The fusion of two worlds |
Birds and thoughts fly through the sky of mind. When they are gone we’re left with the sky of wisdom and compassion.
Wednesday, September 16, 2020
Danger in paradise.
He called the journey “The
Dark Night of the Soul,” because darkness represents the hardships and
difficulties the soul meets in detachment from the world and reaching the light
of union with God. The main idea of the poem can be seen as the painful
experience that people endure as they seek to grow in spiritual maturity and
fusion with God. The Christian experience assumes a soul separated
from God that seeks reunion whereas the Buddhist perspective recognizes no
separation. Instead, unification takes place when the conceptual image of a
false self is replaced by the actual experience of selfhood.
This is the English
translation of the Greek, which camouflages the actual meaning of true human life
due to translation limitations, and this inaccuracy has lead to widespread misunderstandings. In the Greek, the first two uses of the word life meant soul—a conceptual equivalent
of the self, and the latter meant the real self. The Greek word for soul/life
was ψυχή better known as psyche, one of two manifestations of the source of life ζωή/zōē,
the last Greek term used in this scripture.
How to understand this?
When the soul dies the presence of God shines forth. Another word for soul is ego, thus death of the ego unveils the
source, which is eternal (no birth/no death and unconditional). That being the
case, ζωή is ever-present but something without conditions: thus unseen. ζωή can never be perceived, only experienced. On the other hand, the ego is an unreal image—an illusion of the self, which is clearly evident. Nevertheless illusions have a hard way of immediately subsiding; the memory
passes slowly at the same time that the light begins to dawn. The seed grows
slowly and remains separate as an idea but when it dies, unity with all things emerges.
Before, normal was egocentric and afterwards the center, begins to
fade into a depressive, immature darkness. This is a stage of jeopardy and
disorientation when we yearn for retention of our awakening yet can’t seem to
grasp and hold onto what is our hearts desire.
The Buddha properly
pointed out that to desire anything, even a lusting for enlightenment, is a
sure prescription for suffering, and when we think about it, this makes immanent
sense. Once true love is awakened, then only do we know for sure what it is. Up to that point, true love remains a product of our imagination; a wishful
fantasy. But once we know, then we have a dilemma: what was previously a less
than satisfying but acceptable idea, by comparison, now becomes a colorless and
shallow experience that lives on as a not yet forgotten memory.
There’s a story is told in
the Platform Sutra of a conversation held between Daman Hongren (fifth
Chinese Chan patriarch) and Dajian Huineng (sixth Chinese Chan patriarch).
Huineng was an illiterate, unschooled commoner who upon hearing the Diamond Cutter Sutra recited, realized enlightenment and subsequently sought out
Hongren. When Huineng met the patriarch he was assigned the lowly job of
rice-pounder, where he remained for many months before proving his worth to
Hongren.
The conversation between
the two was thus: Hongren—“A seeker
of the path risks his life for the dharma. Should he not do so?” Then he asked,
“Is the rice ready?” Huineng— “Ready long ago, only waiting
for the sieve.” Two questions, a single short answer which reveals the nature
of enlightenment—both sudden and gradual. Sudden since the awakening happened
quickly but fullness required the sifting of life’s sieve. The rice was ready
but the lingering, residual chaff must be blown away by the winds of life.
In the words of the famous
psychiatrist Carl Jung, “There is no coming to consciousness without pain.’
Sometimes when we awaken, we realize that how we have lived and behaved has
simply been out of line and nonproductive. It is a painful experience to
observe ourselves from a space of neutral honesty and watch as we often go out
of integrity to appeal to mental images we have created, and hurt people we
love in the process. This observation of the false ‘self’ we have created in
our minds is one of the first steps of becoming ‘enlightened’ if you will, and
in this observation there is no gaining taking place. There is only the
crumbling away of what you are not.’”
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