Unknown Reality, Session 708
Consciousness operates with what you may
call code systems. These are beyond
count. Consciousness differentiates
itself, therefore, by operating within certain code systems that help direct
particular kinds of focus, bringing in certain kinds of significances while
blocking out other data.
These other data, of course, might well be
significant in different code systems.
In their way, however, these systems are interrelated, so that at other
levels there is communication between them – secondary data, you might say,
that is supportive but not primarily concentrated upon.
These code systems involve molecular
constructions and light values, and in certain ways the light values are as
precisely and effectively used as your alphabet is. For example, certain kinds of life obviously
respond to spectrums with which you are not familiar – but beyond that there
are electromagnetic ranges, or rather extensions of electromagnetic
ranges, completely unknown to you, to which other life forms respond.
Again, all of these code systems are
interrelated. In the same way, the
private psyche contains within it hints and glimpses of other alternate
realities. These operate as secondary
codes, so to speak, beneath the existence that you officially recognize. Such secondary systems can tell you much
about the potentials of human reality, those that are latent but can at any
time be “raised” to primary importance.
Such secondary systems also point toward the probable developments
possible for individuals or species.
All of the probabilities practically
possible in human development are therefore present to some extent or another
in each individual. Any biological or
spiritual advancement that you might imagine will of course not come from any
outside agency, but from within the heritage of consciousness made flesh. Generally, those alive in this century chose
a particular kind of orientation. The
species chose to specialize in certain kinds of physical manipulation, to
devote its energies in certain directions.
Those directions have brought forth a reality unique in its own
fashion. Man has not driven himself down
a blind alley, in other words. He has
been studying the nature of his consciousness – using it as if it were apart
from the rest of nature, and therefore seeing nature and the world in a
particular light. That light has finally
made him feel isolated, alone, and to some extent relatively powerless.
He is learning how to use the light
of his own consciousness, and discovering how far one particular method
of using it can be counted upon. He is
studying what he can do and not do with that particular focus. He is now discovering that he needs other
lights also, in other words – that he has been relying upon only a small
portion of an entire inner searchlight that can be used in many
directions. Let us look at some of those
other directions that are native to man’s consciousness, still waiting to be
used effectively.
I am speaking in your historical terms
because before the historical system that you recognize, man had indeed
experimented with these other directions, and with some success. This does not mean that man in the present
has fallen from some higher spiritual achievement to his current state.
There are cycles in which consciousness forms
earthly experience, and maps out historical sequences. So there have been other species of mankind
beside your own, each handling physical data in its own way. Some have taken other directions, therefore,
than the one that you have chosen. Even
those paths are latent or secondary, however, within your own private and mass experience. They reside within you, presenting you with
alternate realities that you may or may not choose privately or en masse, as you prefer.
Each system, of course, brings forth its
own culture, “technology”, art, and science.
The physical body is basically equipped to maintain itself as a healthy
long-living organism far beyond your present understanding, medically speaking. The cellular comprehension provides all kinds
of inner therapeutics that operate quite naturally. There is a physical give-and-take between the
body and environment beyond here that escapes you, that unites the health of
plants, animals, and men. In the most
simple and mundane of examples, if you are living in a fairly well-balanced,
healthy environment, your houseplants and your animals will also do well. You form your environment and you are a part
of it. You react to it, often forgetting
that relationship. Ideally, the
body has the capacity to keep itself in excellent health – but beyond that, to
maintain itself at the highest levels of physical achievement. The exploits of your greatest athletes give
you a hint of the body’s true capacity.
In your system of beliefs, however, those athletes must train and focus
all of their attention in that direction, often at the expense of other
portions of their own experience. But
their performances show you what the body is capable of.
The body is equipped, ideally again
now, to rid itself of any diseases, and to maintain its stability into what you
would call advanced old age, with only a gradual overall change. At its best, however, the change would bring
about spiritual alterations. When you
leave for vacation, for example, you close down your house. In these ideal terms, death would involve a
closing down of your [physical] house; it would not be crumbling about you.
Now, certain individuals glimpse this great
natural healing ability of the body, and use it. Doctors sometimes encounter it when a patient
with a so-called incurable disease suddenly recovers. “Miraculous” healings are simply instances of
nature unhampered. Complete physicians,
as mentioned earlier, would be persons who understood the true nature of the
body and its own potentials – persons who would therefore transmit such ideas
to others and encourage them to trust the validity of the body. Some of the body’s abilities will seem
impossible to you, for you have no evidence to support them. Many organs can completely replace
themselves; diseased portions can be replaced by new tissue.
Many people, without knowing it, have
developed cancer and rid themselves of it.
Appendixes removed by operations have grown back. These powers of the body are biologically quite
achievable in practical terms, but only by a complete change of focus and belief. Your insistence upon separating yourselves from
nature automatically prevented you from trusting the biological aspects of the
body, and your religious concepts further alienated you from the body’s
spirituality.
In your reality, your consciousness is
usually identified with the body, on the other hand – that is, you think of
your consciousness as being always within your flesh. Yet many individuals have found themselves
outside of the body, fully conscious and aware.
Under certain conditions, therefore, the
body can maintain itself while the “main consciousness” is away from it. The body consciousness is quite able, then,
to provide the overall equilibrium. At
certain levels of the sleep state this does in fact happen. In sleepwalking the body is active, but the
main consciousness is not “awake”. It is
not manipulating the body. The main
consciousness is elsewhere. Under such conditions
the body can perform tasks and often maneuver with an amazing sense of
balance. This finesse, again, hints at
physical abilities not ordinarily used.
The main consciousness, because of its beliefs, often hampers such
manipulability in normal waking life.
Let us look for a moment at the body
consciousness.
It is equipped, as an animal is, to perform
beautifully in its environment. You
would call it mindless, since it would seem not to reason. For the purpose of this discussion alone,
imagine a body with a fully operating body consciousness, not diseased for any
reason or defective by birth, but one without the overriding ego-directed
consciousness that you have. There have
been species of such a nature. In your
terms they would seem to be like sleepwalkers, yet their physical abilities
surpassed yours. They were indeed as
agile as animals – nor were they unconscious.
They simply dealt with a different kind of awareness.
In your terms they did not have [an
overall] purpose, yet their purpose was simply to be. Their main points of consciousness were
elsewhere, in another kind of reality, while their physical manifestations were
separate. Their primary focuses of
consciousness were scarcely aware of the bodies they had created. Yet even those bodies learned “through
experience” and began to “awaken” to become aware of themselves, to discover
time, or to create it.
The sleepwalkers, as we will call them,
were not asleep to themselves, and would seem so only from your viewpoint. There were several such races of human
beings. Their [overall] primary
experience was outside of the body. The
physical corporal existence was a secondary effect. To them the real was the dream life, which
contained the highest stimuli, the most focused experience, the most maintained
purpose, the most meaningful activity, and the most organized social and cultural
behavior. Now this is the other side of
our own experience, so to speak. Such
races left the physical earth much as they found it. The main activity, then, involved
consciousness apart from the body. In
your terms, physical culture was rudimentary.
Now the physical organism as such is
capable of that kind of reality system.
It is not better or worse than your own.
It is simply alternate behavior, biologically and spiritually
possible. No complicated physical
transportation systems were set up. In
the physical state, in what you would call the waking state, these individuals
slept. To you, comparatively speaking,
their waking activities would seem dreamlike, and yet they behaved with great
natural physical grace, allowing the body to function to capacity. They did not saddle it with negative beliefs
of disease or limitation. Such bodies
did not age to the least extent now, that yours do, and enjoyed the
greatest ease and sense of belonging with the environment.
Consciousness connected with the flesh,
then, has great leeway spiritually and biologically, and can focus itself in
many ways with and through the flesh, beside your own particular
orientation. There have been highly
sophisticated, developed civilizations that would not be apparent to you
because the main orientation was mental or psychic, while the physical race
itself would seem to be highly undeveloped.
In some of their own private dreams, many
of my readers will have discovered a reality quite as vivid as the normal one,
and sometimes more so. These experiences
can give you some vague hint of the kind of existence I am speaking of. There are also physical apparatuses connected
with hibernation abilities of some animals that can give further clues as to
the possible relationships of consciousness to the body. Under certain conditions, for example,
consciousness can leave the corporal mechanism while it remains intact –
functioning, but at a maintenance level.
When optimum conditions return, then the consciousness reactivates the
body. Such behavior is possible not only
with the animals. In systems different
from your own, there are realities in which physical organisms are activated
after what would seem to you to be centuries of inactivity – again, when the
conditions are right. To some extent
your own consciousness leaves the body almost in the same way that messages
leap the nerve ends. The consciousness
is not destroyed in the meantime.
Now in the case of an animal who
hibernates, the body is in the same state.
But in the greater hibernation of your own experience, the body as a
whole becomes inoperable. The cells
within you obviously die constantly. The
body that you have is not the one you had 10 years ago; its physical
composition has died completely many times since your birth, but, again, your
consciousness bridges those gaps. They
could be accepted instead, in which case it would seem to you that you were,
say, a reincarnated self at age 7, or 14 or 21.
The particular sequence of your own awareness follows through,
however. In basic terms the body
dies often, and as surely as you think it dies but once in the death you
recognize. On numerous occasions it
physically breaks apart, but your consciousness rides beyond those “deaths”. You do not perceive them. The stuff of your body literally falls into
the earth many times, as you think it does only at the “end of your
life”.
Again, your own consciousness triumphantly
rides above those deaths that you do not recognize as such. In your chosen three-dimensional existence,
however, and in those terms, your consciousness finally recognizes a
death. From the outside it is nearly
impossible to pinpoint that intersection of consciousness and the seeming
separation from the body. There is a
time when you, as a consciousness, decide that death will happen, when in your
terms you no longer bridge the gap of minute deaths not accepted.
Here consciousness decides to leave
the flesh, to accept an official death.
You have already chosen a context however, and it seems that that
context is inevitable. It appears, then,
that the body will last so long and no longer.
The fact remains that you have chosen the kind of consciousness that
identifies with the flesh for a certain period of time. Other species of consciousness – of a
different order entirely, and with a different rhythm of experience – would
think of a life in your terms as a day, and have no trouble bridging that gap
between apparent life, death, and new life.
Some individuals find themselves with
memories of other lives, which are other days to the soul. Such persons then become aware of a greater
consciousness reaching over those gaps, and realize that earthly experience can
contain [among other things] a knowledge of existence in more than one
body. Inherently then consciousness,
affiliated with the flesh, can indeed carry such comprehensions. The mind of man as you know it shows at least
the potential ability for handling a kind of memory with which you are usually
not acquainted. This means that even
biologically the species is equipped to deal with different sequences of time,
while still manipulating within one particular time scheme. This implies a far greater psychological
richness – quite possible, again, within corporal reality – in which many
levels of relationships can be handled.
Such inner knowledge is inherent in the cells, and in ordinary terms of
evolution is quite possible as a “future” development.
Knowledge is usually passed down through
the ages in your reality, through books and historic writings, yet each
individual contains within himself or herself a vast repository: direct
knowledge of the past, in your terms, through unconscious comprehension.
The unknown reality: Much of that reality
is unknown simply because your beliefs close you off from your own
knowledge. The reaches of your own
consciousness are not limited. Because
you accept the idea of a straight-line movement of time, you cannot see before
or after what you think of as your birth or death, yet your greater
consciousness is quite aware of such experience. Ideally it is possible not only to
remember “past” lives, but to plan future ones now. In greater terms, all such lives happen at
once. Your present neurological
structure makes this seem impossible, yet your inner consciousness is
not so impeded.
Practice Element 10
You can hold within your conscious
attention far more data than you realize.
You have hypnotized yourselves into believing that your awareness is
highly limited.
Think back to yesterday. Try to remember what you did when you got up;
what you wore. Attempt to follow the
sequence of your activities from the time you awakened until you went to
sleep. Then flesh in the details. Try to recall your feelings at all of those
times. Most of you will be lucky to get
this far. Those who do, go even further
and try to recall the daydreams you might have had also. Try to remember what stray thoughts came into
your mind.
At first, doing this will take all of your
attention. You might do the exercise
sitting quietly, or riding a bus or waiting for someone in an office. Some of you might be able to do the exercise
while performing a more or less automatic series of actions – but do not
try to carry it out while driving a car, for example.
As you become more expert at it, then
purposely do something else at the same time – a physical activity, for
instance. When most of you begin this
exercise it will almost seem as if you were a sleepwalker yesterday. The precise, fine alignment of senses with
physical activity will seem simply lost; yet as you progress the details will
become clear, and you will find you can at least hold within your mind certain
aspects of yesterday’s reality while maintaining your hold in today.
In larger terms there are other entire lives,
which for you are forgotten essentially as yesterday is. These too, however, are a secondary series of
activities, riding beneath your present primary concern. They are as unconsciously a part of your
present, and as connected with it, as yesterday is.
Now: the second part of the exercise.
Imagine vividly what you will do tomorrow,
and in detail plan a probable day that will rise naturally from your present
experience, behavior, and purposes.
Follow through as you did with the first part of the exercise. That day’s reality is already anticipated by
your cells. Your body has prepared for
it, all of its functions precognitively projecting their own existences into
it. Your “future” life exists in the
same manner, and in your terms grows as much out of your present as
tomorrow grows out of your today.
Doing the exercise will simply acquaint
your normal consciousness with the sense of its own flexibility. You will be exercising the invisible muscles
of your consciousness as certainly as you might exercise your body with
gymnastics.
To other portions of yourself you would
seem to be a sleepwalker. Full creative
participation in any moment, however, awakens you to your own potentials, and
therefore allows you to experience a unity between your own consciousness and
the comprehension of your physical cells.
Those cells are as spiritual as your soul is.
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