More clarity from Adyashanti

It is always amazing to see a brilliant teacher continue to refine the teaching. I find Adyashanti to be simple, clear and profound and last month a new book by Adya appeared in our mailbox, a divine Christmas present, a solstice surprise. Less than 50 pages long, ‘The Way of Liberation’ is his ‘practical guide to spiritual enlightenment’. I’d love to reprint the whole thing here, but I’ll let you track down the book at (www.opengatesangha.org). I will include what he calls the three core practices and some of his observations regarding them. (Italics are straight from the book.)

‘Think of spiritual practice as a sort of ‘applied folly’. “Core practices are something you need to get the feel of, somewhat like getting the feel of balance when learning to ride a bicycle.” ” You should not apply the core practices too willfully, or with a great amount of struggle.” “…just remember the element of grace is all-important and ever present. And it is always darkest just before dawn.”

The core practices are meditation, enquiry and contemplation. “Meditation is the art of allowing everything to simply be, in the deepest possible way. In order to let everything be, we must let go of the effort to control and manipulate our experience – which means letting go of personal will.” ” The silence and stillness of meditation is the bedrock upon which this teaching rests.” “True meditation is effortless stillness, abidance as primordial being.”

“Inquiry is a way of addressing the deepest existential issues confronting every human being. Who or what am I? What is life? What happens after death? …Or simply, Do I know with absolute certainty that this current thought, belief, opinion, interpretation or judgment is true? ” The realization of Truth and Reality can never be created by the mind; it always comes as a gift of grace. Inquiry clears away mis-perceptions and illusions, making one available to the movements of grace.” “Question everything! Leave no stone unturned, no assumption unexamined, no form of denial left intact.”

“Contemplation is the art of holding a word or phrase patiently in the silence and stillness of awareness until it begins to disclose deeper and deeper meanings and understandings. In the Zen tradition, phrases, questions or short teaching stories called koans are used as objects of contemplation…”

Some phrases for contemplation:
“Suffering is how Life tells you
that you are resisting or mis-perceiving
what is real and true.”

“There is only being living itself
through you, as you, and as all that exists.”

“The infinite is pure formless potential
prior to being and non-being, life and death,
form and formlessness.”

Mayan Ouroboros

Awakening to a Mayan Way of Perceiving

(from Drunvalo Melchizedek)

Life is always completing itself, by itself,
through itself.

There is no other!

OUROBOROS

Only one spirit moves through All Life
everywhere
And everything is alive.

SACRED GEOMETRY PROVES

This One Universe of stars and planets was created
through the shape and proportions of a simple
sphere, and can equally be seen in a circle.

As you understand, this you understand
the importance of cycles.

Time is circular.

Space is circular.

Dimensions are circular. Size is circular.

Even all light waves become circular eventually.

So when a cycle of 25, 625 years

comes to an end and a new beginning emerges,

perhaps we should see and know the sacredness in

the moment of our everyday lives.

Remember who YOU are in the dance of cycles,

and

you immediately win the Game of Life.

What’s your prize?

Oneness reveals itself

all around you

and

within you.

Polarity disappears.

Death is mastered.

Immortality becomes reality.

And YOU come full circle when you realize

that what is all around you, Nature,

is also within you.

Do you know you are filled with stars?

YOU

are the connection between outside

and

the inside

And truly,

the First is the Last

The Last is the First

-0-

In La’kesh

Mayan for:

“You are another me, and I am another you”.

The Mayan Ouroborous

DECEMBER 21, 2012

11:11 PM (Chitzen Itza, Mexico)

At that moment,

the Earth, the Sun,
and
the Center of the Galaxy
are in a straight line,
and it will not happen again,

for 25, 625 years.

Spiritually know:

At that moment, the Heart of the Earth, the Heart of the Sun,
the Heart of the Galaxy as living beings are Intimately Connected.

Birth is inevitable.

12/22/2012

2222

A New Cycle Begins.

The WIndow
of
Global
Change

is

Opening…

— excerpt from
The Mayan Ouroborous, Drunvalo Melchizedek

Yoga, Mental Health and Complex Systems

Dan Siegel, pediatric psychiatrist, pioneering interpersonal neurobiologist and all around brilliant guy, has helped revolutionize my understanding of the interconnectedness of yoga/meditation practice and the optimization of mental health. Here, as part of the opening chapter in Healing Trauma, a book he co-edited with Marion Solomon, Dan describes how the human mind, as well as human social groups, can operate as complex systems. (My comments in color.)

“One exciting idea that emerges from the application of complexity theory to mental processes is this: Systems that are able to move toward maximal complexity are healthy systems. They are the most stable, adaptive, and flexible. (Sthira sukham asanam!) What a wonderfully concise definition of well being. Mental health can thus be defined as a self-organizational process that enables the system – be it a person, relationship, family, school, community, or society – to continually move toward maximal complexity.” (Here we see an obvious obstacle for the world community and the US. If more complexity is seen as being too scary, too foreign, there is liable to be a regressing in overall mental health.)

Here Dan articulates seven principles of complexity theory that are relevant to mental health and our yoga practice. Find out in your own practice how these ideas may be helpful. Italics are Dan’s way of zeroing in on the key phrases.

“1. Complex systems have a self-organizational process that emerges out of the nature of the properties of their component parts. (Cells, organs, neurons, blood vessels, bones etc, as well as belief systems, teachings, new ideas.)

2. The flow of states of the system has recursive features, both internal and external, that reinforce flow in a certain direction. (Movement of blood, breath, peristalsis, or the MCAS testing and teaching procedures.)

3. Both internal and external constraints, or features, determine the course of change or trajectory of the system over time. ( How you practice moves the system. Are you opening to more complexity and novelty, just repeating the past, or heading over the cliff (global warming?))

4. Self-organizational processes tend to move the system toward maximal complexity.

5. The ability to create maximally complex states offers the most stable, flexible and adaptive states to emerge. Complexity is a state of the system that flows between sameness, rigidity, order and predictability on the one hand and change, randomness, chaos and unpredicitablity on the other. (tamas, rajas and sattva)

6. Complexity is achieved by the balancing of the two fundamental processes of differentiation and integration. (Can you differentiate your sacrum from the pelvis?, the liver from the heart, the erector spinae muscles from the multifidi?) Can you get them to work together once differentiated? Lots more choices here! .. How about ‘Awareness’ and what arises in awareness?)

7. The inability of the system to move toward complexity can be seen as a form of “stress” to the system. (Check out the current political scene.)

When you begin to recognize the you are inextricably intertwined with the “Whole”, you can draw upon the complexity/intelligence of the both the cosmos and cells to help you heal and thrive.