We love the words not only for the words themselves-which we may or may not understand--or appreciate, but for the experience of the Sensation of the Mother's Voice (Manifest Reality). It's like having a cake--and falling in love with the cake. Eating the cake is an added bonus., but not essential to our love of the cake for its own sake. Like you, I love the world that I see and hear. Impermanent reality, is equally as real and marvelous as Unmanifest Reality--especially when one considers that it is all our very own body, our own voice. The realization we arrive at is that it is the activity of tasting, hearing, seeing, feeling that we love. When we fall in love with the activity of Awareness we do change. Sounds that we once heard and registered as annoying become less noticeable--seem to disappear. If one asked you, isn't that sound annoying, you might reply--"Yes, I suppose so. I hadn't noticed." One may not enjoy each and every individual scent or flavor, but one falls so in love with aroma, with taste, that one simply doesn't eat what one may not like--an takes no notice or thought about 'hating' this flavor or that. One's discernment doesn't depart, as one falls in love with Awareness, but the doer and the done tend to just disappear into the love of doing--for its own sake. Monks in India have been witnessed smearing their bodies with feces. It is not the particular odor of feces that they love, it is the marvelous activity of Awareness that smell Is. And so, even shit smells good when one loves the Awareness that is Smell. Kashmir Shaivism often uses the term 'ignorance'. The Shiva Sutras say that Universal Awareness is One's own nature. Ignorance is being unaware of Universal Awareness as one's own nature. Universal Awareness means just that: universal--excluding nothing. The nondual Shaivism of Kashmir teaches that Universal Awareness is Creative--active: dynamic. Swami Chetanananda writes admirably about this in his texts, Dynamic Stillness. But from my own perspective, his books while very practical and useful, do not always effectively characterize how one's consciousness transforms when transformation occurs. This is important because when one hears the Zen Buddhist speak of No-mind, the nondual Shaivite will understand this precisely--by virtue of Her experience of setting aside the sensations of her particular mind, body and ego, and recognizing the Source of all experiencing. In perfect stillness, she discovers absolute perception--and cannot help but fall in love with all that she perceives. She will realize that her perception is Her own nature as Perceiving, that She is Perfect Awareness of Her own Sensation Body. Why is She creative? Because this is Her nature as extraordinary Bliss. Here is my view: God, as an active, creative Siva exists. But to think of Siva, and Siva's will to create, (knowledge, will and action), as a 'personality' in the traditional, human, linear sense of personality, is, I believe, a mistake. The One Universal Moment contains infinite moments each containing the One Universal Moment. From a very practical, experiential perspective, the Sensation of Being God, that is, infinitely diverse while equally absolutely One, is so overwhelmingly marvelous that it is the Self's nature to Be Manifestingly. I effervesce. That is my true Personality. I effervesce not because I must do so, but because my joy is so great that it is my nature to overflow. That is what recognizing one's nature as all-inclusive Awareness feels like. I love my aliveness--so much so that I flow absolutely freely. Hmm, come to think of it, this probably covers the philosophy part. Let me know if this is useful to you, Gloria. Madhya Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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