T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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967.1 | 'Special effects' | ATSE::FLAHERTY | Nevermore! | Wed Jan 25 1989 13:52 | 14 |
| Hi Cheryl,
I'll take a stab cause I've asked myself that same question many
times. Yup, I think it does effect that individual and I also
believe that you can pull that person into doing what you want.
But if they didn't have a part in wanting that too, then I think
what we get will be short-lived. So I refrain from doing it
(visualizing that person into doing what I want) because it
would seem to me to interfere with their 'free will'. Too much
of an invasion on their personal space.
I'd like to hear other thoughts on this. I wouldn't mind
being wrong on this one cause it could be lots of fun 8-) !
|
967.2 | From my experiences... | SHRBIZ::WAINE | Linda | Wed Jan 25 1989 14:32 | 20 |
|
Hi, Cheryl,
If one interferes with someone's free-will choice, one will
accrue karma. Therefore, when you are visualizing, be extremely
careful. One thing that I have always been told and that I always
follow is to make sure that when you visual you think or say something
to the effect of "Let this or something better manifest, only if it is
of Good and God, for the Highest and Best for all concerned". What one
thinks may be their Highest and Best, may not be truly for that
person's Highest and Best. That's why it's always wise to "tack" that on.
My personal feelings are that you should never try to visualize
for some else. I feel that I do not have this right, for I don't
know what is truly their Highest and Best, and it's up to them
to run their life as they see fit. I think that it's ok to do
"generic" visualizations for people, like for "good health", or
happiness, but I really advise not to do visualizations involving
other people...
Linda
|
967.3 | Subconscious visualizing? | HPSTEK::BEST | | Wed Jan 25 1989 14:59 | 12 |
|
How about "subconsciously visualizing", as in a dream? Does this
have any effect on someone? That is, if you are not really in control
of the visualization? Or is the "you" that is operating in the
dream not the real you? Anyone have any ideas on this? I know
that I have dreamt things about people that I was at odds with that
perhaps I shouldn't have, but I don't know of any effects resulting
from these dreams, verifiable or not.
Guy
|
967.4 | my opinion | WRO8A::WARDFR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Wed Jan 25 1989 15:22 | 27 |
| I don't think there is anything to worry about as long as we
operate with integrity and excellence. As for getting things/people
to do whatever it is you want, there is *a* reality available whereby
that can occur. What will probably happen is that you will discover
that they will want whatever it is you want, too. And that they did
it by their own free will choice. There is a line, however, between
doing what we want and being manipulative about it. The truth is
that no one can tell except the person doing it, which is where
the integrity falls into play. Keep in mind here that we do not
have to limit ourselves to logic. Everything we manifest comes
to us from the causal plane (and I do not wish to go into the details
of this, which are available...and which have to do with etheric
bodies, etc.) They exist on the causal plane at random. WE are
the ones who direct them in whatever order we wish. So, "all" we
have to do is "place the order" and it can come to us. For more
on manifesting, I suggest listening to "Manifesting" by Lazaris
(video or audio). He explains it quite thoroughly. Moreover, he
is currently conducting one-day seminars on manifestation. And
this is what this note is about. So, as the other responses have
inferred, do it, cautiously perhaps.
As for doing something *for* others, at this point I haven't
thought about it enough, but I would tend to agree with the others...
in terms of caution, at least. I believe that it requires lots
of thought and lots of awareness.
Frederick
|
967.5 | I can't help myself | FHQ::OGILVIE | The EYES have it! | Wed Jan 25 1989 15:43 | 18 |
|
All of this discussion recently regarding Creating Realities and
Visualization has taken me steps further into awesome thoughts and
questions. Here's one that may boggle the mind (hee hee hee hee
help):
IF we pre-destined this reality that we are existing within, how
can we creatively visualize something "else"? If we do, does that
infer it was pre-created, or we somehow decided to change our minds
and re-create it?
[gawd, where do these questions come from. this is something like
playing trivial pursuit and all the answers are right]
Cheryl
|
967.6 | Response | CLUE::PAINTER | To dream the impossible dream... | Wed Jan 25 1989 15:52 | 19 |
|
Re.0 (Ogilvie)
Cheryl,
I'm not very familiar with this technique, however this excerpt
came to mind just now. It's from one of Shirley MacLaine's books.
Apparently when she was in meditation and had someone more
knowledgable than her nearby, she asked the person if she could make
the tree outside the house sway. The person replied that she must
first ask/address the tree (oh, John M., please quit laughing...(;^)
if it would be OK, then the tree chose to move in order to fulfill
her request.
What I get from this is that we must make requests, not demands.
For what it's worth.
Cindy
|
967.7 | Boggling, huh? | ATSE::FLAHERTY | Nevermore! | Wed Jan 25 1989 16:08 | 9 |
| Hi Cheryl,
Yes and if it was pre-destined and we all bought into it and
then one of us goes about changing it cause they've had a change
of mind/heart - how does that impact the rest of us who were
in on the initial agreement?!
Ro
|
967.8 | 1/2 cent | USRCV1::JEFFERSONL | HOLY GHOST POWER!!! | Wed Jan 25 1989 16:16 | 10 |
| I personally feel that it doesn't effect a persons fee will. Everyone
has the feedom to choose: Just because you visualize music dosen't
mean that I have to dance:-) I may not like your kind of music!
Now, I admit that there are some people who are "Stronger" than
other ( In ALL areas), but I don't believe it's because some one
is visualizing on them.
Lorenzo_ who_always_knows_it_all__But_doesn't_really_know_anything_
|
967.9 | how much was that? | FHQ::OGILVIE | The EYES have it! | Wed Jan 25 1989 16:29 | 10 |
|
re: 8
HAHAHAHAHAHAHA
Does the 1/2 cent statement have anything to do with "fee will and
fee dom".....
/C
|
967.10 | Works for me (and I don't buy that Karma crap) | HSSWS1::GREG | Malice Aforethought | Wed Jan 25 1989 21:38 | 25 |
|
I use this method of controlling others fairly frequently,
especially when I'm driving. I visualize the person ahead
of me speeding up so I can get around them. I focus on this
image with great power, and project it to the person ahead
of me. More often than not it works.
Of course, I have a theory about why it doesn't work all
of the time. When I project the images, I do so with a
certain emotion as the 'carrier wave' (usually anger). I
think it likely that different people respond more readily
to different carrier emotions. I put this to the test the
other day, and the results were favorable, but I haven't done
it often enough to say with any authority that it's true.
After all, it might just be a coincidence that the old
geezers in front of me just happen to decide to speed up
the very moment I want them to.
Incidentally, one does not have to close one's eyes to
make these visions appear and be projected. It would be
quite silly to engage in any eyes-closed activity while
driving, anyway.
- Greg
|
967.11 | I feel the same way about electricity | ATLAST::LACKEY | Paths are many, Truth is one. | Thu Jan 26 1989 10:47 | 27 |
| re: .10 -< Works for me (and I don't buy that Karma crap) >-
Don't worry about having to buy the "karma crap." It is provided to all
at no cost. Activity of any kind is all that is necessary to insure
that we have it.
It's kind of like living in this country. We pay taxes for the
priviledge. If we do not have income and therefore do not partake of
the many luxuries which are available, then we don't have to worry about
taxes; but if we do engage in the national lifestyle, then taxes are
automatic. The biggest difference is that we can cheat on our taxes,
and perhaps the IRS won't catch us, but we cannot cheat our soul.
We do not have to "buy" gravity or electricity either (neither of which
is usually seen), but they are part of our world nonetheless.
> ........................................... It would be
> quite silly to engage in any eyes-closed activity while
> driving, anyway.
Would it not also be quite silly to engage in any eyes-closed activity
while "driving" through life?
Jeff
|
967.12 | Astral visualization thoughts | FHQ::OGILVIE | The EYES have it! | Thu Jan 26 1989 10:55 | 17 |
|
re: .3 (Guy)
I just had a thought on your question.
If you are "subconsciously" visualizing as in a dream, one may consider
this as also another dimension. So on "that" dimension, possibly
you are creating "something". But where does it go?
Or, then again....it could be an astral action....a continuence
of another story (like a daily soap opera) that you only get to
watch while you are sleeping.
Doesn't this get clear~er and vague~r all at the same time????
8*}
|
967.13 | Thoughts and dreams are real forces -- yes! | PHENIX::BAILIN | | Thu Jan 26 1989 12:57 | 32 |
| Absolutely! I believe (and have experienced) that all our thoughts
and dreams affect each other.
And that we're just as responsible for the effects of our thoughts
and our "subconscious" actions as we are for our physical acts.
Karma accrues from both. I think the idea of "subconscious" is
something people use -- that I use -- to escape responsibility.
If someone's insane when he kills you, you're just as dead.
As far as doing things like speeding up cars in front of you --
if you decide to do it, great. It's just like honking the horn
except that you may be able to conceal your actions from people
who are less sensitive. But you still have to consider the
consequences.
I personally don't believe in "tacking" on lines about "highest
and best". I think that's ducking the issue. If you really want
to do the "highest and best" then do it. I've seen many many people
SAY that that's what they want, but when it comes down to their
desires, it's not true. In my opinion it's better to be honest
with yourself and make decisions about whether to follow your desires
or not and to accept the karma of the decision you make.
Don't do the crime if you can't do the time. Which is not to imply
that a given desire is a crime -- that's what makes life interesting.
That desire may be in line with the dharma -- but then again it
may not. It's up to every being to use their powers of discrimination
to see what's right.
Which doesn't mean that you'll do it. You may have other priorities.
Such is life, yes?
|
967.14 | The Middle "Y" in YCYOR | CSG001::PINCOMB | John | Thu Jan 26 1989 13:39 | 76 |
|
I believe that I can not *directly* influence the reality of someone other
than myself - without their permission.
If I attempted to do so, especially in a negative sense, the energy would
be turned against me.
My responsibility is to create the best possible reality for myself and
affect others by being a good role model, a teacher, and by (positively)
influencing universal energy.
I am here operating on some small percentage of what is the full capacity
of my mental ability, and mostly in the conscious state. My experience with
the YCYOR concept is that it is a combination of conscious and non-conscious
effort. The process of envisioning the reality that will be, is at first
conscious, but the actualizing power emanates from the non-conscious mind
acting on the visual image created by the conscious mind.
This is amplified through emotional energy.
I do not think that life is difficult if I base my being on the very simple
concepts of love and openness and truth.
If my actions are visualized and actualized from this base, then the
results that naturally follow are not only positive but also do not
require conscious "supervision". These concepts become safe platforms
upon which I can base my interaction with universal energy. I do not have
to expend conscious effort guarding every thought, I can operate on
"automatic".
The essence of operating from this base is, that all I have to aspire
to on a day to day basis is to be a "professional person" -
i.e. to be the best I can be in each moment.
If I live this way, I have to make a difference, and I accept the
responsibility for myself and the effects I have on others through my
effect on universal energy. I do this from a growing understanding and
security with my position in the universe. I am "OK".
When I feel less secure I *act as if* I am. When I am not sure of the
possibility of a result for myself, I *act as if* it can be. When I weaken
and escape, I reset by "doing" something - i.e. I visualize myself using my
energy in a positive way. This for me is almost always physical.
I have approached this with a comfortable (for me) methodology that
allows me to evolve as a being by expressing myself through three
essences of energy that I am the most aware of - physical, intellectual
and emotional.
The use of my energy in any of these ways at the best (for me) level in
a given moment moves me closer to achieving a oneness with universal energy.
I feel the need to maintain or at least work toward a balance of all three
and any major imbalance reduces my effectiveness in the other areas. There
is an essential commonality between them all at the universal energy level
and there is a "training effect" for them all.
I see myself gaining power by experiencing (visualizing myself achieving)
the peaks (and sometimes experiencing the valleys) and learning from the
journeys.
An easy journey does not necessarily promise an enlightened one or one that
adds to my experience base. I need the peaks and the valleys to allow me
to make comparisons from which I can better understand my relative position
in the continuum of the flow of energy, from physically based on one end to
more ethereal or spiritually based on the other.
I believe that I advance myself from this base of experience that continues
to expand my perspective of what is possible, and therefore, to what *is*.
John
|
967.15 | Balancing | ATSE::FLAHERTY | Nevermore! | Thu Jan 26 1989 14:08 | 11 |
| Hi John (.14)
Your reply was thought provoking (as usual). It is one
that I'll extract and reread again. I admire your philosophy
as it isn't always easy to keep the balance as we experience the
peaks and valleys.
Thanks,
Ro
|
967.16 | | FHQ::OGILVIE | The EYES have it! | Thu Jan 26 1989 14:28 | 8 |
|
Yes John, (.14)
I too want to extract and reread.
Thanx
Cheryl
|
967.17 | Integrity | SCOPE::PAINTER | Wage Peace | Thu Jan 26 1989 16:33 | 11 |
|
I believe that if we act with _integrity_, that things will be alright.
As Max Robinson stated, "Try to keep your integrity, because you're
going to find out in life, at the end, that's all you've got."
The people in this world whom I admire the most, act in every moment
with the greatest integrity. They also tend to suffer more while
making tough decisions.
Cindy
|
967.18 | Are they martyring themselves to integrity? | WRO8A::WARDFR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Thu Jan 26 1989 16:40 | 8 |
| re: .17
I agree that integrity is immensely valuable, but Cindy,
it's hardly appealing to others if those that have it are the
ones who do the most suffering! Something's out of phase here.
Frederick
|
967.19 | Maximum awareness | SCOPE::PAINTER | Wage Peace | Thu Jan 26 1989 17:27 | 25 |
| Re.18
Frederick,
Oh nononono - not martyring but rather making decisions based on
maximum awareness.
It's easy to make quick decisions based on a few facts (yes/no type
decisions). It's harder to make decisions which involve more factors.
For example, there are some company presidents who will look at
the bottom line and immediately decide that a massive layoff must
take place, and away go the employees. End of story. Then there
are other company presidents who will suffer greatly over such a
decision and try everything before letting this happen, because they
realize and understand the grave impact that a massive layoff will
have on the employees, the families, the community, the marketplace, etc.
Peck mentions this as the willingness to suffer over decisions with
an almost God-like awareness of what the end result of the decision
will be.
Does this explain .17 better?
Cindy
|
967.20 | No awareness without responsibility | ATLAST::LACKEY | Paths are many, Truth is one. | Thu Jan 26 1989 17:37 | 4 |
| re: .19 (Cindy)
Real good point.
|
967.21 | It only stops hurting when I quit hitting myself. | WRO8A::WARDFR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Fri Jan 27 1989 10:44 | 11 |
| re: .19
Yes, I understand, Cindy. What disturbs me is the "suffering"
part. From your paraphrase from Peck, I don't think he would
necessarily disagree. I concur with being aware and being
responsible, and I also agree with the willingness points, but
somewhere in this loop the implication of martyrhood (suffering,
pain, sacrifice, etc.) must be cut out.
Frederick
|
967.22 | Sacrifice isn't so bad if it produces a rose | ATLAST::LACKEY | Paths are many, Truth is one. | Fri Jan 27 1989 11:08 | 6 |
| re: .21 (Fredrick)
Do you think that the Christ could have accomplished all that he
did *without* the sacrifice?
Jeff
|
967.23 | Yes, but not for us. | WRO8A::WARDFR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Fri Jan 27 1989 11:15 | 16 |
| re: .22
My first response was "yes." And, I do believe it could
have been done. On the other hand, "HE" didn't believe it could
be done in another manner, and he's the one who carried out
his beliefs. Therefore, for him, and for those who directly
or indirectly shared his reality, no. This becomes a dog
chasing its own tail situation. At some point, the jump
into another reality "could" have been done. But in order
to provide the impact which billions of people have insisted
on, no, it could not have been done any other way. Does this
make sense? In other words, I know the answer is evasive-sounding,
but that's the greatest truth I know.
Frederick
|
967.24 | response | FHQ::OGILVIE | The EYES have it! | Fri Jan 27 1989 11:25 | 11 |
|
If Christ "visualized" his symbolic sacrifice as an event that would
save the world, than it was so. If we recognize this and accept
it as being so, then it is so. Otherwise it has no meaning, to
either Him or Us.
If a tree falls in a forest and no one is there to hear it, did
it make any noise?
Cheryl
|
967.25 | Suffer the little Children? | REGENT::WAGNER | | Fri Jan 27 1989 12:26 | 28 |
| .19 Cindy,
Super Excellent!
When Jesus said "Suffer the little children, and forbid them not, to
come unto me: for of such is the Kingdom of Heaven. " He did
not mean drag them along by the shirt collar and cause them pain.
He meant as you did. Make the children aware and let them suffer(the
doubts, the ego) through weighing the impact of making their own decisions.
From our narrow limited view, it seems that Jesus must have suffered
(martyrdom) greatly, But from a larger perspective, it wasn't his
physical pain so much as the mental suffering he went through,
the doubts that the greatest metaphysical demonstration of all time
would be futile. Jesus was at a level of awareness where he had
command of parapsychological powers: If he could feed all those
people with a few loafs of bread and a few fish, couldn't he overcome
the physical pain through the use of mental powers? Jesus suffered
FOR us not because of us. His suffering was the doubt that what
he was he was doing might be worthless, that nobody would understand
the true meaning and, thus, noone would be saved (be anymore aware
or enlightened than they already were) and rightly so. Almost no
one except for those who were at a much higher level of awareness
understood what Jesus was trying to teach and demonstrate. "Forgive
them for they know not what they do."
Ernie
|
967.26 | I don't want an escalated religious talk from this. | WRO8A::WARDFR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Fri Jan 27 1989 12:41 | 18 |
| re: .25
Oh, GAWD, I hate getting into Jesus arguments...we could be
here for 1,989 more years and still get to the same place (nowhere.)
However, the last line you wrote could be a self-statement
(thinking out loud.) He may have been saying to himself, "Self,
forgive them, for...") Then he *should* have said, "Now, self,
forgive yourself for thinking that way of them in the first place."
And if he had forgiven himself, he never would have had to prove
his self-worth by impaling himself on a cross. In any case, I really
cannot approve of the sense of pain, suffering as a "condition"
to growth, which is what Cindy implied and you are saying. THAT
we suffer is bad enough, but to tell us we "should" suffer is
reprehensible.
Frederick
|
967.27 | | WILLEE::FRETTS | keep life's wonder alive | Fri Jan 27 1989 13:20 | 22 |
|
RE: ...last few replies
I am on my way to *another* meeting, so don't have a whole lot
of time for this reply. However, I did want to mention the
Age of Pisces and how this may symbolically relate to the
discussion of Jesus and sacrifice, martyrdom, suffering. These
three words are three of the many characteristics of the sign
Pisces. *If* at the beginning of each new age, an Avatar comes
to us to teach us, and *if* Jesus was that Avatar for the
Age of Pisces, then the process he used to symbolically get his
message across was appropriate. Now, we are currently ending
the Age of Pisces and moving into the Age of Aquarius. This is
a whole new ball game, so to speak, and one in which, if an
Avatar for this new age comes to us, a different symbolic
*language* is in order.
Will get back into this note with a description of the Aquarius
archetype next week, unless someone can do that for me ;-).
Carole
another Avatar come to us
|
967.28 | Re.26 - Oh, _GAWD_? Good one Frederick! (;^) | CGVAX2::PAINTER | Pray for peace, people everywhere. | Fri Jan 27 1989 13:27 | 22 |
|
Rathole alert!
I believe we are all saying the same things, however the word 'suffer'
is being used in different contexts here.
Probably .19 (company president, etc.) should have the word 'agonize'
or perhaps the words 'weigh heavily' as opposed to 'suffer'. This
also shows the difference between empathy and selflessness as opposed
to selfishness. Being selfish is easy, since you don't have to take
anyone into account except yourself. Getting into another person's
shoes and empathizing is far more difficult...and painful, if you
have to make a decision that negatively impacts the person you are
in the shoes of at that moment.
I can't imagine how much Truman must have agonized over the dropping
of the bombs. And yet I suspect that Johnson didn't do much agonizing
at all over Vietnam. Big difference.
Clearer?
Cindy
|
967.29 | Total agreement | ATSE::FLAHERTY | Nevermore! | Fri Jan 27 1989 13:46 | 17 |
| Cindy (.28)
>>This also shows the difference between empathy and selflessness as
opposed to selfishness. Being selfish is easy, since you don't have to
take anyone into account except yourself. Getting into another
person's shoes and empathizing is far more difficult...and painful, if
you have to make a decision that negatively impacts the person you are
in the shoes of at that moment. <<
Yes, yes, yes. That's what it is all about. It is easy to
philosophize and intellectualize, but 'engaging' (ugh, those
psychobabble terms) in what the other person will 'feel'
and then making your move is really playing the 'game'.
Ro
|
967.30 | Pain is an illusion! | REGENT::WAGNER | | Fri Jan 27 1989 14:04 | 31 |
| I guess the point went over your head, Frederick. Yes He was saying(to
his (higher, macro) self just that since God and the higher self
is one and the same. From your narrower and more limited view he
was physically suffering. But since pain is "subjective" as any
hypnotherapist can tell you, the physical suffering was moot to the
point. Jesus did not have to and didn't "suffer" the pain to grow since he
was aready 99.99% in continuous touch with his higher-macro-God
Self). He was able to get beyond the physical pain of the situation
because of his parapsychological powers he had aquired and
demonstrated. But that still don't get you into heaven or Nirvana
or sattiva unless one goes through the mental anguish of eliminating
the self centered Ego. One can only do this by removing all doubts
from ones actions. And one can only do this if one is as fully aware
of any situation that he or she finds themselves in. In jesus
case that doubt was the worthwhileness of enacting the demonstration.
The fact that he had nails pounded into his body is unimportant
to the final message that we are more than our body.
If we don't suffer ourself in this manner to know that our actions
are bringing us closer in touch with our higher self, Then how do
we get that one step closer?
Perhaps more from your perspective: If reality is just an illusion
since we create it ourselves, wouldn't the pain resulting from physical
or mental abuse be an illusion also?
I don't know how else to explain the concept. I understand (and
experience it regularly. Cindy and Cheryl and others are beginning to get
a solid grasp of this concept. We must suffer our egos to allow
us to get in touch with our higher selves.
With Love,
Ernie
|
967.31 | | GENRAL::DANIEL | | Fri Jan 27 1989 15:03 | 2 |
| Carole, I was thinking it (not as eloquently as you!) and you said it. I
agree.
|
967.32 | False Cause | DNEAST::CHRISTENSENL | | Fri Jan 27 1989 15:50 | 21 |
| Suffer: to endure pain. This and similar definitions are according
to Webster. The problem here is the dictionary was written by most
ordinary people who have as their ground of being _False Cause_.
False cause is where the cause of a situation exists outside oneself.
Gurdieff and others have talked about internal suffering or as
Ernie puts it; suffering one's own ego. A Being in transformation,
that is a Being in the process of emerging from it's condition of
identification whith whom The Being thinks it is, will suffer the
pain of seeing itself as cause. This is useful suffering.
An ego (condition of Being being identified with what it thinks it is)
suffers pain from claimed external sources and causes outside itself.
These sufferings, from the point of view of ego, are caused by threats
to the ego of it's own survival. If it were just pure body survival
the ego would be in perfect accord. It is when the ego is so pervasive
that it includes threats to it's ideals, opinions, belief systems and
principals trouble occurrs. This is called useless suffering.
L.
|
967.33 | Suffering, Pain, Hurting, Etc. | CLUE::PAINTER | Wage Peace | Mon Jan 30 1989 17:28 | 107 |
| Somehow, the text below seemed appropriate to enter here at this
time.
Cindy
---------------------------------------------------------------------
On Emptiness
------------
From: The Different Drum, by M.Scott Peck, pp.212-213
"Since peacemaking is our end, let me give an example of cross-cultural
misunderstanding that was caused by mental fullness, clutter and
noise, but was finally clarified out of silence and emptiness.
The situation occurred at an international symposium of theologians
from all corners of the globe. When we assembled after one of the
plenary sessions for discussion in our assigned small group, a man
from Ghana who was a practitioner and teacher of what is known as
African traditional religion began by saying that he didn't understand
all the stuff that had been said in the preceding lecture about
a "suffering God." "It's the most ridiculous thing I ever heard,"
he exclaimed. "God doesn't suffer."
"Of course He suffers," almost everyone in the group affirmed, quoting
Dietrich Bonhoeffer or this authority or that. But with each rebuttal
the African just dug in his heals deeper, maintaining ever more
vehemently, "I've never heard anything so silly in my life." The
more he stuck to his guns, however, the more adamant the group became
in its attempt to change his mind. The clamor escalated until our
little group of adults became as noisy as a third-grade classroom
after the teacher had been absent for an hour.
"Stop," I cried suddenly. "The average IQ in this room is probably
around a hundred and sixty. Surely we can communicate better than
this. Let's just stop and be silent for three minutes and see what
happens.
The group obeyed. After the silence one of the Americans began
talking about how much he loved his children. In fact, he said,
he missed them right then, and that hurt him. He felt hurt when
they were sick or injured. Their trials and tribulations pained
him. He worried over their future, and that too was a kind of
suffering. His children were the most important aspect of his life,
he told us, and he would hardly have it different, but in certain
ways his love for them made his existence much more painful than
it might be otherwise.
"Ah, now I understand," the African exulted with obvious pleasure.
"Of course there is pain with love, and of course God loves, so
He hurts over us the way we hurt over our own children. The problem,
you see, is that in our language, the word 'suffer' refers solely
to bodily suffering, to physical pain. And we do not believe that
God has a body. He is pure in spirit. So to talk of Him experiencing
bodily pain seemed absurd to me. But does God hurt? Oh, yes, of
course God hurts."
One wonders how many thousands - how many millions - of times each
day such misunderstandings arise among people of different cultures,
even among people of the same culture, because we fail to bracket,
to "silence the familiar," to empty ourselves of our semantics and
traditional images. I am reminded of the time when Soviet Premier
Nikita Khrushchev came to the United States and, at the start of
one of his speeches, clasped his hands above his head and bounced
up and down. Americans were furious. Had he not already said that
Russia would bury us, and here he was bouncing up and down like
a cocky prizefighter who had just triumphed in a boxing match!
Yet some years later a man familiar with the culture told me that
this was a traditional Russian gesture meaning "hands clasped in
friendship across the sea."
Unless we empty ourselves of such preconceived cultural or intellectual
images and expectations, we not only cannot understand the Other,
we cannot even listen. Indeed, we cannot even feel empathy."
...Emptiness requires work. It is an exercise of discipline and
is always the most difficult part of the process that a group must
undergo if it is to become a community. Like any discipline, it
can become easier if we make it a habit... But even if habitual,
it is still painful. For emptiness always requires a negation of
the self and the need to know, a sacrifice.
...there is no formula in answer to that inevitable question, I
can only say further, "The unconscious is always one step ahead
of the conscious mind, and it is therefore impossible ever to 'know'
that you are doing the right thing (since knowing is a function
of consciousness). However, if your will is steadfastly good, and
if you are willing to suffer fully when the good is ambiguous, your
unconscious will be always one step ahead of your conscious mind
in the right direction." In other words, you will do the right
thing even though you will not have the consolation of knowing at
the time that it is the right thing.
Those who seek certainty, or who claim certainty in their knowledge,
cannot tolerate ambiguity. The word "ambiguous" means "undertain"
or "doubtful" or "capable of being understood in more than one way."
And because that means not knowing - perhaps not ever being able
to know - we have great trouble with ambiguity in our culture.
It is not until we move into Stage IV of our spiritual growth that
we even begin to feel comfortable with ambiguity. We start to realize
that not everything is "black or white", that there are multiple
dimensions to things, often with contradictory meanings. So it
is that mystics of all cultures and religions speak in terms of
paradox - not in terms of "either/or" but in terms of "both/and."
The capacity to accept ambiguity and to think paradoxically is both
one of the qualities of emptiness and one of the requirements for
peacemaking."
|
967.34 | Visualization How Does It Work? | MILPND::HASSEY | | Thu Sep 14 1989 15:46 | 9 |
| Hi,
Does visualization really work? Are there special techniques in
how to do it?
Thanks
Alice
|
967.35 | I visualize a picture in my mind. | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Thu Sep 14 1989 16:00 | 15 |
| re: .34 (Alice)
Yes, by all appearances (pun intentional) visualization really
works. There are many techniques and it all depends on the person
and what they are trying to do. (One could go so far as to say
each of us is but a visualization of our Higher Selves...then
the question "does it work?" takes on a new and different meaning.)
It is clear from many people via many sources that they attribute
whatever to a visualization of same...if you are more specific as
to what you want to know, many of us would probably respond more
specifically.
Frederick
|
967.36 | | USAT05::KASPER | Life's a gift, learn to accept it | Thu Sep 14 1989 17:47 | 6 |
| re: .34 (Alice)
If your're interested in reading, try _Creative Visualization_
by Shakti Gawain (sp?). Has lots of exercises.
Terry
|
967.37 | Visualization | MILPND::HASSEY | | Fri Sep 15 1989 16:29 | 7 |
| Hi
Thank you for that information, I guess I wanted to understand
if this was a method of attracting things you want into your life.
Alice
|
967.38 | There are helpful techniques...depends on specifics | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Fri Sep 15 1989 17:35 | 6 |
| re: .37 (Alice)
Yes, it definitely is/can be.
Frederick
|
967.39 | Response | CGVAX2::PAINTER | One small step... | Fri Sep 15 1989 21:29 | 6 |
|
Alice,
It works for me. The book by Gawain is an excellent one.
Cindy
|
967.40 | Why they work | CARTUN::BERGGREN | | Mon Sep 18 1989 19:15 | 31 |
| Alice,
I seem to recall reading somewhere that visualization works because the
area of the mind where vis's are created can not distinguish subjective
reality from objective reality. In other words, everything is real.
So if you want to lose weight for example, you visualize a slender
body, and if you also couple that with affirmations, a verbal statement
to yourself that reinforces the vis, then you have a very powerful tool
for transformation.
I think it's particularly effective in dealing with psychological
issues, where you might want to create or transform a negative
self-image into one more positive.
Another example, if a person thinks that life is out to "get them",
they might visualize themselves with a peaceful, relaxed expresion and
themselves as being happy. They might also couple that with an
affirmation such as "I will look and find the gift in every
experience." Because a certain part of the psyche is already accepting
this as being true, it begins to pull the other parts of the mind that
don't into the same line. At some point then, the person's actions
are affected and will tend to come more in line with the vis's and
affirmations as well.
That's the basics of why it works that I can recall. Maybe someone
can add something else to this, if needed.
Good luck!
Karen
|
967.41 | Gawain on video | DEMING::ARSENAULT | | Mon Sep 18 1989 19:52 | 5 |
| Just to let you know I saw Creative Visualization by Gawain in
video this weekend. I plan to rent it one of these days.
Gina
|