Most people are ill at ease and restless because they are all the time
bewildered by the constant inflow of thoughts in their mind. They can't
stop thinking. There is no inner peace and calm. They give the
impression of being haunted by something. Their emotions give rise to
new thoughts and their thoughts give rise to new emotions. So
they are fettered to this vicious chain of cause and effect. This is
what makes them so unhappy, because they seem not to be able to let
loose of their thoughts and enjoy the happiness of the Here and
Now. All the time
their thoughts take them adrift.
For the mind creates the past and the future. If we would have no
thoughts we would be forever living in the happiness of an Eternal
Now. But instead, our thoughts force us to be mesmerized by our
past, both with guilt and with feelings of nostalgia, and also by the
future, the outcome of which is always too uncertain and too
fickle to make it worth a second thought, one would say; but
nevertheless people go on thinking and worrying, which are in most
cases synonymous, about the future.
Out of fear for the Void behind our thoughts we keep clinging to the
content of our mind.
thoughts be for what they are, mere bubbles in a vast ocean, but we are so used to identify our self with mind, that our whole notion of self is derived from it. We just give our mind too much credit and what is worse: we think
while it would be more accurate to say that Consciousness is having
these thoughts in this particular mind in this particular body.
So in order to be happy we have to learn to disidentify with our
thoughts and emotions and take a higher stance in witnessing our
internal life. That way we shall develop presence in the Here and Now and
learn not to be taken away anymore. This is the Mystical Warrior
Stance: to remain firmly rooted in the Now and fight all distractions
of the mind, out of our deep knowledge that nothing can make us happy
and blissful apart from this our own inner Self.
For this
is our greatest mistake: we think that happiness is somewhere out there
on the horizontal line, either in the past or in the future. But
happiness is the whole vertical line of our existence. When we were
sometime happy in the past, it was because we were then living -be it
just the blink of a moment- the
vertical line of our existence. The same with the future:
happiness will come when we start living on the vertical line.
This doesn't mean that we can not use our mind for practical and
technical problems. Our work and the Or are we also in bed or in our seat constantly
overwhelmed with thoughts about our work and our problems? Tolle says
that we are by then creating 'psychological time': we have made the
clock
time of our work and daily life internal and by thinking about it -be
the thoughts joyful or distressing- we have created our past and our
future.
But can we let go of all mental images, all judgments, all memories,
anticipations and
evaluations about everything, including our self? Can we live in the
Now? For beyond our mind and our thoughts there is the blissful world
of Being. We only have to identify our self with this world of peace,
says Tolle. And it is not so hard as it may seem, for in fact we are
this very Being. All else is just a dream and an illusion.
This is
not the case. In fact most mystics are very rational and wise persons
who are in sound and healthy control of their mind. They see
their rationality as a great gift and treasure it.
But in order to reach the happiness and bliss of the domains of our
consciousness we have to be able to
we have to be able, at any given moment, to leave our mind behind and enter the Stillness, the source of all intuitive knowledge. So the mystic does not despise and depreciate rationality but he enlarges his rationality by opening it up to the transcendental world of unlimited knowledge.
It is my
personal experience, that the mind becomes more clear and more able in
discerning. It also shows from the history of mysticism, that offers us
numerous examples of clear and gifted thinkers. like Plato or
Shankara. So it must be stressed that mysticism is no enemy of
the mind. But with the mystics the mind is only an instrument. It is
not our true identity. Our true identity lies in Being.
consciousness and living in the Now end all misery
Pain and misery are created in the psyche because of an internal conflict between what is and what we think should have been.
CREATIVE BLAME...We are
never happy with the present state of affairs. We always want better
circumstances. We always want more. Even when we are happy, we still
want more happiness. This is the working of our mind, that it is never
satisfied with the Now. Our heart says: 'what is wrong with the
beauty of this moment? Look at the sky and the beautiful trees and
flowers? What is wrong with it? Isn't life beautiful just the way it
is?'
Why is our mind so afraid of the present moment? Because total living
in the Here and Now would entail a total annihilation of the mind. The
mind cannot survive in the Now. It can only survive when we bring
in the past and the future, but in the Now it instantly drops dead. The
Now is its worst enemy. And like every holon in the universe it fights
for its survival. So when the Now comes in, it instantly starts
fighting back. It has since the beginning of time grown so powerful
that
there isn't holon in the universe as sly and cunning as mind. So it
fights with all possible, even with treacherous and perfidious means.
It even tells us that we are unhappy when we are happy, or that we need
more happiness, when we have enough. It tells us lies, just to survive.
But let us be very precise here in our analysis. We have just said that
pain and misery arise in the psyche out of an internal conflict. Can
there still be conflict, without mind and thoughts? Is there not
internal conflict in us, just because we want to change what
Isn't it our mind that creates
our problems? The world is just what it is, neither good nor bad. Our
mind makes the value judgments and in doing so it also creates our
misery.
Mind and misery are dependent of one another. So when we end the mind,
we will end our misery, (and ending our misery we will end our mind;
just observe how our mind falls blank, be it for only one second,
when our misery ends, either when we reach success but also in cases
wherein we do not fight our misery anymore, but accept it and
surrender to it).
Eckhart Tolle has the mystical experience that the awareness of present
in our consciousness. In fact we become
our consciousness itself. For the Now and formless consciousness are
one
and the same. When we become our consciousness -when we identify solely
with consciousness-, we will by doing so witness the content and workings of
our mind. This
conscious witnessing can only be done in the Now. So there is a second
way also in ending our misery. If the Now and consciousness are one and
the same, we can end our misery also by
being totally conscious of our pain. Consciousness will shine
its light over our lives and will end all our misery by putting an end
to the workings of mind and by firmly establishing us in the Now. It is
impossible to be miserable and to be fully conscious at the same time.
So both consciousness and living in the Now end all our misery.
This is Tolle's message: let's concentrate on our life and shrug
shoulders about our life situation. Our life is blissful and peaceful,
full of beauty and harmony. It is available and instantly to be
contacted with right here at this moment. We only have to
disidentify
with the situation we are in.
To find out who we really are we must concentrate on and identify with
formless Consciousness, the substratum of our mind and body. But at the
same time we must never forget that our body also is a manifestation of
Consciousness. It is not the opposite of Consciousness. It is not
her enemy. This is the great mistake religious people and also mystics
have made in history. They have condemned the body. They mistakingly
thought that the body formed a hindrance for realizing Spirit. They
were blinded by that worst of dualisms, the separation of body and
soul. It led to that deplorable atrophy of true religion and mysticism:
ascetism. Even a beautiful mystic like Plato thought we had to
subjugate our body and bring it under control. The end result was
catastrophic for the spirituality of the West: only rarely did our
western monks, mystics and religious laymen reach enlightenment,
because of this hostile attitude toward the body. It only brought guilt
and the tears of remorse to the soul. Man became unto himself his own
worst enemy. The soul of religion became contaminated with the pest of
this inner conflict.
I personnally think this is the most beautiful message Eckhart Tolle is
offering us: instead of being our enemy, our body can be our greatest
helper in reaching enlightenment. It can help us in contacting our true
inner Self.
We can feel it being the cause of everything. We can feel that if It would not be there, things would not work. By feeling and observing this we get immediate and instant knowledge about It. If we'll concentrate on this inner Body we will reach enlightenment in the end. For in contacting Consciousness our mind makes the shift from form to the formless.
We prevent our blissful living in the Here and Now because we create a hard and obstinate mental attitude against the situation as it is. This creates inner conflict and dualism in our consciousness and out of this dualism (the dualism of We have to give way to the situation as it is. This is what
It only means that we have
to give up our mental resistance. So the first thing we have to do if
our life situation becomes bad (and this may sound paradoxical if we do
not understand the mechanism behind it) is to totally accept the
situation.
In life situations that may seem
and unfavorable we have to have a
mental attitude of surrender (Thy will be done....). Why so? To
understand the working of this mechanism let's refer in comparison to
some physical workings of nature. Let's assume we have been hurt and
have been afflicted a severe injury. We can make a fuss about it, run
around very nervous and agitated, worry about it or think about it
constantly, but the best way to deal with the injury is to rest and to
observe inner calm and let nature heal the wound out of herself. We
have to let nature have her way.
Now when we accept our life situation, surrender to the situation as it
is and put trust in the workings of nature, a greater Power than we
could ever imagine steps in. If we do no come in the way this Power
now takes
over control. This is the Power of
the God/Brahman the power of unfathomable Intelligence. If we put trust
in this Intelligence, everything in our life will be healed. At
this point in our argumentation, all explanations and deductions must
come to an end. For why this is and how it works we do not know. It is
a sheer mystery. It may be the case that with surrender, acceptance and
trust we stop the mind deliberating and analyzing.
and then our
consciousness takes on again its primal formlessness, together with the
primal qualities of truth and blissfulness that somehow are identical
with Being. But how exactly this transformation of consciousness (from
relative to absolute again) takes place is still a matter of dispute
among mystics and may well remain a mystery forever.
For his seem to
suggest that we can realize formless Consciousness just by
changing our view and mental outlook on life. This is at least
the way it will in most cases be interpreted by the reader.
But staying on the mental level will never transform our selves. That
way our changed outlook will never become realized in Being. It will
only be a transient mood that only lasts for the time being, as long as
we read the book or as long as we (sparingly, I fear) think about
Tolle's ideas. What we have to do is to practice with our mind body the technique of
remaining in formless Emptiness. The way to do this is to meditate.
Meditation not only brings about altered states of consciousness, but
also altered neural and physical states in our nervous system and our
brain. That way the physcial basis of our consciousness will be altered
and along with it, our mental view on life will be totally transformed
in the way as it happened to Tolle. For it is my view that the state of
our consciousness is influenced by the state of our body and also vice
versa.
But here I disagree with Eckhart Tolle: this will take time, because
our body is in time. Our mind can instantly in the Now realize
enlightenment and that's what happens in a so called 'satori', a sudden
peak experience of the transcendental world of Pure Consciousness. The
mind suddenly and instantly realizes all the characteristics of Eternal
Being. But after that sudden flash of spiritual experience our mind
instantaneously falls back into its old ways of perceiving, because our
body is not yet on a par with the higher developments of the mind.
Eckhart is, like Krishnamurti, afraid that the word meditation takes
the aspirant away from the Here and Now. He is right: there may be a
danger that one thinks that something can be by the ego to realize
enlightenment and that that 'something' will only materialize in the
future after a lot of effort has been put to the test. If this is the
way meditation is performed, then the meditations will be a total
failure. But we have to meditate totally in the
Now, with no expectations, with no hope for results, with no effort
whatsoever. We have to meditate precisely along the guidelines of
Tolle's beautiful book. But still we
have to meditate. If we do not sit, close our eyes and
meditate nothing will change, both in our consciousness and in our
body. We have to practice the taoist wu-wei by performing meditations:
we have to do, by not doing anything whatsoever. This is the great
mystical paradox.