Dear Ramji
I have been fascinated for eons by
maps. I am trying to build a sacred
geography of the being I am, of the process I am part of, in a minimalist
abstraction. Can it be said to be about
an invisible energy cloaking itself with a mind and ego to create apparent
division and separation then progressively removing these and other effects by
loving itself and understanding its constitutional situation?
jai govinda
Hi Mike,
Yes.
The most frequent idea used to describe the spiritual process from
beginning to end is involution and evolution.
It goes something like this:
Act 1
In the beginning there was the Self
and the Self alone. It grew tired of
non-duality and the desire to experience itself as 'the other.' So it forgot who it was (Maya) created the
five elements and then appeared as the jiva, a limited bundle of
consciousness. To make sure that it
would re-awaken it planted a seed of remembrance at the root of the spine that
would re-awaken when it became weary of its play in the non-dual. (End of involution, beginning of
evolution).
Act 2
Then it 'turned within' and began
the long journey home up the spine though many planes of existence until it
burst from the body and merged with the infinite light that it always was.
*****
Of course, from the Self's point of
view none of this happened, in fact nothing ever happened, but individuals
often feel the need to explain who they are, why they are here, and where they
are going. Life does seem like a journey
and this kind of journey metaphor or veil metaphor seems to closely approximate
experience. The problem with it, as I
have been arguing for a long time, is that if the metaphor is taken literally
it can prevent Self realization.
Nonetheless, taking into account the limitation of words, it is perhaps
a rough but serviceable metaphor.
Love,
Ramji
Hi Ram
You made some interesting comments,
it would be nice to elabourate: "it planted a
seed of remembrance at the root of the spine", what precisely is this, I
realize you are probably referring to the kundalini, but any particular
thing/energy, point or essence i.e. was it a full version of itself or just a limited aspect?
Hi Mike,
‘Planted a seed’ means a memory of
wholeness, completeness, limitlessness.
As we ‘journey’ through life ‘peak’ moments happen when the conditioned
mind dissolves and we see/experience from the Self’s point of view. Each time this happens it leaves a vasana, a
subconscious memory and these memories (seeds) eventually become more than an
unconscious urge for fulfillment or meaning; they rise to the plane of
consciousness and the person begins to think of ‘permanently returning’ to the
Self. It is often called ‘going home.’ The idea of kundalini, the ‘serpent’ power,
is an idea of latency, potentiality. It
is ‘coiled’ like a spring, ready to be released. It means there is always the potential of
‘return.’ It is ‘hidden’ at the base of
the spine. ‘Hidden’ means
ignorance. We are unaware of it. ‘Base of the spine’ means the lowest
point. Even at the lowest point of our
life’s journey it is there waiting to break forth. Even in the basest states of consciousness it
is possible to experience release. A
snake is chosen to represent this memory, this latent power, because snakes
live in the holes in the ground. They
live in the dark, i.e. ignorance and come out into the light. I’m sure the image was inspired by the cobra
which coils itself so it can strike.
When we garner enough of these ‘spiritual’ vasanas they cause some kind
of major epiphany and our life ‘strikes out’ in a new direction.
Of course this metaphor is only
meaningful if we assume a position of Self ignorance. This memory is the Self but it is not the
full power of the Self. If it were there
would be no need for the world and for evolution. It would just wake the person up instantly
and for good once he or she had fallen asleep…which means that there his no
need for the universe and time…etc. The
‘spiritual’ reason for the universe…according to human beings…is to provide a
field in which the forces of involution and evolution can work themselves
out. In fact, from the Self’s point of
view, there is no creation, no time and no purpose. Everything is already accomplished so no
forces need to play and nothing needs to be discovered.
Anyway, it is just a tiny memory,
but oh what power it has! Even though
Self ignorance is beginningless and all pervasive, it
eventually succumbs to the power of this idea.
A person can be born over and over through countless lifetimes and still
this seed guides him or her home. This
is so because experience is transitory and the joys that one picks up always
fade…motivating the search for a happiness that does not decay. This happiness is always with us because it
is the very nature of the Self.
Vedanta puts an end to this metaphor
by telling us that the seeker is the sought.
Its teachings do not employ the journey metaphor but point out something
that is not appreciated…the fact that you are already and always ‘home.’ The journey metaphor is dangerous because it
defines the Self, the goal, as something to be attained experientially. And this sets up
craving for ‘Self experience’ which is a joke because everything you are
experiencing every minute is the Self…assuming a non-dual reality. Vedanta therefore counsels one to ‘give up
the search’ and see that you are everything you could hope to attain.
Ram