The Little Purple Notebook On How To Escape From This Universe
Copyleft � 1998 by Maximilian J. Sandor, Ph.D.
Subscription Information: Maria Loren
[email protected]
Website:
http://transmillennium.net/pnohteftu/
The Prep Trap
Very often a preparatory step becomes a trap in which the 'victim' gets
stuck in some kind of necessary introduction and never proceeds to actually
engage in the final objective.
This phenomenon is widespread and engrained to such a degree that it is
difficult to uncover and to change. Here again, the 'victim' is completely
convinced that s/he 'knows already' and will vehemently fight anything that
expands on this established 'knowledge'.
Sometimes it is not easy to decide an observed condition belongs to the
prep trap class because of similarities in symptoms to the self-evident
trap, the know-best trap, or the on-the-roll trap [all described later].
The prep trap can develop out of several conditions which in some instances
overload to a seemingless hopeless condition:
* lost technology: someone came up with something good a long time ago
but there is a broken link in the chain of tradition;
* a teacher's progression trap: in order to not lose credibility (and
with that the paying followers), the teacher may not be able to
revise or expand his/her own philosophy;
* an negative overwhelm during a stage after the preparatory stage,
making the Being stop at the prep stage in order to avoid another
'horror trip';
* a 'positive overwhelm' that the person thinks it cannot be repeated
easily such as an out-of-body or a 'we are all one' experience (cp
'Blinded by the Light');
* failure to achieve the expectations of a preparatory stage and
compulsive repetition of the failed action;
* a 'one source' teacher/founder never got there in the first place
because of the prep trap and promotes the prep trap stage, typically
as the 'only way there is';
From the outside, the situation will look like the picture of a scuba diver
who keeps walking on the beach in scuba gear instead of actually diving in
the ocean (cp 'Mahamahabaala Sutta'). Or, a horseback rider who, in a nice
dress and with a saddled horse, never proceeds to mount the horse. Or maybe
a car driver who has learned in hard and long lessons over the last twenty
years how to open the door of a car, how to sit behind the wheel, and start
the engine, but who never actually drives the car out of the garage.
While these parallels may look ridiculous, recognizing the prep trap in
familiar spiritual schools or techniques can come as quite a shock.
The two most significant instances of the prep trap are probably the
concentration exercises as a 'Way to Enlightenment' in many traditional
schools and the paradigm of 'Coming to p.t. (Present Time)' promoted by a
contemporary philosophy [chapters in progress].
Both instances follow the same pattern: in order to expand in a coordinated
way it seems necessary to start out by first _contracting_ into a
clean-slate state.
For example, the attention units of an 'ordinary' human being are scattered
all over a projected timeline, making the Being 'stuck in the past(s)'.
As a remedy, the Being could ignore or undo stuck attentions by
concentrating on a time slice that it projects as 'Present Time'.
This, however, is a preparatory step and not the final objective. Since
time is an illusion, the time line itself must be resolved or confronted.
Otherwise, the person is just stuck at a self-defined time slice and acts
much like a robot instead of being dispersed with attention scattered over
time and space.
If expansion does not occur after the initial contraction, the Being
becomes concentrated' (literally!!) and is figuratively 'smaller' than
before.
In other words, if a 'concentration' exercise or practice is not
immediately followed by un-focussing again (cp. 'Focus') or followed by
permeating a medium or the Universe as such after restricting the view in
an initial stage, it can quickly become a 'prep trap' (cp. 'Introversion,
Extroversion, and Permeation').
Another classical example of a prep trap is, of course, any book that
attempts to communicate some kind of knowledge or technology.
Both authorship _and_ study of a book can easily become a prep trap!
So, if you see this Max-guy displaying any symptoms of the prep-trap,
please hit him on the back of his head (not too rough, OK!) and make him
read his own babbling in this chapter, will you, please!?
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Copyleft � 1998 by Maximilian J. Sandor, Ph.D.