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/
Mystic Exercises
Many remarks in this 'Little Purple Notebook' point to the difference
between the 'rational path' and the 'intuitive path'. As emphasized, Gotamo
stated that only the 'rational path' can be gone by _everybody_. The
'intuitive path' requires special talents and is inherently unsafe.
One could label the 'rational path' as 'processing' and the 'intuitive
path' as 'meditation'.
The way things are practiced in Buddhist and New Age communities these
days, however, has led to the situation that nowadays about every activity
is being labeled 'meditation'.
Showing how the 'intuitive path' is being entered does not mean that the
author would encourage it! It is here only to round off the picture.
'Real' meditation as in these exercises should NEVER EVER be done in a
group. It should ONLY be done in complete solitude and within a safe
environment. Some of the reasons for this rule are explained in another
chapter of PNOHTEFTU. _ALL_ exercises that were presented by Gotamo, for
example, are prefixed by this very important rule.
If this rule is broken, it may happen that the meditant is being touched
while being in the state of samaadhi (even if it's just by the house cat),
or, in the very worst case, the body is being moved.
There is NO known process to this date that can reliably repair such an
incident, and allowing this to happen is an overt of magnitude (cp. also
'The Karma of a Teacher'!)
Now, after all these dire warnings, here is the 'traditional' way to enter
'mystic' states, the so-called kasi.naa exercises:
Step 1:
One selects a visible object, for example: a colored disk, a clearly
recognizable spot on the ground, a pond or a lake in the distance, or a
very small light source such as the light from another room shining through
a keyhole or a gap in the roof during daytime.)
Step 2:
One concentrates on this visible object with undivided attention until one
perceives an image that can be likened to the moon. This image should be
perceived with open _and_ closed eyes and it is called the 'learnt image'
(uggaha-nimitta.m).
Step 3:
If one continues to concentrate on this image (which should stay even if
one is going to a different place), an image will appear that looks like a
sparkling star or like the moon when it comes out of the clouds. This is a
color- and formless 'inner image' (patibhaaga-nimmitta.m).
At this point the (mental) obstacles (niivaranaa) will disappear and the
state that is 'bordering samaadhi' (upacaara samaadhi) is being entered.
Samaadhi itself can be induced by a simple trick but it can also occur
inadvertently. This is a state in which the physical body functions, such
as heart beat and breathing will come to a complete rest.
Nothing for the faint-hearted, obviously, and, again, this exercise is
listed here only to give a glimpse of the 'intuitive path'.
Step 2 above also acts as a very effective way of achieving 'exteriozation'
(a term that should be used with caution (cp. 'Int, Ext, and Perm'). Much
faster, reliable, and cheaper than listening to 'hemisync' tapes, anyway.
And at least there are some repairs of exteriozation problems (in lingo:
'out-int') available even though they are very unreliable at times (which
puts quite a crimp on exercises like this).
It is conceivable that modern technology could provide some sort of
biofeedback machine that would facilitate 'mystic contemplations'
(jhaanaa). Entering the state above is a dramatic experience. Since there
are no reports of the various phenomena that can occur during upacaara
samaadhi (let alone samaadhi itself), it can be assumed that the existing
gadgets do _not_ lead there (yet).
In any case, it is _much_ safer to stay on the 'rational path', the
'processing' side.
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Copyleft � 1998 by Maximilian J. Sandor, Ph.D.