Archive for December, 2009

A Nonduality New Year

December 31, 2009

#3762 – Thursday, December 31, 2009 – Editor: Jerry Katz

The Nonduality Highlights

Happy New Year!

We bring you a few appetizers, a main course, and music.

Here are a few tweets:

aflow For the first time in almost twenty years, there’s going to be a Blue Moon on New Year’s Eve.(NASA): http://tinyurl.com/blooon

dustmapper I’m finding it harder to fake euphoria for the New Year…what I sense in the celebration is a momentary escape from profound suffering.

LeonardJacobson “If you are to awaken, you will have to learn to be in right relationship with your feelings.” LJ

margonaut HAPPY NEW YEAR… I’m heading to the Promise NYE party in Toronto tonight http://www.ilovepromise.com

DrWeil Parties and celebrations tonight? Be safe and remember these 5 tips to prevent a hangover: http://bit.ly/4IHAOZ

jhalifax this for the last day of 2009: Benjamin Franklin:There never was a good war or a bad peace.

lux1008 As the end of the year approaches, may the Heart of Wisdom dharani vibrate strong: Gate Gate Paragate Parasamgate Bodhi Svaha! #buddhism

guruphiliac RT @jmknapp53: First Issue of free #Spiritual_Abuse Newsletter out: Click to view! http://bit.ly/7PQ5og http://twib.es/t-82EDF

Jodpurs A single honest attempt to convey your own highest principle (however awkwardly) is worth more than a million spiritual quotes.

Rhea11 Tony Parsons’talk at the Urban Guru Cafe — http://urbangurucafe.com/category/ugc-speakers/podcasts-blogroll-12/

Yogaheart A Consideration: There is A LOT of space here :o ) Space is open, accepting, unconditional… Isn’t that what we call love? xoxo

Vicki Woodyard
http://www.bobwoodyard.com

Dec.26, 09–There comes a time in every aspirant’s life when push comes to shove. When we think our little candle may go out. When the world conspires to push all of our buttons. And then you remember to be dust under the guru’s feet. Here is another way of saying it. Let thought be dust under the feet of awareness. That brings it back to you being the One. The only. It reminds you that it is all maya, that the cards were played long, long ago and that the house is rigged. And yet Christ said that there were other mansions, better and higher places to live. It ain’t on Househunters.

In my life there have been many years of genuine sorrow. Times when I have done nothing but study truth, ponder wisdom and try my best to walk the path. And there have been times when I have realized that I knew nothing for sure. And that is the direction of self-abandonment.

I have been watching accounts of people stuck in their cars in this winter’s December blizzard. Stuck at the airport. Stuck on airplanes themselves. Surprisingly, these people were cheerful and following the way of tao. This attitude, too, is self-abandonment. Caught in snowdrifts, they responded like old Chinese sages.

Today I drove to the mall to meet a friend for lunch. There had been a water main break and the mall had shut down until it was repaired. I drove home and called my friend to say we couldn’t meet today. Then I hassled with my insurance company because the system had spit me out. I had driven into a very small snowbank. I put on a new pair of fuzzy slippers and hoisted myself onto the couch to watch TV. My attitude, I noticed, was cranky. Apparently I needed to watch reruns of those people stuck in the blizzard.

Real sorrow is behind everyone’s attempt to awaken. Never mind what anyone says to the contrary. This world is a pit and a snare even while wearing fuzzy slippers.

Regina Spektor

My Dear Acquaintance (A Happy New Year)

A Short Guide to the Scientific History of the Universe, by Paul Marvelly

December 30, 2009

A Short Guide to the Scientific History of the Universe

by Paula Marvelly

Part I of III

All truths are easy to understand once they are discovered;
the point is to discover them
Galileo Galilei

In the beginning was the void. Emptiness. Nothing. And miraculously, about 14 billion years ago, out of this nothing came a something – the Big Bang – setting the whole universe into being.

For whatever reason, our planet Earth was formed and human existence appeared on its surface, albeit only in the last 150,000 or so years. At first, humans, like any other species, existed by their wits. The instinct to survive – to find food, shelter and a mate – was the only thing that mattered. But over time, humankind started to become more sophisticated, living in small communities, sharing skills, and forming meaningful relationships. Thus, their ability to understand and interact with other people and their surroundings evolved, for better or worse.

It’s very easy to get a romanticised view of the past. Indeed, it was a brutal existence in many ways – famine and disease, rape and war. And yet, people were more acutely in tune with the rhythms and seasons of the planet, the changing vistas of the cosmos. Everything was believed to be interconnected by an underlying field of energy – the universal life force if you will – which was experienced and worshipped as one holistic whole, this ‘something’ from which the universe had emerged.

And how did people communicate this understanding, generation to generation? By inventing myths, formulating poetry, composing songs, for all posterity.

As the world’s population grew, however, humans became more and more competitive for the planet’s resources: communities developed into hierarchies; language and cultural differences set people against each other; and religious methodologies started springing up all over the place as a form of societal regulation and control. So instead of believing that everything was linked together, men and women started to see themselves as separate, isolated, solitary beings pitched in battle against everyone else, fighting the so-called noble fight of good and evil, with the only hope of reward in some future life ordained by a distant and judgemental God. You only have to open a daily newspaper or switch on the television to see how that idea plays itself out even today.

The next profound shift in the state of consciousness of humankind would be the millennium before the birth of Jesus of Nazareth and during the empire of the Ancient Greeks. The Greeks were the most advanced civilisation in the known world during this period in history. They galvanised mankind’s obsession with looking at the world objectively and rationally, that is to say by only trusting in hard evidence that could be observable through the senses and endorsed by the power of reason.

Indeed, it was the philosopher, Democritus, who expounded one of the first theoretical models of the universe. What he effectively said is that everything is made of atoms and empty space. And nothing else.

Then came the fall of the Greek and Roman civilisations, and the subsequent rise of Christianity throughout Medieval Europe, as represented by the Roman Catholic Church. Its own view of the world essentially comprised a pastiche of Aristotelian philosophy, the cosmology of Ptolemy – who believed the Earth was at the centre of the universe – and biblical imagery taken from the Book of Genesis.

Of course, many who challenged this view were exterminated. The world has witnessed many holocausts, and that of the Middle Ages ranks along side some of the worse the world has ever seen. Millions of women throughout Europe were burnt at the stake by the Inquisition, punished for their knowledge of pagan folklore and natural medicine – heretical ideas at the time, rendering them a threat to papal authority.

Only in the Renaissance period, starting approximately in the early fifteenth century, do we start to see something of a sea change. Indeed, many mathematicians and astronomers of the time were beginning to make discoveries that would challenge conventional thinking, which weren’t based on superstitious faith but hard evidence – empirical observation, calculus, rational analysis – and triggering what we now call the Scientific Revolution.

And thus amazing breakthroughs were made in our understanding of the world in which we live. People such as the astronomer Copernicus usurped the Church’s geocentric model of the universe by stating that it was flawed. Copernicus demonstrated that our solar system is in fact heliocentric, meaning that the sun is at its centre with the Earth revolving around it, rather than being the other way around. The Church was so affronted by this new proposition that they threatened to silence Copernicus permanently like so many before him who had dared to speak out publicly – luckily for Copernicus, he died of natural causes first.

Similarly, it was the contemporary British philosopher, Francis Bacon, who coined the phrase ‘knowledge is power’; in other words, the more you know about yourself and your environment, the less likely you are to be seduced by spurious arguments about the way things are and to be taken in by the prevailing paradigms of the time.

It was during the seventeenth century, however, when the study of physics would truly begin to take off. Sir Isaac Newton, whilst nursing wounds sustained from a falling apple, would go on to formulate one of the world’s greatest theories based on the nature of gravity.

Moreover, Newton essentially saw the world as a clockwork machine, which obeyed predictable laws that can be measurable to a high degree of mathematical accuracy. Although it was believed at the time that God created the world, Newtonian mechanics says that the world carries on working without any outside help. In other words, God – or whatever you what to call it – is separate from creation. So, everything in the universe is seen to be objective, that is to say, can be looked at and measured by an independent observer.

Newton is known as the founding father of what is generally called classical physics, and which refers to the everyday world we see around us. In fact, classical physics is also called Newtonian physics in his honour since everything manmade – washing machines, TV sets, space shuttles – owes its conception and creation in some way to the laws of classical physics. Needless to say, the realm of feelings, emotions, intuition, even psychic phenomena, have no place in this model. They are subjective, irrational and, therefore, aren’t measurable in the classical sense.

So when Charles Darwin came along in the nineteenth century, he sealed mankind’s pre-programmed, bestial status seemingly forever. His famous Origins of Species makes the case that humans are not descended from Adam and Eve as it says in Genesis but instead from a bunch of apes. The survival of the human race, according to Darwin, is dependent upon competition and selection – the survival of the fittest you might also like to say. And this has led to contemporaneous theories that propose that everything about us, from our eye colour to our sexual preferences, comes from our genetic programming, our DNA.

It would be Albert Einstein, twentieth century physicist and Nobel Laureate, who would radically alter our perception of the universe forever, his most famous theory being the Theory of Special Relativity, or put simply, E = mc². Dealing primarily with the macroscopic level of the universe, Einstein realised that space and time are relative measurements depending on the position of the observer.

Think, for example, of being on a moving train pulling out of a station – if you really look out of the window, it feels as if the train is stationary and it is the platform itself that is moving.

Despite breaking the classical mould by saying that both space and time, energy and matter, are all bound up with one another in some way, Einstein still believed that the universe obeyed certain laws, one law in particular which states that nothing can travel faster than the speed of light.

But this is just where even Einstein himself would be proven wrong …

–Paula Marvelly

Read Parts II and III.

Nonduality Blogs

December 29, 2009

I remember when there was nothing online about nonduality, except a few websites from Gurus. There were no regular people talking about nonduality. Well, these days nonduality is flowing in the streets. Still, there are billions of kitchen tables without glasses of nonduality juice upon them. Don’t worry, we have deliver men knocking on doors 24 hours a day.

Here’s a list of over a hundred blogs grounded in the teaching of nonduality. I list the blogs as I come across them. Let me know of your blog or if I’ve missed any:

The blogs of nonduality.

Nonduality in the movie Avatar

December 27, 2009

Marcos Vazquez writes the following in his Live Journal:

Avatar

* Dec. 26th, 2009 at 5:13 PM

I went to the movies yesterday to see Avatar, and while quite predictable at times, it struck a chord with me because it somehow reflects some of my own beliefs. The way the na’vi can bond with animals, with trees, with their ancestors, how they understand that they are simply ‘borrowed’ energy from the same source (Ai’wa), to which they all return in the end… It pretty much aligns with the concept of One-ness, of Non-Duality, understanding that we are not only related to everything else, but that we are one and the same.

The movie also sends a clear message about the way humans treat this earth and all creatures on it, about how everything seems to be justified in the name of ‘progress’, of ‘enrichment’… it reminds me of a native american proverb, “Only when the last tree is cut, only when the last river is polluted, only when the last fish is dead, will they realize that they can’t eat money”.

-Marcos Vazquez

A William Samuel Christmas

December 25, 2009

THE GIFT
by William Samuel
(1970)

At this moment it seems to me that we have a most important “mission.” It is to discover and live the Christ-Love we are that we may be found to be the comforter of this world of images that appears within the Selfhood that Awareness is. “As I be lifted up,” says the Christ, “all mankind shall be lifted likewise and drawn unto Me.”

We give the gift of Childlikeness to our world.We give the gift of unbounded joy. We give the gift of tenderness that warms the Heart and brings the soft breath of happiness, the tender touch and the unrestrained tear of gratitude. We tell the story of Identity. We tell the weary who they are. We show them the Kingdom of their heritage. We hand them their scepter and point to the limitless Light of Love which is their dominion. We look up and out and “show unto mankind his uprightness.” This is the Father’s business, so let us be at it.

This Christmas Season finds a New Star in the Heavens–this one to tell those with ears to hear of the New Jerusalem wherein there is neither sorrow nor darkness, nor age nor death.

The Holy City is already the fact, you know.

Isness is the totality of all Being within which there is nothing to make it dual, and we do not have to wait to see this fact!

While there presently appear to be an inside and an outside, a here and a not-here, a now and a not-now, all these things are only aspects of the Whole, the All—for which this Awareness “we” are is the activity. Mind (1) aware (2) of Itself (3) is a Holy Trinity to Itself. “Itself” knows these three are One Mind, One Love.

Well, this started out as a simple Christmas greeting. Don’t you forget that all the carols and bright lights, decorations and happy children are for you! Who else is the Christ?

Happy Christmas,
William Samuel (1970 )

http://williamsamuel.com

Wonder

December 24, 2009

Freshness x Surprise = Wonder

Open Mind x Attention = Wonder

Open Heart x Breath = Wonder

Everything = Wonder

New Nonduality Book: Beyond the Separate Self, by Colin Drake

December 23, 2009

An e-book from Nonduality.com Publications…

“Colin has a passionate love affair with Truth. This has culminated in him writing, simply and clearly, what has been revealed to him. His writings are an invitation to those with a similar interest, to explore and discover for themselves. Enjoy.” Isaac Shapiro

~ ~ ~

Beyond the ‘Separate Self’
The End of Anxiety and Mental Suffering

A Simple Guide to Awakening

Based on the Meditations, Contemplations, and Experiences
of Forty Years of Spiritual Search and Practice

by Colin Drake


Read the Table of Contents, Index, Introduction, and Chapter One.

$8 via PayPal. Download right away in .pdf format.

Notes on the Science and Nonduality Conference 2009, Part 6: Gary Weber

December 20, 2009

Gary Weber – You Are Not in Control

Segment of talk entitled “Ramana Maharshi and Einstein on Free Will” given at Science and NonDuality Conference in San Rafael, CA in October 2009. Employs Bhagavad Gita, thought experiments, gedanken, and examples from everyday life to demonstrate that it is impossible to be in control of what happens in your life and that concepts like sin and karma have no real validity.

Here is the link to the YouTube video of the talk. (WordPress or YouTube is not allowing the embedding of the video within this blog entry.)

Interview with James Swartz

December 18, 2009


An Interview with James Swartz

Conducted by Paula Marvelly


James Swartz

James Swartz was born in Butte, Montana in 1941. He grew up in Lewiston, Idaho; at 17, he left for a military prep school in Minnesota. He spent two years in a liberal arts college in Wisconscin, and then attended University of California at Berkeley in ’63. Six months short of graduation he ran off to Hawaii to start a successful business. But something was terribly wrong; at 26 he had ‘become an alcoholic, was a chain smoking gluttonous adulterer and life in every respect was not worth living’. One day in the Post Office in Waikiki he had a life changing epiphany that put him on the path to freedom.

Q. In your talk at the Science and Nonduality Conference, you said that the words ‘Advaita’ and ‘Vedanta’ don’t really go together. So could you define precisely what they mean?

Advaita means nondual. It’s an adjective that describes consciousness. It is not the name of a particular school of Vedanta because if Vedanta is properly understood, it is not a philosophy that can be broken up into different schools. In fact Vedanta is a dualistic method that removes ignorance. The only thing that is nondual is consciousness.

Vedanta means the knowledge that ends the search for knowledge. This knowledge is enshrined at the end of each of the four Vedas. Once you have this knowledge you don’t need to know anything else ever again. It refers to knowledge of yourself as awareness. It does not mean that you know every fact in existence.

Vedanta is a pranana – a means of knowledge. Because knowledge doesn’t happen on its own, it requires a means. The Self is not going to be known by the ordinary means that we have – by our senses, mind and intellect – because they need objects. But the Self is not available for objectification.

So, the means at our disposal is unsuitable and therefore Vedanta has evolved. It removes ignorance about the nature of the Self. It destroys the beliefs and opinions and ideas that you have about yourself that stand in the way of appreciating who you truly are.

Q. Ramana Maharshi likens knowledge to a stick that stirs the funeral pyre and once the Self is understood, you throw the stick in as well.

Yes, that’s right. Vedanta is a throw-away. Once the self is known for what it is, you do not need to know it again. You cannot forget it because the Self is always present. It is not an object to be remembered, like an experience. You can forget something that is not present, but once you know the Self you cannot forget it because it is you. Try to forget you. It is impossible.

Q. So the apparent self embarks upon a spiritual journey, uses the knowledge to reach a point of understanding and then it’s over.

That’s right. The mantra that people are chanting everyday is, I am small, I am inadequate, I am incomplete, I am separate. It is a steady drone in the back of their minds all the time. This is how they think and this is the point of view from which they are thinking.

Those thoughts need to be neutralised because they are not in harmony with the nature of reality. This method of teaching is called pratipaksha bhavana which means applying the opposite thought. It’s called enquiry but you are not asking a question like who am I? You are seeing what kind of thought is in your mind…the thought behind your thoughts and neutralizing it with the truth. The same thought is always in the mind – there’s something wrong with me, I am missing something, something is lacking, I need something. It is not true. You don’t need anything. Nothing is missing.

Shankara calls it the jnanabyasa, which means the application or the practice of knowledge, and it requires a certain degree of faith. It is why faith and devotion are qualifications for enlightenment. Even though I don’t feel that I am whole and complete, I have to fake it till I make it! I have to pretend that I am what I am. It sounds ridiculous, but it works.

Q. Assume a virtue if I have it not …

Yes. I have to assume that this is true; then I have to operate from that assumption and see if reality does or doesn’t confirm the truth. Because when I start thinking like this, when I start seeing myself in this way, I suddenly see a transformation in my life, things start to turn around, and I get this confirmation over and over again from my experiences, from the people around me.

Q. Why is it there this inherent paradox that only a few embark upon the path to Self knowledge? It’s ludicrous!

Yes, it is ludicrous from the point of view of the intellect, but it’s not really a legitimate question because the one who is asking it is a product of self ignorance. It’s like flashlight bulb saying, ‘I’d like to know what electricity is, why am I shining, and where is my light coming from?’ It can’t know because it is a gross transformation of a subtler energy and a gross thing cannot understand something subtler.

‘How’ ignorance works, we can say – that is a legitimate question. But there’s no actual ‘why’ to this because the one who wants the answer is incapable of understanding that he or she is awareness.

When you see that you are awareness, the idea of asking ‘why’ doesn’t come up. ‘How’ is relevant because it is a process we can describe and indicate. It is subject to analysis and investigation.

But there’s no ‘why’. It is just the nature of the Absolute.

Q. There’s diversity in the unity. That’s the paradox.

Yeah, in maya, everything is a paradox – it’s a zero-sum game. It’s all set up to frustrate you completely.

Q. In a way, it’s like very advanced mathematics – the paradox is an exquisite arrangement.

Absolutely. It’s totally conscious, it’s total purposeful, it’s aesthetic and it’s humorous. How can something that doesn’t have a problem, imagine that it has a problem, create a whole universe in order to solve its own problem and get out of it again… Ha!

Q. But it’s the jivas (individuals) that have the problems because of their self-ignorance?

There are no jivas apart from awareness, so awareness under the spell of apparent ignorance imagines that it has a problem. The ignorance is apparent and the knowledge is also apparent. The knowledge of Vedanta is an apparent knowledge because it operates only in maya and it’s only useful until it’s solved its problem. And then we throw in the stick, we throw the knowledge away. I don’t need the knowledge because it has already neutralised the ignorance.

You are giving the jiva some kind of independent existence.

Q. But to say that awareness has a problem to me is like saying Brahman has a problem. But Brahman doesn’t have a problem because Brahman just is.

Yes, but if there is a problem, then only Brahman could have that problem because there is only Brahman and so what kind of a problem is it? It’s not a real problem, it’s only an apparent problem.

In other words, the problem is all mithya (apparent), it is not satya (real).

When Brahman (consciousness) associates with maya (Ignorance) it seems to become a jiva, an individual. Pancadashi and other texts are very clear about this. The jiva, the individual, is Brahman or consciousness with a gross, subtle and causal body, i.e., ignorance. And that’s what makes Brahman seem to be an individual, when in fact it is not an individual.

This is a linguistic problem, two different words referring to the same thing. You can’t have a problem if there is only Brahman. If there is a jiva, it would have to be Brahman. Jiva would have to be another word for Brahman. But if jiva is different from Brahman you have a problem. It contradicts non-duality.

So Vedanta says it is an apparent problem that belongs to Ignorance and can be removed by enquiry. If it’s a real problem, then we’ve got a situation where Brahman who is limitless and jiva who is limited have the same degree of reality. How would we determine which is real? When Ignorance enters the picture one thing seems to be two different things.

Q. This brings me to Neo Advaita… As I understand it, Neo Advaita says I don’t exist, all is One, there is no separate self. This is opposed to traditional Advaita Vedanta teachings that say there is an apparent self, all is apparent diversity, there is an apparent separate self. Neo Advaita seems to miss that paradoxical subtlety. So I just wonder how it is that Neo Advaita is flourishing so much?

Well, it’s not exactly opposed because the traditional texts also say that there is no separate self. But what this means is not understood properly by this raft of so-called enlightened people who teach Neo-Advaita. People want an easy path and this seems to be a very easy way to solve the problem. But it does not solve the problem. Neo Advaita doesn’t have a way out of the apparent reality apart from its mindless denials. It has no guru, no teaching, no teacher – even though these guys are functioning as teachers, who are disseminating ignorance. There’s no way you can get from where you are to Brahman. There’s no path for them.

Vedanta is a complete path and provisionally accepts you as an individual and then it gradually, slowly, works you out of the problem of limitation, showing you as you go along what the Self is, what ignorance is.

Enlightenment in Vedanta is called atma-anatma viveka and it means discrimination between the Self and the apparent self.

So, I need to get that very clear – what the ‘not self’ is and what I can do in this relative apparent reality to get the kind of mind that’s capable of appreciating the fact that I am non-dual awareness.

There’s no way the Neos can get their minds prepared for enlightenment, so they just have to believe that they don’t exist on the basis of faith.

Q. So Neo Advaita is a faith?

Yes, it’s pure religion. These guys are the latest religious snake oil salesmen. And these people want to believe and belief is easy, until you start thinking. Once you start thinking, it screws up your beliefs.

The bloom is off the Neo-Advaita rose. I am getting a lot of people who realize how hollow it is and are coming back to the traditional teachings.

Q. So the understanding that there is only Brahman only comes when the mind is ripe to understand it. What Neo Advaita teachers are doing is taking people straight off the street and giving them the final teaching in a MacDonald’s happy meal, when in fact they’re not prepared.

Absolutely, instant enlightenment, yes! ‘I’m not really here, I’m just playing in the maya, nothing is really real, that’s why I am robbing you and cheating you and telling you all sorts of stories!’

In Vedanta, we have a concept called adhikara which means qualification. The way that these qualifications were arrived at was by looking at enlightened people, because all enlightened people basically have the same kind of nature and qualities in their minds – discrimination, dispassion, clarity of mind, devotion, forbearance, and so forth and so on. If you do not have these qualities, enligtenment will not be within your reach. Once you have developed them, then you are ready to be taught.

In Vedanta, you don’t get the teaching until you are qualified. For the people who are not qualified, who can’t get it, we teach them karma yoga and bhakti yoga, the three guna yoga, etc., which are subsets of Vedanta, and we also teach them how to use their minds properly and how to meditate until their minds become clear.

If you look at the Bhagavad Gita for example, the chapters up until chapter six are basically about karma yoga, although in the second chapter the Self is also presented.

Arjuna doesn’t get the Self teaching because he’s not qualified; he’s rajasic, an extrovert. So he needs karma yoga. Once he has understood karma yoga, he is ready for more, for meditation and self knowledge.

You cannot just walk in off the street and ‘get it’ as they advertise. They call it satsanga (keeping the company of truth) but it’s all about the sanga and not about the sat, although they talk a lot about it. It’s talk about it, it’s not the Self talking. It’s all a feel good thing. They get high on the group energy and perhaps some herbs. It produces a a lovely kind of intoxicating feeling, which they imagine is spiritual. It’s a nice social event, you get your long attenuated hugs with the other people who are there, perhaps you get the phone number of a cute girl or guy and well, it’s so cool…

Q. You said earlier in your talk today at the SAND Conference that Vedanta is the one and only system that provides everything you need for knowledge. What about the mystical paths, for example Sufism, Gnosticism, the Kabalah – are they just as profound?

I don’t think I said, ‘only.’ Vedanta is not profound and it’s not mystical. It’s purely common sense, logic and reason, direct experience and investigation. The thing about Vedanta is that it has a complete cosmology, a psychology, there’s a complete description of the Self, plus there are methods that you can use to transform your mind to make it meditation-worthy, to make it qualified for knowledge.

I don’t see that in other traditions. I see they only have bits and pieces of it

Q. So you’re saying Vedanta is the complete toolbox for Self-knowledge.

Yes. It’s called Brahma Vidya, which has several meanings, but one of them is the science of Brahman.

Q. So it is something that you can trust.

Absolutely. And it’s been confirmed over and over again and it’s never changed. These teachings have never changed and these methods have never changed. They remain true to the tradition forever because it is the truth and it works.

Q. Some people, I find, who are interested in non-duality, even in traditional teachings themselves, will say that any kind of teaching regarding the order of the creation, the nature of the mind, is somehow unimportant; in light of the fact that the apparent knowledge must be sublated or dissolved or let go in order to understand that everything is Brahman, what is the point ultimately in devoting so much time to such knowledge?

It’s true from the Self’s point of view, from awareness’s point of view, that there is no creation. It’s called ajatawada, non-creationism. Everything is the Self and the unborn. Therefore there is no creation.

But who understands it that way? Who actually gets that?

But if people who find themselves here in the creation, as jivas, as individuals with lives, bodies, minds and problems and want to grow toward that understanding, they first need to understand their milieu, the environment in which they find themselves and see how they relate to it.

And Ishvara or God is a name for the rules and laws and forces that are operating in the field and the one who operates these laws. The field of existence and the knower of the field is consciousness.

Q. The jnani knows that Brahman is samsara and samsara is Brahman, satyam is mithya and mithya is satyam.

Right. But this highlights the problem with Neo Advaita. They intellectually understand that all is Brahman and yet they dismiss the field of existence before they even know in what sense it is Brahman. So they continue to behave exactly like the fools they were before they they got the knowledge of Brahman. So you’ve got to ask, what kind of knowledge of Brahman is it?

You know, the proof of the pudding is in the eating. It’s how you live, it doesn’t matter what you say. You know whether a desire or a fear is motivating you. If you know it’s all Brahman, and that you’re Brahman, you’re not motivated by desires and fears – you stand apart from them.

The only way you can really tell with those people is not what they say, but how they live.

The tradition teaches what mithya is, and the tradition teaches what satya is. You don’t need to do anything about it, you just need to know what they are. Once you are clear about mithya and satya, then you won’t confuse them. Freedom is knowing which is which. Things will continue as they always have. The world is not going to suddenly merge in consciousness never to be seen again. Nor are you going to end up floating around in some blissful transcendental sky, free of everything.

Q. What comes to mind is Shankara’s three statements…

Brahma satyam. Jagan mithya. Jiva brahmaivah naparah.

Brahman alone is real. The world is an apparent reality. The individual and awareness are one. Or, the individual is limitless awareness.

Brahma is the truth, awareness is what’s real, what is true, what is always here and always present. Jagat, the world, is apparent. It looks real – it’s a very convincing dream and Ishvara has created a really cool dream that easily fools you. You can easily mistake it for reality, but it is only an apparent reality. You need to investigate and contemplate the meaning of these words, and then you can see though it.

Q. And what do you come to, arrive at? What is the answer to the ultimate question, who am I?

You arrive at the understanding that nothing is missing in you. That you are not lacking in any way, you see?

All this seeking is based upon the idea that something is missing.

Q. That ache that never seems to go away?

Exactly. And what you discover is that ache, that longing, that searching is not valid. You see that nothing is missing.

As Swami Dayananda says, you are whole and complete – purna is the word in the Vedas.

And therefore, my getting and keeping are no longer relevant to me. I am not hanging onto anything, and I’m not trying to obtain anything. However it is, is fine with me.

I feel adequate to deal with whatever is happening because I am awareness and awareness can handle anything. Nothing can affect me and I know this for certain. Not because I am a person who knows that I am awareness, but because I am awareness.

If it’s a person who knows that they are awareness, that’s a little different situation. You could call that self realization, or something. But there is still someone there who has a conviction that they are awareness.

But at a certain point, that conviction dissolves into the hard and fast understanding that I am awareness and then there’s no more discussion about it at all. And then it’s just I AM.

Q. I know Ramana Maharshi talks about two very distinct points – there’s an initial point where there is ‘self realization’ but the vasanas are still active; then there’s another point where the vasanas have burnt out and there is only I AM.

Absolutely. And you no longer assume the point of view of a jiva or an individual. The tension has gone.

One of the great gods in India is called Sri Ram and he appears as a deity with his bow, the bow is always unstrung; the bow being a symbol of the jiva, the ego.

And why doesn’t it have a string on it? Because there’s no tension in it! He’s totally free of tension and that’s the meaning of that symbol. The tension is borne of the belief that I am limited and incomplete and I’m in relationship to this world and I’ve got to negotiate my way through, avoiding this and gaining that, which basically wears you out and doesn’t provide you with any real peace.



How to Attain Enlightenment: The Vision of Nonduality
by James Swartz

(Sentient Publications, 2010)
Buy Amazon.US

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Visit James’ website, shiningworld.com, for more information about his work.

This interview originally appeared on
http://www.advaita.org.uk/SAND/JamesSwartzSAND.htm

Science and Nonduality Conference 2010

December 17, 2009

The Science and Nonduality Conference is being held October 20-24, 2010 in San Rafael, California. Early Bird tickets are $295. Click here to find out more and to buy tickets.

We’re going for a combination of professionalism, freshness, and diversity.

We’re pushing for people with nondual angles in business, ecofeminism, world music, literature, sex/romance/marriage/family, and a few other presentations involving incense, stage performers, and alternative lifestyles. Of course the bread and butter is the teachers of nonduality, including more female teachers next year.

Another important aspect is creating experiential and participatory opportunities.

The vision is for a combination of celebratory, educational, spiritual, beautiful, wondrous, participatory. And magical, because you never know who you might meet or what you might discover and experience.

Last year’s conference already had those qualities; they’re going to be kicked up a few notches. And like I said, the early bird ticket price is really good at $295 for a long weekend with events and talks scheduled throughout the day and evening.

The Science and Nonduality Conference, October 20-24, 2010, San Rafael, California. Release into the unknown.

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