Monday, July 31, 2006

Imprinting

How to Imprint Your Goals
by Dr. Robert Anthony





Deciding to change a habit, attitude or personal situation does not automatically bring about the change desired. The decision to make the change is only the first step. Further action is required in order to effect a change in your subconscious self-image. You have learned that your goal is the mental picture of what you want. When you write down the goal, it becomes an affirmation.

The process of doing this is called "Imprinting". Imprinting is the deliberate control of thoughts and pictures of the kind of changes we want to make. The imprinting occurs when our subconscious mind accepts the new visual image of the end result.

You affirm your goal.
You picture the end result.
You feel the emotion that goes along with accomplishing the goal.
Let's talk about each step so that we are absolutely clear on the procedure.

Step 1 - Affirm Your Goal

An affirmation is simply a statement of fact or belief that is written out in a personal, positive, present tense form as though the goal were already a reality. When you write out your affirmations, you deliberately control the programming of your subconscious by directing the visual picture to the end result you want.

Step 2 - Picture the End Result

Picture and experience in your mind the accomplishment of the end result. See yourself actively involved in the accomplishment. This is called constructive "synthetic visualization" or "virtual reality". It works on the theory of displacement. You are displacing the old picture and old self-image with the new. Remember - you will move toward the goal that you picture.

Step 3 - Feel the Emotion That Goes Along with Accomplishment

The subconscious responds to feelings more than to words. It doesn't respond any better to positive feelings than to negative feelings. It just responds to feelings. The more emotion or feeling we can put behind an idea, the faster it will manifest. So feeling and emotion are very important for impact. It can be said that our affirmation will manifest in direct proportion to the frequency with which we use picturing and emotional involvement. What you want to do is see to yourself accomplishing the end result while feeling the joy and satisfaction of the accomplishment.

All three steps are necessary for successful imprinting. If you just read your affirmations you can expect about a 10% success rate. If you read and visualize the end result, you can expect about a 55% success rate. If you read your affirmations, picture the end result, and feel the emotion behind the accomplishment of what you are picturing, you can expect a 100 % success rate!

Dr. Robert Anthony

Friday, July 28, 2006

You Are Happiness

What stops happiness is a constant desire for that which you perceive that you do not have, that which you think you are not, and that which you believe that you do not do. The problem with the ego is that it does not stay focused. One day it wants one thing and the next day it wants another. But by the third day it still unconsciously wants what it did not get the first two days. Thus the ego builds an enormous hunger that seemingly can never be satisfied. This dissatisfaction makes the ego feel like an angry deprived victim, a failure. Then to control its painful deprivation, the ego tries to not want anything. The result of this suppression is that the ego then tries to stop others from getting what they want. This brings on war in all of its forms, and the ego marches on, right but empty. When the ego is deprived and angry, criminal behavior is born.

What can be done about this universal human dilemma? You have to use your imagination differently. You imagined deprivation, now you have to imagine fulfillment. Out of imagination arise both the physical and spiritual universes. First, the spiritual and then the physical. The ego does not know the difference. The ego must be born again. The ego is not deprived, not a failure, not a victim. The ego is just blinded by the mis-use of your all powerful imagination. Your ego forgot that imagination created the physical universe in the first place. When the ego is re-born, it awakens to the Kingdom of God. It remembers that you already are and have everything in your spiritual universe. You can then claim and enjoy that wholeness and fullness within, right now. You do not have to wait for materialization and manifestation. You are no longer in want. The Lord is my shepherd, I am not in want. When you no longer want, your desires come true. Because your desires are already fulfilled in your spiritual universe, they start to show up in your physical universe. Criminality and war are not necessary. Forgiveness becomes a possibility. You are not deprived. What you want is the Infinite Good and that is your inheritance. The Infinite Good is yours right now. Just be aware. You are happiness.

I am appreciative to Jorj Elprehzleinn for some of these insights.

Thursday, July 27, 2006

Your Growing Edge


How do you determine what your growing edge is? Your growing edge is where your anxiety is nudging you to stop, look and listen. Your growing edge is a signal coming to you from within your guidance system, a signal that today you can choose your Infinite Good. You may not even suspect yet that the Infinite Good exists, but that’s okay. It exists and it is revealing itself to you. Just allow yourself to imagine. Imagination is your growing edge, often clouded by anxiety. Imagination is where God touches your finite mind. Whatever you can imagine you can manifest. All things are possible. That’s a stretch, isn’t it? Your growing edge is a stretch beyond your comfort zone, beyond the habit box you live in. Imagination is required to become aware of your Infinite Good in your finite world. What would you like to experience today? Go for it. All things are possible. Just let yourself grow.

For example, your growing edge might be the power of blessing. Did you know that you have the power to curse or to bless? To burden down or to lift up? To deaden or to enliven? To criticize or to praise? Silently or verbally you can make a difference. You are already using this power one way or the other every day. Every thought, feeling and word is making an impression on the world around you. You can bless your self, your family, your pets, your car, your house, your food, a clerk, a waitress, a co-worker. You can send irritation or love, peace and joy, much like a radio wave is broadcast. To bless means that you become aware that God is in all persons, things and places. You can evoke or draw out the Infinite Good simply by your awareness and choice.

Praise and bless your partner, your children. Praise them most for the qualities at present them appear to lack, and it will stir up those very qualities, even love and loyalty.

A charming lady heard a lecture on blessing. She was very unhappy. Her husband had been neglecting her, leaving her home alone every night. She sat down that afternoon before the fire, put a chair in front of her, and mentally placed her husband in it. She then blessed and praised him for his goodness—his kindness—his honesty and integrity—his success in life and loyalty, releasing in him every good quality she knew. All afternoon she did this. At five she went upstairs and put on her prettiest gown. At six her husband came home with a box of gorgeous American Red Roses, also a large box of candy, and gave them to her. She thanked him, very graciously, but not a word about how she had spent the afternoon. After dinner, her husband said, “Do you know my dear, I hadn’t meant these gifts for you, but as I was leaving the office, something said to me ‘What a chump you are, wasting your time and life. Go home to your wife, who really and truly loves you.’ He had a complete awakening!

Frances Wilshire: You: Discover Your Real Self, the Spirit Within, Devorss Publications, 1935.

Tuesday, July 25, 2006

Self-Talk

Unless we are sleeping, we never stop self-talking and every word produces an effect. Isn’t that amazing! We are accountable for every idea we think, every word we speak, every image we conjure up. Is that good news? It could be. It all depends on what you are telling yourself. Either way, its very powerful. How many thoughts does a person have in a day? 5000? 100,000? Thank God, most of them cancel each other out. Up to a point we are protected from the outcome of our undisciplined minds. Even so, life is truly an outpicturing of imagination. Just suppose that every thought, word and image which you energize comes true! Wouldn’t that be important to know? Wouldn’t you want to harness that power for your day today? Why would you carelessly create another unwanted experience?

The answer is habit. We are creatures of habit. We are sleeping giants. Unaware of our God-given powers. Unaware of the fact that thoughts are things. We unconsciously and by habit give power to thousands of external things, and then wonder why we feel like victims. The secret of life lies hidden within. A genie in the bottle of our imagination grants our every consistently energized wish. Our every careless thought comes true. Be careful what you pray for, you get it. Study your own mind, study your own spiritual nature. You have studied everything else. The proper study of mankind is man. This website is dedicated to the opening up of your mind to itself, and to the nature of reality. “Oh, what have I said, what have I done, Oh all powerful human words!” William Blake

We are anxious because we are mis-using our imagination against ourselves. We are shooting ourselves in the foot. Until we see and admit our blindness, how will we see the true power of our words? Wake thou that sleepest, cried St. Paul. Aren't we asleep to the fact that all things are possible? When you have fully discovered the secret knowledge of the Christ within you, you will be free of anxiety and victimization, but not until then. Watch your self-talk. Watch your judgments. Watch your opinions. Think no evil, see no evil, speak no evil. If my thoughts are my food, how do they affect my health? What you say comes true. Be aware!

Monday, July 24, 2006

Positive Parenting on A Vacation Trip

Vacations are an awesome way to keep your family close and connected! At the same time, however, traveling can also be stressful -- especially trying to keep children occupied for long road trips or flights. This article shares a few ideas for keeping
your sanity during such times!

Our family LOVES vacationing and we try to plan a couple of big trips for the whole family ever year. These trips may be anything from camping in the great outdoors to spending a few days at a theme park such as Disneyland. Camping is great because it is inexpensive and there is just something bonding about sleeping in
tents and roasting marshmellows over a camp-fire!

Disneyland or Disneyworld is also fun because the parks are timeless and appeal to a wide variety of ages. By the way, if you are planning a trip to Disney World any time in the near future, then check out this Disney World Vacation Guide - It will tell you everything you need to know to make your vacation awesome (including how to save a lot of money)!

http://clicks.aweber.com/z/ct/?5uZIEyBZmUSaWKm4bbhrpw

We are lucky that we live within a half day's drive to Disneyland, but even with that - seven hours in a car with six small children is no easy feat! Recently we took such a trip and I was wishing that I had brought along our tickets and envelopes from the G.O.L.D.
Standard and perhaps a few prizes to earn for the long drive.

One of the nice things about the G.O.L.D. Standard, is that it is portable, meaning you can bring it with you on vacation! I hadn't really thought about it for this particular trip, however, and our children started becoming restless trying to sit still for so long in a car. Soon petty arguments began to break out and I found myself becoming increasingly irritated!

So, here we are...confined in our mini-van -- with several more hours to go until we reach our destination. What to do? Have you ever been in a similar situation and found yourself shouting, "You had better stop it right now or we are turning this car around right
now and going home!" Now, this is an empty threat (and your kids
know it)! Maybe some of you would actually have the gumption to carry out such a threat, but I know I wouldn't want to turn around and go home after driving several hours!

Of course we could have pulled over and waited until everyone stopped fighting before continuing to drive. That usually works well, but it also wastes precious time and would probably wake up my baby who somehow managed to sleep peacefully through all of the noise! In any case, I found myself barking useless orders such as, "stop that!" "Knock it off!" and "Will you PLEASE be quiet!" Of course this did absolutely
no good.

If I had brought along the tickets and something for my children to earn, (or a prize they could pick out at Disneyland if they had enough tickets) then I could have taken a ticket every time our children acted up - and rewarded them for behaving well in the car.
Not that this solves every problem (it doesn't) but it helps TREMENDOUSLY!

Since this road-trip was a little difficult to handle, I started looking into some other ideas to make our trips run more smoothly.
Now when we go on vacation, we let each of our children pack a little backpack with one of their favorite toys, books to read, little travel games and activity books.

Another idea that works really well is to buy a few surprises to pass out along the way such as books, bubble posters and markers, or word-finds and crossword puzzles. The kids can "earn" these surprises along the way with tickets they have earned with their good behavior. Other simple activities that work well are: a piece of yarn (kid's can play games like cat's cradle), pipe cleaners (kids will twist them up into all sorts of cool creations), and paper and pens (for hang-man, tic-tac-toe and other games they can play with each other).

I recently heard a humorous tip to help deal with travel battles.
When the kids are fighting and knocking each other over the head, just pull the car over and start kissing your spouse. Your kids will immediately stop what they are doing to see what is going one.
Then they will promise you the world to get you to stop being so "gross!"

On a more serious note, however, the more we can keep our children occupied, the better they will behave in the car or plane. Of course there is always the old stand-by of having a DVD/VCR in your car. That does help keep children occupied for awhile, but even that can become mundane after awhile and doesn't offer much family interaction.

Other options for car travel include playing family games such as "Twenty Questions" and "The Alphabet Game." The Alphabet helps keep children occupied as they try and spot each letter of the alphabet in order on various signs and billboards before everyone else does. Our family loves to sing and we have a grand old time singing songs together at the top of our lungs or playing games
such as "Name That Tune." I have found an excellent web-site that
lists travel games and ideas for kids of all ages. You can find it
at: http://clicks.aweber.com/z/ct/?zlGaeUMztJyAsiWpTT0pqw

Vacations can provide a great atmosphere for learning. Kids can follow along with their own map or play "car bingo" looking for different items along the way. Another game is called "Geography."
One child thinks up a place like Colorado, and then the next person has to come up with another place using either the first or last letter of the word "Colorado." Another game you can play is to have a "Scavenger Hunt." Type up a list of things you might see on your road-trip and pass out copies. The first one to "find"
everything on the list wins!

When traveling with children, it is always a good idea to stop every couple of hours or so at a rest-stop or park so that everyone can stretch their legs. This way the kids can run around for a few minutes. Stopping to eat also helps break up a road-trip and allows everyone a much-needed break.

Little yummy (but nutritious) treats also come in handy on trips.
To avoid arguments between siblings, it is a good idea to let each child have his or her own Ziploc bag filled with a few snacks. I always pack a water bottle for each child (the kind with the pop-up spouts work best and are harder to spill). I fill the water-bottles part way full with water and then freeze them the night before so that the water remains cold the entire trip.

My husband and I like to listen to Audio Books in the car. Being involved in a great story really helps the time fly! Kids can also listen to audio books that are geared towards their age range. You can pick these up from your local library. Then your children can either follow along with the book or simply listen to the story and let their imagination soar.

Vacations are a wonderful investment for a family. They will bring you closer together both physically and emotionally. These are times when some of the greatest memories are made. I still get nostalgic when I think back on particular vacations I had growing up. Memories such as these are priceless!

For more information on vacation or travel tips, go to:

http://clicks.aweber.com/z/ct/?XuUhpfTTQDyjtjWhMFhtCw

For more information on using the G.O.L.D. Standard either at home, or on vacation, go to:

http://clicks.aweber.com/z/ct/?sJ8UR6BLtDSZIb0Jkv3BVw

Have Fun!

Wendy
http://clicks.aweber.com/z/ct/?sJ8UR6BLtDSZIb0Jkv3BVw


Positive Parenting
P.O. Box 752
Santa Clara, UT 84765-0752

Can You See God?

Can you see God? Can you see a vase? Please click on Archetypal Symbols, and look at the figure entitled "Can You See the Vase?" Just as the vase is hidden, so is God hidden in the landacape of our lives. Relax, allow your vision to be receptive. Aggressive vision will not reveal what you want to see.

Saturday, July 22, 2006

Imagination is God

There is nothing to fear but our shadow and the shadow is really nothing but misused imagination, collectively and individually. Imagination is God. The misuse of imagination is the shadow. You are imagination in action. And when you misuse the power of God, you make the shadow seem real, but it is not. Imagination is God; imagination in proper action is manifested in Jesus Christ, Buddha and the Great Ones. When one with God, we are one with the power of imagination. Doubt, fear and misbelief are the only things that interfere with the absolutely constructive use of the power of imagination. Evil is the apparent misuse of imagination.

You can read tons of books on science, theology, metaphysics, religion, philosophy and psychology, but you will find very little in-depth analysis and understanding of imagination. Everyone discusses the mind, the emotions, cognition, behavior, and the intellect, but imagination for the most part is left to the poets and dreamers. And yet, nothing that you can see, feel, hear or touch was created without the power of imagination. Imagination is the source of creativity and productivity. Out of imagination springs our thoughts, our emotions, and our actions. All self-talk arises from imagination. Through imagination comes the energy of life, shaping our experiences. Choice is shaped by what we imagine we have to choose from.

"...with our thoughts we create the world..."
Buddha

And with our imagination, we create our thoughts, we might add.

“According to your faith, so be it unto you” announced Jesus. What is faith but imagination in action?

And now, the quantum physicists are telling us that every experience and every object is created by collapsing invisible waves into visible particles through the imaginative act. What an awesome gift we have! What terror and beauty we create daily through this awesome gift. How unconscious we are! What else is worth doing except to become conscious?

Imagination is infinite. The only limits to imagination are our fears and mis-beliefs. Imagination is infinite creativity. Imagination is the hidden source of our very being. Imagination is where man and God join. Consciousness is imagination in action.

Where does suffering come from, if not from imagination? God did not create suffering, we did. And what is suffering but the perverted and unconscious use of imagination? We are made in the image or imagination of God. The next step in our evolution has to be the discovery, not of outer space, but of inner space. Reason becomes irrationality without the proper conscious use of imagination. Love turns into hate without the proper use of imagination. Confidence shatters into cowardice without the realization of the power of imagination. Dreams turn into nightmares. “The best laid plans of mice and men often go astray.” Get acquainted with your self. Become a Columbus in your inner world. Discover your God nature. Let go of the victim theme of unconscious imagination. The keys to the kingdom have been given to us. Unlock the door to your inmost self. Anxiety is the name of that door. Anxiety is our daily menu until and unless we unlock the power of imagination.

Perhaps William Blake was right when he said that God within us is our own wonderful human imagination.

Thursday, July 20, 2006

What If?

WHAT IF?

WHAT IF unconditional love, unlimited resources, infinite intelligence, spontaneous creativity, universal power, unending life, and uncaused serenity and contentment are constantly available choices for you?

And WHAT IF you didn’t see these choices, and without awareness you “chose” by default to put most of your time , attention and energy into beliefs and assumptions about the value or necessity of struggle, worry, low self-esteem, victim feelings, control and power plays, anxious and depressive behavior, addictive “solutions” , blame guilt and atonement games, and the medication of stress?

And WHAT IF such default choices resulted in a painful crisis or impasse in your life? And WHAT IF you took the challenge to courageously and honestly look for any mistakes in your pet assumptions in spite of your desire to be “right”? And WHAT IF you asked yourself how and why you attracted and created your dilemma so that you could find out what it really means, enabling you to transform it into a bigger picture?

And WHAT IF you realized that human behavior is basically spiritually motivated and that all of our troubles and crises are actually “wake up” signals to look again?

And WHAT IF you looked more deeply and saw that:

• what is driving the 15% annual increase in health costs is the desire to find health and wholeness;
• and what is driving the violent crime and road rage epidemic, not to mention politics and wars, is the disguised desire for self-worth and power;
• and what is driving drug, alcohol, food and porn addictions is the secret desire to reduce stress and ‘get high”;
• and what is driving the stock market and business world technology craze is really the desire of our alienated wireless society to “stay connected”;
• and what is driving consumerism is actually the far of lack and the desire for more; and what is driving the sexual compulsiveness of our time is the desire for excitement, intimacy and oneness;
• and what is driving the internet explosion into the information age is the symbolic desire for true knowledge and wisdom;
• and what is driving all of our desires is the search for the Infinite Good beyond all of the fickle tangible gods we usually depend on.

WHAT IF you realized that the potential for staying connected, getting high, discovering wholeness, feeling empowered , accessing wisdom, and experiencing intimacy and prosperity are already given to you and are presently available to you through a shift in awareness?

And then WHAT IF you decided to wake yourself up to your Infinite Spirituality each moment of the day, especially when you get a distress signal telling you there is a “problem?” Then we could be grateful to know that we are conscious spiritual beings having a human experience and that life is what we always dreamed it should be but feared to believe that it actually is.

And WHAT IF you decided to take a leap, regardless of the risk and the consequences, in order to find out the truth about yourself? And WHAT IF you didn’t give up this WHAT IF question until you became enlightened?

Dr. Joe

Saturday, July 15, 2006

You Can Choose Again

Our emotions are the motions of energy
With a spin we put upon them.
Suppose that what I sense and see out there is unique to me
Suppose that I create all of my own experiences
Of the world each moment
If I have chosen to see and experience what I do not want
Then I can always choose again.
Action and reaction are not my destiny
Choice is my God-given but often forgotten power
Awareness of that choice is my wake-up call
I am not a victim of the world or of my emotions
I am free and the world is my oyster
I am free of the habits of criticizing, complaining and blaming
I choose to appreciate, support and forgive unconditionally
Conditions do not control me because I made them up to begin with
I am not a stimulus-response machine or a copy cat
I choose to co-create with you a new world today
Will you join me in the discovery of the creative power of choice?
We can choose peace and not the reactive story of violence
By waking up right now from our nightmare of fear
Only love is real

Friday, July 14, 2006

The Magic Mirror Gate



"Where were we?" Engywook asked.

"At the Great Riddle Gate," Atreyu reminded him.

"Right. Now suppose you've managed to get through. Then - and only then - the second gate will be there for you,
the Magic Mirror Gate. This second gate is both open and closed. Sounds crazy, doesn't it?

The point is that this gate seems to be a big mirror or something of the kind, though it's made neither of glass nor of metal. What it is made of, no one has ever been able to tell me. Anyway, when you stand before it, you see yourself. But not as you would in an ordinary mirror. You don't see your outward appearance; what you see is your real innermost nature. If you want to go through, you have to - in a manner of speaking - go into yourself."

"Well," said Atreyu. "It seems to me that this Magic Mirror Gate is easier to get through than the first."

"Wrong!" cried Engywook. Once again he began to trot back and forth in agitation. "Dead wrong, my friend! I've known travelers who considered themselves absolutely blameless to yelp with horror and run away at the sight of the monster grinning out of the mirror at them. We had to care for some of them for weeks before they were even able to start home."

"We!" growled Urgl, who was passing with another bucket of water. "I keep hearing we. When did you ever take care of anybody?"

Engywook waved her away.

"Others," he went on lecturing, "appear to have seen something even more horrible, but had the courage to go through. What some saw was not so frightening, but it still cost every one of them an inner struggle. Nothing I can say would apply to all. It's a different experience each time."

"Good," said Atreyu. "Then at least it's possible to go through this Magic Mirror Gate?"

"Oh yes, of course it's possible, or it wouldn't be a gate. Where's your logic, my boy?"

"But it's also possible to go around it," said Atreyu. "Or isn't it?"

"Yes indeed," said Engywook. "Of course it is. But if you do that, there's nothing more behind it.

The third gate isn't there until you've gone through the second."

Michael Ende: The Neverending Story


Ask yourself the Great Riddle: What is this that I am seeing in my daily self-talk? What is this that I am seeing in my environment? What is this chair? this car? this computer? this dollar bill? We assign meaning to all that we imagine, and all that we see. By asking yourself these questions, you can enter the Magic Mirror of your life and there you will see some image, either horrible or nice, but realize that it is just an image. Go through that image and you enter the Third Gate, the Kingdom of Heaven.

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

Prioritizing

Prioritizing

1. Seek ye first the Kingdom of God
2. And all of these things will be added unto you

1. Love God totally
2. Love your neighbor as yourself

1. See the wholeness beyond time and space
2, Parts will be added in time and space

1. Tune in Here/Now
2. The there and then will be added

1. Realize your Mission
2. Job benefits will be added

1. Realize your wealth
2. Dollars will be added

1. Realize your Health
2. ILLs will be dissolved

1. Love soul-ness
2. A soul-mate will be added

1. Face Reality
2. Anxious illusions will fade away

1. Realize your Mission Impossible
2. Your mission possible will be added unto you

1. Realize your Infinite Good
2. Relative goods will be added

Anxiety is priority confusion. While your #2’s remain in first priority, you remain anxious. The Kingdom of God cannot be #2 because it is all-encompassing. There is only one consciousness and it includes all #2’s

When you enter the Kingdom of Reality, it’s all there already, and in due time the wanted parts are added to our awareness.

You are already healthy, wealthy and wise if you are Kingdom-aware. Claim it and it will manifest. But if you insist that you are finite, that will manifest also.

In Kingdom Consciousness, you manifest thought into matter by asking, requesting, decreeing, declaring, confirming, and intending. Speak boldly before the king, and it is delivered unto you in a way and in a time that you know not.

The problem is that we assume lack and unwittingly create more lack. Right here, right now, you can experience the Infinite Good as a First Level awareness. Climbing the ladder from the second level (the finite) to the Infinite is not only tiresome, frustrating and time-consuming but it is actually impossible. The ego is a time and space vehicle, but consciousness is beyond time and space. Just be present.

Friday, July 07, 2006

There is No Separateness, No Lack, No Entrapment

Please realize that you are always, if you are aware, in the center of God and godness everywhere. Only the kingdom of God exists. Nothing but the Infinite Good is real. I am right there right now. There is nowhere you have to go, nothing you have to do, except to be aware of the Infinite Good.

The journey to a goal involves time and space. Due to those two factors, we experience anxiety and lack of control. To transcend or transform anxiety, we simply choose to be here now. The infinite good is always here now--its just that we are not. We do not have to set a goal. No process is necessary. No time and space are required for enlightenment. In true awareness, time and space are not barriers. There is no separateness. The sense of separateness from our good is strictly an illusion, an ego trip.

As long as we are engaged in the story of separateness, we experience the illusion of being a victim. Jesus never said he was our rescuer, although he appeared to be playing that game. In that game, he became a victim to end the illusion of victimization for all time. Jesus only spoke about himself: I am the resurrection and the life. I have to speak about myself: I am the resurrection and the life. He could not speak for me and I cannot speak for you. Each person must walk his own path and declare his own relative story or absolute truth. There is no other choice. We choose each moment to continue to live our self-fabricated ego story or to live the Infinite Good. You do it till you don’t. God is patient. He has forever. He does not wish for us to continue to think that we are suffering, but He allows it. Yes, suffering, like our story, is made up. Suffering is part and parcel of our story. Suffering is used to validate our ego story. Suffering is unnecessary. When we choose to believe in separation from the infinite good, we choose to suffer.

We believe that we are separate from, different than, and deprived of
absolute health, infinite abundance, eternal life, oneness with everyone and everything. And so, that is what we experience. We experience what we assume, what we believe, what we fear: the story we tell ourselves. We pretend that we believe what we see, but actually we see what we believe. As you imagine and think, so it is. What you see is what you’ve got.

Do We Know?

We all think we are aware, that we know, that we see things as they are. And when we hear the word “disillusionment,” or disappointment, or disenchantment, we think we know what those words mean. But we do not. We don’t know what any single word means.

If we don’t know what “I” means, how could we possibly know the meaning of any other word that “I” uses? Every single word in our vocabulary is used incorrectly. Not one single word is properly understood. And yet all of our actions are based upon our words. No wonder our actions are so crazy.

As A Course in Miracles teaches: Nothing that I see means anything. My thoughts do not mean anything. My words and my world mean nothing. All of my perceptions, thoughts, words and actions are based upon false assumptions, stereotypes, illusory beliefs. These beliefs can be reduced to the one generic belief in good versus evil. As long as this belief system is intact, all of my actions, even my love, is ambivalent. Anxiety is rampant.

“Disillusionment” means enlightenment, not depression. If you were truly disillusioned, you would be disillusioned of the truth of the ego belief system. You would be disillusioned about the truth of separateness, deprivation and entrapment.

It is clearer to me than ever before that language is a problem. Semantics. We think we speak the English language, but what we speak is Ego language. Every word in our vocabulary, our entire mental semantics repertoire, is oriented toward the “I” we believe ourselves to be. It is the *I* word, not the F*** word, not the N***** word, that is our problem. Do you get it? *I* sneaks under the radar screen unnoticed. As long as the *I * word remains unchallenged, the F*** and the N***** words will continue.

God’s word for “I” is entirely different than our word for “I”. Therefore, every thought we have and every word we utter is misleading and ultimately self-defeating. A man is as good as his word. This truism is true. But how good is our word? Every word we utter is based upon the word “I” and we have no idea who “I” is.

Who is “I” ?

Who is “I”? sounds like bad English.

Wouldn’t it be a shame if we lived a whole lifetime not knowing what the *I* word means! How many words does a person utter in a lifetime? Millions? Maybe billions? The meaning of all of these words are based upon what the *I* word means. Cellphones are in. We all want to be connected all the time. Yet we complain about poor communication. We write and read millions of books. We have this unlimited highway of information on the internet. We talk and talk and talk, and say nothing beyond what the *I* word implies. How can a false I say anything real? Bullshit is a pretty good word. Where is the Word in all of our words? Where is the Truth in all of our verbalizations? Where is Wisdom in our so-called knowledge? No wonder we live in an age of skepticism. Nothing is sacred to the comedians. They see our human foolishness. God bless the skeptics and the comedians. We live in a Fool’s Paradise. If we don’t question and joke about our abuse of language, we will never be awakened.

Words do not reach their intended target. Words do not get us what we want. Words do not even get us what the ego wants. Dreams make no sense because they speak God-language. Daytime words are ruled by the ego system. Even the Bible becomes ego language. Even God’s word is misconstrued. We have to re-invent the dictionary. Webster is not good enough. Mathematics is not good enough. The ego misuses Webster and math every day, all the time. Science is not good enough. Science becomes a tool of the ego agenda. Research is not objective. Research is usually a tool of the ego to prove its agenda. The little man in the body is the ego. He runs the speech department. Speech runs the world. We are victims of words. We are victims of speech. We are victims of thought. And yet, in truth, we are not victims. What a paradox!

The main problem in communication is anxiety misinterpretation, misunderstanding and misjudgment. Anxiety is existential, that is, it springs from identity amnesia. Ego and anxiety are codependent. We are neck deep in anxiety whether the sky is falling in or not. Since the ego is illusory, anxiety is inevitable until we become conscious. Without awareness of the infinite good, we have been, or will be subject to, anxiety.

Although everyone is motivated by anxiety, we perceive it, react to it, and interpret it differently. Anxiety may be perceived as stress, tension, uptightness, worry, insecurity, fear, panic or paranoia. Anxiety may be reacted to by anger, stonewalling, denial, upset, withdrawal, punishment, pain, guilt, resistance, somaticizing. Complaining, blaming, criticizing or pollyana, to name a few.

Anxiety interpretation is perceived and handled in 3 major modalities: villain, victim and rescuer. None of these works because they foul up communication, and add more stress to relationships. Deciphering our self-medicating reactions to anxiety consumes most of the therapy process. Without anxiety awareness, we can neither send nor receive accurate messages of communication, nor repair communication damage. Even forgiveness requires an understanding of the meaning and function of anxiety.

Usually we do not recognize that the cause of anxiety is identity ignorance. As long as we are not aware of our divinity, we will be on guard about victimization. As long as we do not recognize our infinite nature, we attribute anxiety to external factors, to other people, and to physical causes in general.

When people are in pain, they do not think clearly. Confusion reigns when we get into power struggles within or without. Blame arises. Communication is garbled. More hurt and anxiety follows. Real communication ceases.

Anxiety wears masks such as anger, guilt, blame, criticism, self-defensiveness, belittlement, fear, worry, insecurity, nagging, threatening, manipulating, etc. Real communication cannot occur unless there is anxiety analysis and decipherment.

Be curious. How are you experiencing anxiety right now? What are some of your most typical reactions to anxiety? What makes your partner anxious? How does your partner handle anxiety? We cannot effectively respond to hostility, guilt, withdrawal or defense in communication and neither can anyone else. We can learn to decipher anxiety and to talk about it with increasing wisdom and insight.

But let us begin with inquiry. Is what you are hearing and seeing in this power struggle really true? Or is it just a mask for anxiety? Consider that below the apparent mask of hostility, for example, lurks anxiety and below anxiety is caring. Below ego is Self. Below ego is divinity. If you respond to ego, you will be ego. If you respond to the divine, you will be divine. Please realize that only the divine exists, all of the rest is fantasy.

Thursday, July 06, 2006

The Infinite

Infinity is everywhere. All is infinite, appearing in finite forms. I am one with the infinite. I am one with infinite health, infinite wealth, infinite time, infinite intelligence, infinite love, infinite presence. Appearing in the finite. infinity is always here now.

Tuesday, July 04, 2006

The Self-Aware Universe (Cont'd)
Part 2
An Interview with Amit Goswami
by Craig Hamilton - What is Enlightment?

WIE: To be honest, when I first saw the subtitle of your book I assumed you were speaking metaphorically. But after reading the book, and speaking with you about it now, I am definitely getting the sense that you mean it much more literally than I had thought. One thing in your book that really stopped me in my tracks was your statement that, according to your interpretation, the entire physical universe only existed in a realm of countless evolving possibilities until at one point, the possibility of a conscious, sentient being arose and that, at that point, instantaneously, the entire known universe came into being, including the fifteen billion years of history leading up to that point. Do you really mean that?

AG: I mean that literally. This is what quantum physics demands. In fact, in quantum physics this is called "delayed choice." And I have added to this concept the concept of "self-reference." Actually the concept of delayed choice is very old. It is due to a very famous physicist named John Wheeler, but Wheeler did not see the entire thing correctly, in my opinion. He left out self-reference. The question always arises, "The universe is supposed to have existed for fifteen billion years, so if it takes consciousness to convert possibility into actuality, then how could the universe be around for so long?" Because there was no consciousness, no sentient being, biological being, carbonbased being, in that primordial fireball which is supposed to have created the universe, the big bang. But this other way of looking at things says that the universe remained in possibility until there was self-referential quantum measurement—so that is the new concept. An observer's looking is essential in order to manifest possibility into actuality, and so only when the observer looks, only then does the entire thing become manifest—including time. So all of past time, in that respect, becomes manifest right at that moment when the first sentient being looks.

It turns out that this idea, in a very clever, very subtle way, has been around in cosmology and astronomy under the guise of a principle called the "anthropic principle." That is, the idea has been growing among astronomers—cosmologists anyway—that the universe has a purpose. It is so fine-tuned, there are so many coincidences, that it seems very likely that the universe is doing something purposive, as if the universe is growing in such a way that a sentient being will arise at some point.

WIE: So you feel there's a kind of purposiveness to the way the universe is evolving; that, in a sense, it reaches its fruition in us, in human beings?

AG: Well, human beings may not be the end of it, but certainly they are the first fruition, because here is then the possibility of manifest creativity, creativity in the sentient being itself. The animals are certainly sentient, but they are not creative in the sense that we are. So human beings certainly right now seem to be an epitome, but this may not be the final epitome. I think we have a long way to go and there is a long evolution to occur yet.

WIE: In your book you even go so far as to suggest that the cosmos was created for our sake.

AG: Absolutely. But it means sentient beings, for the sake of all sentient beings. And the universe is us. That's very clear.The universe is self-aware, but it is self-aware through us. We are the meaning of the universe. We are not the geographical center of the universe—Copernicus was right about that—but we are the meaning center of the universe.

WIE: Through us the universe finds its meaning?

AG: Through sentient beings. And that doesn't have to be anthropocentric in the sense of only earthlings. There could be beings, sentient beings on other planets, in other stars—in fact I am convinced that there are—and that's completely consonant with this theory.

WIE: This human-centered—or even sentient-being-centered—stance seems quite radical at a time when so much of modern progressive thought, across disciplines from ecology to feminism to systems theory, is going in the opposite direction. These perspectives point more toward interconnectedness or interrelatedness, in which the significance of any one part of the whole—including one species, such as the human species—is being de-emphasized. Your view seems to hark back to a more traditional, almost biblical kind of idea. How would you respond to proponents of the prevailing "nonhierarchical" paradigm?

AG: It's the difference between the perennial philosophy that we are talking about, monistic idealism, and what is called a kind of pantheism. That is, these views—which I call "ecological worldviews" and which Ken Wilber calls the same thing—are actually denigrating God by seeing God as limited to the immanent reality. On the face of it, this sounds good because everything becomes divine—the rocks, the trees, all the way to human beings, and they are all equal and they are all divinity—it sounds fine, but it certainly does not adhere to what the spiritual teachers knew. In the Bhagavad Gita, Krishna says to Arjuna, "All these things are in me, but I am not in them." What does he mean by that? What he means is that "I am not exclusively in them."

So there is evolution, in other words, in the manifest reality. Evolution happens. That means that the amoeba is, of course, a manifestation of consciousness, and so is the human being. But they are not in the same stage. Evolutionarily, yes, we are ahead of the amoeba. And these theories, these ecological-worldview people, they don't see that. They don't rightly understand what evolution is because they are ignoring the transcendent dimension, they are ignoring the purposiveness of the universe, the creative play. Ken Wilber makes this point very, very well in his book Sex, Ecology, Spirituality.

WIE: So you would say they have part of the picture but that without this other aspect that you are bringing in, their view is very—

AG: It's very limited. And that's why pantheism is very limited. When Westerners started going to India, they thought it was pantheistic because it has many, many gods. Indian philosophy tends to see God in nature, in many things—they worship rocks sometimes, that kind of thing—so they thought it was pantheistic and only somewhat later did they realize that there is a transcendent dimension. In fact, the transcendent dimension is developed extremely well in Indian philosophy, whereas the transcendent dimension in the West is hidden in the cave of a very few esoteric systems such as the Gnostics and a few great masters like Meister Eckhart. In Jesus' teachings you can see it in the Gospel according to Thomas. But you have to really dig deep to find that thread in the West. In India, in the Upanishads and the Vedanta and the Bhagavad Gita, it is very much explicit. Now, pantheism sounds very good. But it's only part of the story. It's a good way to worship, it's a good way to bring spirituality into your daily life, because it is good to acknowledge that there is spirit in everything. But if we just see the diversity, see the God in everything, but don't see the God which is beyond every particular thing, then we are not realizing our potential. We are not realizing our Self. And so, truly, Self-realization involves seeing this pantheistic aspect of reality, but also seeing the transcendent aspect of reality.

WIE: In addition to being a scientist, you are also a spiritual practitioner. Could you talk a little bit about what brought you to spirituality?

AG: Well, I'm afraid that is a pretty usual, almost classic, case. The ideal classic case, of course, is the famous case of the Buddha, who recognized at the age of twenty-nine that all of his pleasure as a prince was really a waste of time because there is suffering in the world. For me it was not that drastic, but when I was about thirty-seven the world started to fall apart on me. I lost my research grant, I had a divorce and I was very lonely. And the professional pleasure that I used to get by writing physics papers stopped being pleasure.

But in that era, around thirty-seven, that particular world—where God didn't exist and where the meaning of life came just from brain-pursuits of glory in a profession—just did not satisfy me and did not bring happiness. In fact it was full of suffering. So I came to meditation. I wanted to see if there was any way of at least finding some solace, if not happiness. And eventually great joy came out of it, but that took time. And also, I must mention that I got married too, and the challenge of love was a very important one. In other words, I very soon discovered after I got married for the second time that love is very different than what I thought it was. So I discovered with my wife the meaning of love, and that was a big contribution also to my own spirituality.

WIE: It's interesting that, while you turned to spirituality because you felt that science wasn't really satisfying your own search for truth, you have nevertheless remained a scientist throughout.

AG: That's true. It's just that my way of doing science changed. What happened to me, the reason that I lost the joy of science, was because I had made it into a professional trip. I lost the ideal way of doing science, which is the spirit of discovery, the curiosity, the spirit of knowing truth. So I was not searching for truth anymore through science, and therefore I had to discover meditation, where I was searching for truth again, truth of reality. What is the nature of reality after all? You see the first tendency was nihilism, nothing exists; I was completely desperate. But meditation very soon told me that no, it's not that desperate. I had an experience. I had a glimpse that reality really does exist. Whatever it was I didn't know, but something exists. So that gave me the prerogative to go back to science and see if I could now do science with new energy and new direction and really investigate truth instead of investigating because of professional glory.

WIE: How then did your newly revived interest in truth, this spiritual core to your life, inform your practice of science?

AG: What happened was that I was not doing science anymore for the purpose of just publishing papers and doing problems which enabled you to publish papers and get grants. Instead, I was doing the really important problems. And the really important problems of today are very paradoxical and very anomalous. Well, I'm not saying that traditional scientists don't have a few important problems. There are a few important problems there too. But one of the problems I discovered very quickly that would lead me, I just intuited, to questions of reality was the quantum measurement problem.

You see, the quantum measurement problem is supposed to be a problem which forever derails people from any professional achievement because it's a very difficult problem. People have tried it for decades and have not been able to solve it. But I thought, "I have nothing to lose and I am going to investigate only truth, so why not see?" Quantum physics was something I knew very well. I had researched quantum physics all my life, so why not do the quantum measurement problem? So that's how I came to ask this question, "What agency converts possibility into actuality?" And it still took me from 1975 to 1985 until, through a mystical breakthrough, I came to recognize this.

WIE: Could you describe that breakthrough?

AG: Yes, I'd love to. It's so vivid in my mind. You see, the wisdom was in those days—and this was in every sort of book, The Tao of Physics, The Dancing Wu Li Masters, Fred Alan Wolf's Taking the Quantum Leap, and some other books too—everywhere the wisdom was that consciousness must be an emergent phenomenon of the brain. And despite the fact that some of these people, to their credit, were giving consciousness causal efficacy, no one could explain how it happened. That was the mystery because, after all, if it's an emergent phenomenon of the brain, then all causal efficacy must ultimately come from the material elementary particles. So this was a puzzle to me. This was a puzzle to everybody. And I just couldn't find any way to solve it. David Bohm talked about hidden variables, so I toyed with his ideas of an explicate order and an implicate order, that kind of thing—but this wasn't satisfactory because in Bohm's theory, again, there is no causal efficacy that is given to consciousness. It is all a realist theory. In other words, it is a theory on which everything can be explained through mathematical equations. There is no freedom of choice, in other words, in reality. So I was just struggling and struggling because I was convinced that there is real freedom of choice.

So then one time—and this is where the breakthrough happened—my wife and I were in Ventura, California and a mystic friend, Joel Morwood, came down from Los Angeles, and we all went to hear Krishnamurti. And Krishnamurti, of course, is extremely impressive, a very great mystic. So we heard him and then we came back home. We had dinner and we were talking, and I was giving Joel a spiel about my latest ideas of the quantum theory of consciousness and Joel just challenged me. He said, "Can consciousness be explained?" And I tried to wriggle my way through that but he wouldn't listen. He said, "You are putting on scientific blinders. You don't realize that consciousness is the ground of all being." He didn't use that particular word, but he said something like, "There is nothing but God." And something flipped inside of me which I cannot quite explain. This is the ultimate cognition, that I had at that very moment. There was a complete about-turn in my psyche and I just realized that consciousness is the ground of all being. I remember staying up that night, looking at the sky and having a real mystical feeling about what the world is, and the complete conviction that this is the way the world is, this is the way that reality is, and one can do science.

You see, the prevalent notion—even among people like David Bohm—was, "How can you ever do science without assuming that there is reality and material and all this? How can you do science if you let consciousness do things which are ‘arbitrary'?" But I became completely convinced—there has not been a shred of doubt ever since—that one can do science on this basis. Not only that, one can solve the problems of today's science. And that is what is turning out. Of course all the problems did not get solved right on that night. That night was the beginning of a new way of doing science.

WIE: That's interesting. So that night something really did shift for you in your whole approach. And everything was different after that?

AG: Everything was different.

WIE: Did you then find, in working out the details of what it would mean to do science in this context, that you were able to penetrate much more deeply or that your own scientific thinking was transformed in some way by this experience?

AG: Right. Exactly. What happened was very interesting. I was stuck, as I said, I was stuck with this idea before: "How can consciousness have causal efficacy?" And now that I recognized that consciousness was the ground of being, within months all the problems of quantum measurement theory, the measurement paradoxes, just melted away. I wrote my first paper which was published in 1989, but that was just refinement of the ideas and working out details. The net upshot was that the creativity, which got a second wind on that night in 1985, took about another three years before it started fully expressing itself. But ever since I have been just blessed with ideas after ideas, and lots of problems have been solved—the problem of cognition, perception, biological evolution, mind-body healing. My latest book is called Physics of the Soul. This is a theory of reincarnation, all fully worked out. It has been just a wonderful adventure in creativity.

WIE: So it sounds pretty clear that taking an interest in the spiritual, in your case, had a significant effect on your ability to do science. Looking through the opposite end of the lens, how would you say that being a scientist has affected your spiritual evolution?

AG: Well, I stopped seeing them as separate, so this identification, this wholeness, the integration of the spiritual and the scientific, was very important for me. Mystics often warn people, "Look, don't divide your life into this and that." For me it came naturally because I discovered the new way of doing science when I discovered spirit. Spirit was the natural basis of my being, so after that, whatever I do, I don't separate them very much.

WIE: You mentioned a shift in your motivation for doing science—how what was driving you started to turn at a certain point. That's one thing that we've been thinking about a lot as we've been looking into this issue: What is it that really motivates science? And how is that different from what motivates spiritual pursuit? Particularly, there have been some people we have discussed—thinkers like E. F. Schumacher or Huston Smith, for example—who feel that ever since the scientific revolution, when Descartes's and Newton's ideas took hold, the whole approach of science has been to try to dominate or control nature or the world. Such critics question whether science could ever be a genuine vehicle for discovering the deepest truths, because they feel that science is rooted in a desire to know for the wrong reasons. Obviously, in your work you have been very immersed in the scientific world—you know a lot of scientists, you go to conferences, you're surrounded by all of that and also, perhaps, you struggle with that motivation in yourself. Could you speak a little more about your experience of that?

AG: Yes, this is a very, very good question; we have to understand it very deeply. The problem is that in this pursuit, this particular pursuit of science, including the books that we mentioned earlier, The Tao of Physics and The
Dancing Wu Li Masters, even when spirituality is recognized within the materialist worldview, God is seen only in the immanent aspect of divinity. What that means is: you have said that there is only one reality. By saying that there is only one reality—material reality—even when you imbue matter with spirituality, because you are still dealing with only one level, you are ignoring the transcendent level. And therefore you are only looking at half of the pie; you are ignoring the other half. Ken Wilber makes this point very, very well. So what has to be done of course—and that's when the stigma of science disappears—is to include the other half into science. Now, before my work, I think it was very obscure how this inclusion has to be done. Although people like Teilhard de Chardin, Aurobindo or Madame Blavatsky, the founder of the Theosophy movement, recognized that such a science could have come, very few could actually see it.

So what I have done is to give actual flesh to all these visions that took place early in the century. And when you do that, when you recognize that science can be based on the primacy of consciousness, then this deficiency isn't there anymore. In other words then, the stigma that science is only separateness goes away. The materialist science is a separatist science. The new science, though, says that the material part of the world does exist, the separative movement is part of reality also, but it is not the only part of reality. There is separation, and then there is integration. So in my book The Self-Aware Universe I talk about the hero's journey for the entire scientific endeavor. I said that, well, four hundred years ago, with Galileo, Copernicus, Newton and others, we started the separatist sail and we went on a separate journey of separateness, but that's only the first part of the hero's journey. Then the hero discovers and the hero returns. It is the hero's return that we are now witnessing through this new paradigm.

Monday, July 03, 2006

Consciousness Creates Matter



For today and tomorrow I want to share with you a rather long two-part article by Craig Hamilton in which he interviews Amit Goswami in What is Enlightenment (WIE)magazine. Please study this document in depth. It represents the turning point in scientific and spiritual understanding.

WIE: In your book The Self-Aware Universe you speak about the need for a paradigm shift. Could you talk a bit about how you conceive of that shift? From what to what?

Amit Goswami: The current worldview has it that everything is made of matter, and everything can be reduced to the elementary particles of matter, the basic constituents—building blocks—of matter. And cause arises from the interactions of these basic building blocks or elementary particles; elementary particles make atoms, atoms make molecules, molecules make cells, and cells make brain. But all the way, the ultimate cause is always the interactions between the elementary particles. This is the belief—all cause moves from the elementary particles. This is what we call "upward causation." So in this view, what human beings—you and I—think of as our free will does not really exist. It is only an epiphenomenon or secondary phenomenon, secondary to the causal power of matter. And any causal power that we seem to be able to exert on matter is just an illusion. This is the current paradigm.

Now, the opposite view is that everything starts with consciousness.That is, consciousness is the ground of all being. In this view, consciousness imposes "downward causation." In other words, our free will is real. When we act in the world we really are acting with causal power. This view does not deny that matter also has causal potency—it does not deny that there is causal power from elementary particles upward, so there is upward causation—but in addition it insists that there is also downward causation. It shows up in our creativity and acts of free will, or when we make moral decisions. In those occasions we are actually witnessing downward causation by consciousness.

WIE: In your book you refer to a new paradigm called "monistic idealism." You suggest that science seems to be verifying what a lot of mystics have said throughout history—that science's current findings seem to be parallel to the essence of the perennial spiritual teaching.

AG: It is the spiritual teaching. It is not just parallel. The idea that consciousness is the ground of being is the basis of all spiritual traditions, as it is for the philosophy of monistic idealism—although I have given it a somewhat new name. The reason for my choice of the name is that, in the West, there is a philosophy called "idealism" which is opposed to the philosophy of "material realism," which holds that only matter is real. Idealism says no, consciousness is the only real thing. But in the West that kind of idealism has usually meant something that is really dualism—that is, consciousness and matter are separate. So, by monistic idealism, I made it clear that, no, I don't mean that dualistic kind of Western idealism, but really a monistic idealism, which has existed in the West, but only in the esoteric spiritual traditions. Whereas in the East this is the mainstream philosophy. In Buddhism, or in Hinduism where it is called Vedanta, or in Taoism, this is the philosophy of everyone. But in the West this is a very esoteric tradition, only known and adhered to by very astute philosophers, the people who have really delved deeply into the nature of reality.

WIE: What you are saying is that modern science, from a completely different angle—not assuming anything about the existence of a spiritual dimension of life—has somehow come back around, and is finding itself in agreement with that view as a result of its own discoveries.

AG: That's right. And this is not entirely unexpected. Starting from the beginning of quantum physics, which began in the year 1900 and then became full-fledged in 1925 when the equations of quantum mechanics were discovered, quantum physics has given us indications that the worldview might change. Staunch materialist physicists have loved to compare the classical worldview and the quantum worldview. Of course, they wouldn't go so far as to abandon the idea that there is only upward causation and that matter is supreme, but the fact remains that they saw in quantum physics some great paradigm changing potential. And then what happened was that, starting in 1982, results started coming in from laboratory experiments in physics. That is the year when, in France, Alain Aspect and his collaborators performed the great experiment that conclusively established the veracity of the spiritual notions, and particularly the notion of transcendence. Should I go into a little bit of detail about Aspect's experiment?

WIE: Yes, please do.

AG: To give a little background, what had been happening was that for many years quantum physics had been giving indications that there are levels of reality other than the material level. How it started happening first was that quantum objects—objects in quantum physics—began to be looked upon as waves of possibility. Now, initially people thought, "Oh, they are just like regular waves." But very soon it was found out that, no, they are not waves in space and time. They cannot be called waves in space and time at all—they have properties which do not jibe with those of ordinary waves. So they began to be recognized as waves in potential, waves of possibility, and the potential was recognized as transcendent, beyond matter somehow.

But the fact that there is transcendent potential was not very clear for a long time. Then Aspect's experiment verified that this is not just theory, there really is transcendent potential, objects really do have connections outside of space and time—outside of space and time! What happens in this experiment is that an atom emits two quanta of light, called photons, going opposite ways, and somehow these photons affect one another's behavior at a distance, without exchanging any signals through space. Notice that: without exchanging any signals through space but instantly affecting each other. Instantaneously.

Now Einstein showed long ago that two objects can never affect each other instantly in space and time because everything must travel with a maximum speed limit, and that speed limit is the speed of light. So any influence must travel, if it travels through space, taking a finite time. This is called the idea of "locality." Every signal is supposed to be local in the sense that it must take a finite time to travel through space. And yet, Aspect's photons—the photons emitted by the atom in Aspect's experiment—influence one another, at a distance, without exchanging signals because they are doing it instantaneously—they are doing it faster than the speed of light. And therefore it follows that the influence could not have traveled through space. Instead the influence must belong to a domain of reality that we must recognize as the transcendent domain of reality.

WIE: That's fascinating. Would most physicists agree with that interpretation of his experiment?

AG: Well, physicists must agree with this interpretation of this experiment. Many times of course, physicists will take the following point of view: they will say, "Well, yeah sure, experiments. But this relationship between particles really isn't important. We mustn't look into any of the consequences of this transcendent domain—if it can even be interpreted that way." In other words, they try to minimize the impact of this and still try to hold on to the idea that matter is supreme.
But in their heart they know, as is very evidenced. In 1984 or '85, at the American Physical Society meeting at which I was present, it is said that one physicist was heard saying to another physicist that, after Aspect's experiment, anyone who does not believe that something is really strange about the world must have rocks in his head.

WIE: So what you are saying is that from your point of view, which a number of others share, it is somehow obvious that one would have to bring in the idea of a transcendent dimension to really understand this.

AG: Yes, it is. Henry Stapp, who is a physicist at the University of California at Berkeley, says this quite explicitly in one of his papers written in 1977, that things outside of space and time affect things inside space and time. There's just no question that that happens in the realm of quantum physics when you are dealing with quantum objects. Now of course, the crux of the matter is, the surprising thing is, that we are always dealing with quantum objects because it turns out that quantum physics is the physics of every object. Whether it's submicroscopic or it's macroscopic, quantum physics is the only physics we've got. So although it's more apparent for photons, for electrons, for the submicroscopic objects, our belief is that all reality,all manifest reality, all matter, is governed by the same laws. And if that is so, then this experiment is telling us that we should change our worldview because we, too, are quantum objects.

WIE: These are fascinating discoveries which have inspired a lot of people. A number of books have already attempted to make the link between physics and mysticism. Fritjof Capra's The Tao of Physics and Gary Zukav's The Dancing Wu Li Masters have both reached many, many people. In your book, though, you mention that there was something that you felt had not yet been covered which you feel is your unique contribution to all this. Could you say something about what you are doing that is different from what has been done before in this area?

AG: I'm glad that you asked that question. This should be clarified and I will try to explicate it as clearly as I can. The early work, like The Tao of Physics, has been very important for the history of science. However, these early works, in spite of supporting the spiritual aspect of human beings, all basically held on to the material view of the world nevertheless. In other words, they did not challenge the material realists' view that everything is made up of matter. That view was never put to any challenge by any of these early books. In fact, my book was the first one which challenged it squarely and which was still based on a rigorous explication in scientific terms. In other words, the idea that consciousness is the ground of being, of course, has existed in psychology, as transpersonal psychology, but outside of transpersonal psychology no tradition of science and no scientist has seen it so clearly.

It was my good fortune to recognize it within quantum physics, to recognize that all the paradoxes of quantum physics can be solved if we accept consciousness as the ground of being. So that was my unique contribution and, of course, this has paradigm-shifting potential because now we can truly integrate science and spirituality. In other words, with Capra and Zukav—although their books are very good—because they held on to a fundamentally materialist paradigm, the paradigm is not shifting, nor is there any real reconciliation between spirituality and science. Because if everything is ultimately material, all causal efficacy must come from matter. So consciousness is recognized, spirituality is recognized, but only as causal epiphenomena, or secondary phenomena. And an epiphenomenal consciousness is not very good. I mean, it's not doing anything. So, although these books acknowledge our spirituality, the spirituality is ultimately coming from some sort of material interaction.

But that's not the spirituality that Jesus talked about. That's not the spirituality that Eastern mystics were so ecstatic about. That's not the spirituality where a mystic recognizes and says, "I now know what reality is like, and this takes away all the unhappiness that one ever had. This is infinite, this is joy, this is consciousness." This kind of exuberant statement that mystics make could not be made on the basis of epiphenomenal consciousness. It can be made only when one recognizes the ground of being itself, when one cognizes directly that One is All.

Now, an epiphenomenal human being would not have any such cognition. It would not make any sense to cognize that you are All. So that is what I am saying. So long as science remains on the basis of the materialist worldview, however much you try to accommodate spiritual experiences in terms of parallels or in terms of chemicals in the brain or what have you, you are not really giving up the old paradigm. You are giving up the old paradigm and fully reconciling with spirituality only when you establish science on the basis of the fundamental spiritual notion that consciousness is the ground of all being. That is what I have done in my book, and that is the beginning. But already there are some other books that are recognizing this too.

WIE: So there are people corroborating your ideas?

AG: There are people who are now coming out and recognizing the same thing, that this view is the correct way to go to explain quantum physics and also to develop science in the future. In other words, the present science has shown not only quantum paradoxes but also has shown real incompetence in explaining paradoxical and anomalous phenomena, such as parapsychology, the paranormal—even creativity. And even traditional subjects, like perception or biological evolution, have much to explain that these materialist theories don't explain. To give you one example, in biology there is what is called the theory of punctuated equilibrium. What that means is that evolution is not only slow, as Darwin perceived, but there are also rapid epochs of evolution, which are called "punctuation marks." But traditional biology has no explanation for this.

However, if we do science on the basis of consciousness, on the primacy of consciousness, then we can see in this phenomenon creativity, real creativity of consciousness. In other words, we can truly see that consciousness is operating creatively even in biology, even in the evolution of species. And so we can now fill up these gaps that conventional biology cannot explain with ideas which are essentially spiritual ideas, such as consciousness as the creator of the world.

WIE: This brings to mind the subtitle of your book, How Consciousness Creates the Material World. This is obviously quite a radical idea. Could you explain a bit more concretely how this actually happens in your opinion?

AG: Actually, it's the easiest thing to explain, because in quantum physics, as I said earlier, objects are not seen as definite things, as we are used to seeing them. Newton taught us that objects are definite things, they can be seen all the time, moving in definite trajectories. Quantum physics doesn't depict objects that way at all.In quantum physics, objects are seen as possibilities, possibility waves. Right? So then the question arises, what converts possibility into actuality?Because, when we see, we only see actual events. That's starting with us. When you see a chair, you see an actual chair, you don't see a possible chair.

WIE: Right—I hope so.

AG: We all hope so. Now this is called the "quantum measurement paradox." It is a paradox because who are we to do this conversion? Because after all, in the materialist paradigm we don't have any causal efficacy. We are nothing but the brain, which is made up of atoms and elementary particles. So how can a brain which is made up of atoms and elementary particles convert a possibility wave that it itself is? It itself is made up of the possibility waves of atoms and elementary particles, so it cannot convert its own possibility wave into actuality. This is called a paradox. Now in the new view, consciousness is the ground of being. So who converts possibility into actuality? Consciousness does, because consciousness does not obey quantum physics. Consciousness is not made of material. Consciousness is transcendent. Do you see the paradigm-changing view right here—how consciousness can be said to create the material world? The material world of quantum physics is just possibility. It is consciousness, through the conversion of possibility into actuality, that creates what we see manifest. In other words, consciousness creates the manifest world. (To be continued)

Sunday, July 02, 2006

Can you Restore? Rejoin? Heal?

Once there was a very violent man where Buddha lived. This man, Angulimala, had vowed to kill one thousand people. As a momento, and as a count of his victims, he severed an index finger from each victim and made a garland of fingers to wear around his neck. After his 999th kill, he fell pray to a slump . Nobody approached near enough for him to claim his thousandth victim. Ignoring all warnings and pleadings, Buddha approached Angulimala, which surprised Angulimala that Buddha came voluntarily. What kind of a man was this?

“Well, I’ll grant you one wish for your bravery,” Angulimala offered magnanimously.

Buddha requested that he chop off a branch from a nearby tree. Whack, it was done!

Why did you waste your wish?” asked Angulimala

“Will you grant me a second request, a dying man’s request?” Buddha asked humbly.

“All right, what is it?”

“Would you restore that fallen branch to the tree?” asked Buddha with perfect equanimity.

“I can’t do that!” exclaimed Angulimala startled.

“How can you destroy something without knowing how to create? how to restore? how to rejoin? It is said that the encounter so moved Angulimala that he became enlightened.

But the question that Buddha asked two-and-a-half-thousand years ago remains relevant today. Suppose we ask our scientists who use their creativity to invent weapons of destruction, the same question. How do you suppose they will answer?

And how do we answer? Do we use our creativity for ego gratification or for enlightenment? For criticism or for upliftment?

Saturday, July 01, 2006

Can You Balance the Score?

A client, whom we shall call Fred, was trying to persuade me that he is a victim of circumstances, that his story about that is true, but he can’t do it because he can’t even prove it to himself, although he keeps looking for evidence. The question here is “How does it help Fred to keep telling himself this story?” If we think that our story and actions help us to control the fear of victimization, then we will keep on doing it. All fear-obsessed thinking is based upon our perceived belief in victimization experience.

Fred’s solution to his painful victimization is to expose the offenders in court or in the media and challenge them to see their harmful behavior and admit it, and thus my client will have prevented their further abuse of himself and others. This social remedy, however, only functions on the surface.

Is such a thing as balancing the score, if the scoreboard is in each person’s head. All scorekeeping about being wronged, rejected and abused are based upon judgments, and all judgments are based upon anxiety and misperception. Neither party sees that their appraisal, their scorekeeping, and their judgments are based upon anxiety and not upon facts and reality. When you become willing to let go of scorekeeping, then you move on past anxiety. Every predator believes that he or she was or could be a victim.

The whole system of good versus evil is based upon flawed perception. Society operates upon the superficial belief in innocence and guilt, but it is all a dualistic illusion. There is an Original Innocence, but it has little to do with the polarity of innocence-versus-guilt. There is nothing to forgive. God never had to forgive because he never judged. If God had anything to forgive, it would be to forgive our self-condemnation, and no one can do that but ourselves. All pain is self-inflicted because if you didn’t give someone’s criticisms the power to hurt you, they couldn’t hurt you. Some people say women are the victims of men and some the opposite, but in truth there are no victims. Victimization is an illusion by which we give ourselves pain. The pain hurts, but the whole system is an illusion. It hurts because we believe our own self-image story.

There is a drama triangle made up of postures of villain, victim and rescuer. If you study these roles that people play, they are all obsessive.

Even rescuing is illusory and painful. If the rescuer tries to prevent abuse or to rescue someone from abuse, he is going to fail, because each player is attached to the role of suffering for their sense of separate identity. The only escape from the drama triangle is enlightenment. You cannot win in any of these roles, because they are all based upon the common illusion that good and evil exist at the deepest and most truthful level of existence. Good and evil are judgments that come from the separated mind, and therefore they cannot be true. The Drama Triangle is a mental prison in which people can spend many lifetimes going in circles, supported by our anxiety-produced perception of the world as good versus evil, and therefore illusory. The first step in anxiety therapy is to step back and see the drama triangle cycle, whether it takes days or years. Attached is a letter I wrote to Fred.

Dear Fred:

I know that you want to “right the wrongs” but the method you are considering is the old method, and it is the hardest and least productive method, used by mankind for thousands of years. And the problem is, it always backfires sooner or later. There is a new method, much faster, more effective, with no backlash. The main point is you want to get out of your mental prison. When you accomplish that, you will have begun to get a taste of this new method.

For you to get out of your mental prison requires several steps. The first step is this:

Focus on someone who did you wrong: A parent. A doctor. A lawyer or judge. A hospital staff. A girlfriend. The clubhouse. A staff member. Yourself. God. All of the above.

Sit down with a pen and paper and write a letter to each of those people. Tell them about ever rotten dirty deal they ever did which hurt and affected you. Use the strongest language possible. "You no good rotten scoundrel." Something like that. Spill your guts out on paper. Then forgive them for all of this, even if they don't deserve it. Forgive them from the bottom of your heart. Write it down. Then burn the letter. Do this for every incident or person that comes to mind.

If you are still hurt and angry about something in the past, you are living in a mental prison made up of past memories. You are living in the past. Your forgiveness letter frees you. This is for your benefit, not theirs. Oh, and be sure to write one to God. He's heard the tough language before, you're safe. He is your best friend after all. Frank, after Step one is finished, let me know and I will give you Step Two.

Your professional friend and therapist/coach,

Dr. Wright