Pluto
Meowing to go out
- Dec 27, 2020
- 3,991
Warning: this topic may be triggering or destabilising for some people.
Yin & Yang
Yin & Yang is a familiar symbol representing the concept of interconnected opposites in Taoism and other ancient Chinese philosophies. These interconnected opposites include feminine/masculine, birth/death, pleasure/pain, light/dark, etc. which we all know and love/hate.
The tragedy of the human condition boils down to our vain attempts to extract the good aspects and reject the bad, as if trying to keep only one side of a single coin. The futility of this is similarly expressed in Buddhist philosophy with the famous first noble truth, that suffering is an innate characteristic of all human life.
There are many very practical ways in which this plays out. People chase worldly goals, only to either fail, or else succeed only to have the novelty wear off, or the thing in question proves temporary. Death is the consistent theme; "All things vanish [into the Tao] and it alone endures."
Putting aside the subjectivity of labelling events as good/bad, we can see obvious historical examples. World War II was 'bad', yet ushered in the era of jet-powered aeroplanes and rockets that would put man on the moon. Nuclear power went from destroying cities to powering them. And yet, the era of relative peace and population growth led directly to new ecological catastrophes.
While people and their opinions come and go, what remains is basic underlying principles such as, "Life is one damn thing after another."
Nonduality
With the problem of life - suffering, death, etc. - well defined as an innate quality of this dualistic reality, the solution of nonduality emerges. Talking about this gets infinitely messy, fast. Nonduality already implies that there is no problem and no solution, nor is there a duality-nonduality duality. Put simply, the mind is no longer a relevant tool if we are to proceed. The goal is not to understand anything.
The seers of Eastern philosophy were aware of the timeless nature of life long before Einstein declared that time is an illusion. More importantly, they knew to question our sense of self. The sense of self is the centre of the human experience, including all of its trouble, yet there are few settings where it is socially acceptable to question our core beliefs about ourselves, despite it obviously being a product of accumulating ideas since childhood.
From this perspective, the 'death' of the psychological ego-self is merely the recognition that it was never real in the first place. Nothing else needs to change. Waking from a bad dream does not require addressing any grievances of the character, nor even causing its death as such. Important note: this is not a self-help psychological trick nor a religious belief system, but a very real shift in identity which radically changes the experience of everyday living.
(Just to touch on it briefly. Killing the physical body is neither here nor there in this context. We all know it is necessary under some circumstances, but the issue of needing to discard a false identity remains either way. It doesn't matter if you are reading this in a human body or as a ghost.)
In a way, the shift needed to overcome the problem of duality is indescribable within the framework of the dream. Hence, language is used almost artistically to try and trigger one's own inner sense of knowing what is already true. Even to call duality a problem treats it as if it were real. It is easy to reinforce the belief in ourselves as individual protagonists struggling to navigate a dualistic world, rather than a timeless consciousness that is merely aware of sense perceptions in the immediate present.
Back Down to Earth
Many obvious questions that arise regarding this topic. Is it real? Can the shift happen for me? Are everyday people actually going through this "die before you die" thing? How to go about it? Is it even desirable? What would become of me and my life?
Many of you will have had a taste of advanced states of consciousness. Some psychedelic experiences tap into it. It can be experienced through near-death or spontaneous spiritually transformative experiences. Sometimes a deep state of meditation is a catalyst. The most practical methods are self-inquiry and time with someone who is already in the nondual state. It will happen for everyone, and you will then realised that it was never not the case.
At this point, attention needs to turn towards proper teachers. What's fascinating right now is that they seem to be emerging everywhere. Direct teachings which can potentially trigger a spiritual awakening are available en masse on YouTube. There's an active Reddit community. Since each liberated person can potentially liberate many others, it may be the beginnings of a radical shift for humanity, but more importantly will end the suffering of each individual who goes through it.
At a personal level, I notice that this is happening right at a time when the suffering-laden story of my human form is at a stage where there's no rational reason to push on. Except maybe this. I follow a physician who is routinely interviewing people who have been through, and are going through a spiritual awakening. The ultimate outcome is the same, but it is well worth having this message available and to encourage discussion for anyone who is interested. I believe there is no higher purpose in life.
Yin & Yang
Yin & Yang is a familiar symbol representing the concept of interconnected opposites in Taoism and other ancient Chinese philosophies. These interconnected opposites include feminine/masculine, birth/death, pleasure/pain, light/dark, etc. which we all know and love/hate.
The tragedy of the human condition boils down to our vain attempts to extract the good aspects and reject the bad, as if trying to keep only one side of a single coin. The futility of this is similarly expressed in Buddhist philosophy with the famous first noble truth, that suffering is an innate characteristic of all human life.
There are many very practical ways in which this plays out. People chase worldly goals, only to either fail, or else succeed only to have the novelty wear off, or the thing in question proves temporary. Death is the consistent theme; "All things vanish [into the Tao] and it alone endures."
Putting aside the subjectivity of labelling events as good/bad, we can see obvious historical examples. World War II was 'bad', yet ushered in the era of jet-powered aeroplanes and rockets that would put man on the moon. Nuclear power went from destroying cities to powering them. And yet, the era of relative peace and population growth led directly to new ecological catastrophes.
While people and their opinions come and go, what remains is basic underlying principles such as, "Life is one damn thing after another."
Nonduality
With the problem of life - suffering, death, etc. - well defined as an innate quality of this dualistic reality, the solution of nonduality emerges. Talking about this gets infinitely messy, fast. Nonduality already implies that there is no problem and no solution, nor is there a duality-nonduality duality. Put simply, the mind is no longer a relevant tool if we are to proceed. The goal is not to understand anything.
The seers of Eastern philosophy were aware of the timeless nature of life long before Einstein declared that time is an illusion. More importantly, they knew to question our sense of self. The sense of self is the centre of the human experience, including all of its trouble, yet there are few settings where it is socially acceptable to question our core beliefs about ourselves, despite it obviously being a product of accumulating ideas since childhood.
From this perspective, the 'death' of the psychological ego-self is merely the recognition that it was never real in the first place. Nothing else needs to change. Waking from a bad dream does not require addressing any grievances of the character, nor even causing its death as such. Important note: this is not a self-help psychological trick nor a religious belief system, but a very real shift in identity which radically changes the experience of everyday living.
(Just to touch on it briefly. Killing the physical body is neither here nor there in this context. We all know it is necessary under some circumstances, but the issue of needing to discard a false identity remains either way. It doesn't matter if you are reading this in a human body or as a ghost.)
In a way, the shift needed to overcome the problem of duality is indescribable within the framework of the dream. Hence, language is used almost artistically to try and trigger one's own inner sense of knowing what is already true. Even to call duality a problem treats it as if it were real. It is easy to reinforce the belief in ourselves as individual protagonists struggling to navigate a dualistic world, rather than a timeless consciousness that is merely aware of sense perceptions in the immediate present.
Back Down to Earth
Many obvious questions that arise regarding this topic. Is it real? Can the shift happen for me? Are everyday people actually going through this "die before you die" thing? How to go about it? Is it even desirable? What would become of me and my life?
Many of you will have had a taste of advanced states of consciousness. Some psychedelic experiences tap into it. It can be experienced through near-death or spontaneous spiritually transformative experiences. Sometimes a deep state of meditation is a catalyst. The most practical methods are self-inquiry and time with someone who is already in the nondual state. It will happen for everyone, and you will then realised that it was never not the case.
At this point, attention needs to turn towards proper teachers. What's fascinating right now is that they seem to be emerging everywhere. Direct teachings which can potentially trigger a spiritual awakening are available en masse on YouTube. There's an active Reddit community. Since each liberated person can potentially liberate many others, it may be the beginnings of a radical shift for humanity, but more importantly will end the suffering of each individual who goes through it.
At a personal level, I notice that this is happening right at a time when the suffering-laden story of my human form is at a stage where there's no rational reason to push on. Except maybe this. I follow a physician who is routinely interviewing people who have been through, and are going through a spiritual awakening. The ultimate outcome is the same, but it is well worth having this message available and to encourage discussion for anyone who is interested. I believe there is no higher purpose in life.
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