Unknown Reality, SECTION 5: HOW TO JOURNEY INTO THE “UNKNOWN” REALITY; TINY STEPS AND GIANT STEPS. GLIMPSES AND DIRECT ENCOUNTERS
Session 716
This section will deal with various methods
that will allow you to come in contact with the unknown reality to one extent
or another. We have spoken of probable
man, hinted at probable civilizations, and mentioned alternate systems of
actuality. Yet these do not exist
completely apart from the world that you know, or entirely cut off from the
psyche. If you have no experience with
such realities, then their existence remains delightful or speculative conjecture.
The unknown reality is a variation of the
one that you know, so that many of its features are latent rather than
predominant in your own private and mass experience. Any encounter with such phenomena will then
include a bringing-into-focus of elements that are usually not concentrated
upon. Your consciousness must learn to
organize itself in more than one fashion – or rather, you must be willing to allow
your consciousness to use itself more fully.
It is not necessarily a matter of trying to ignore the contents of the
world, or to deny your physical perception.
Instead, the trick is to view the contents of the world in different
fashions, to free your physical senses from the restraints that your mental
conventions have placed upon them.
Each particular “station” of consciousness
perceives in a different kind of reality, and as mentioned earlier, you usually
tune in to your home station most of the time.
If you turn your focus only slightly away, the world appears differently;
and if that slightly altered focus were the predominant one, then that is how
the world would seem to be. Each aspect
of the psyche perceives the reality upon which it is focused, and that reality
is also the materialization of a particular state of the psyche projected outward. You can learn to encounter other realities by
altering your position within your own psyche.
In order to begin, you must first become
familiar with the working of your own consciousness as it is directed toward
the physical world. You cannot know when
you are in focus with another reality if you do not even realize what it
feels like to be in full focus with your own.
Many people phase in and out of that state without being aware of it,
and others are able to keep track of their own “inner drifting”. Here, simple daydreaming represents a slight
shift of awareness out of directly given sense data.
If you listen to an FM radio station, there
is a handy lock-in gadget that automatically keeps the station in clear focus;
it stops the program from “drifting”. In
the same way, when you daydream you drift away from your home station, while
still relating to it, generally speaking.
You also have the mental equivalent, however, of the FM’s lock-in
mechanism. On your part this is the
result of training, so that if your thoughts or experience stray too far this
mental gadget brings them back into line.
Usually this is automatic – a learned response that by now appears to be
almost instinctive.
You must learn to use this mechanism
consciously for your own purposes, for it is extremely handy. Many of you do not pay attention to your own
experience, subjectively speaking, so you drift in and out of clear focus in
this reality, barely realizing it. Often
your daily program is not nearly as clear or well-focused as it should be, but
full of static; and while this may annoy you, you often put up with it or even
become so used to the lack of harmony that you forget what a clear reception is
like. However, in this world you are
surrounded by familiar objects, details, and ideas, and your main orientation
is physical so that you can operate through habit alone even when you are not
as well focused within your reality as you should be.
When you go traveling off into other systems,
however, you cannot depend upon your habits.
Indeed, often they can only add to your mental clutter, turning into “static”
– so you must learn first of all what a clear focus is.
You will not learn it by trying to escape
your own reality, or by attempting to dull your senses. This can only teach you what it means not
to focus, and in whatever reality you visit the ability to focus clearly and
well is a prerequisite. Once you learn
how to really tune in, then you will understand what it means to change the
direction of your focus.
One of the simplest exercises is hardly an
original one, but it is of great benefit.
Practice Element 11
Try to experience all of your present sense
data as fully as you can. This tones
your entire physical and psychic organism, bringing all of your perceptions
together so that your awareness opens fully.
Body and mind operate together.
You experience an immediate sense of power because your abilities are
directed to the fullest of their capacities.
In a physical moment you can act directly on the spot, so to speak.
Sit with your eyes open easily, letting
your vision take in whatever is before you.
Do not strain. On the other hand,
do explore the entire field of vision simultaneously. Listen to everything. Identify all the sounds if you can, mentally
placing them with the objects to which they correspond even though the objects
may be invisible. Sit comfortably but
make no great attempt to relax. Instead,
feel your body in an alert manner – not in a sleepy distant fashion. Be aware of its pressure against the chair,
for example, and of its temperature, of variations: Your hands may be warm and
your feet cold, or your belly hot and your head cold. Consciously, then, feel your body’s
sensations. Is there any taste in your
mouth? What odors do you perceive?
Take as much time as you want to with this
exercise. It places you in your universe
clearly. This is an excellent exercise
to use before you begin – and after you finish with – any experiment involving
an alteration of consciousness.
Now: Bring all of those sensations
together. Try to be aware of all of them
at once, so that one adds to the others.
If you find yourself being more concerned with one particular
perception, then make an attempt to bring the ignored ones to the same clear
focus. Let all of them together form a
brilliant awareness of the moment.
When you are using this exercise following
any experiment with an alteration of consciousness, then end it here and go
about your other concerns. You may also
utilize it as an initial step that will help you get the feeling of your own
inner mobility. To do this proceed as
given, and when you have the moment’s perception as clearly as possible, then
willfully let it go.
Let the unity disappear as far as your
conscious thought is concerned. No
longer connect up the sounds you hear with their corresponding objects. Make no attempt to unify vision and
hearing. Drop the package, as it were,
as a unified group of perceptions. The
previous clarity of the moment will have changed into something else. Take one sound if you want to, say of a
passing car, and with your eyes closed follow the sound in your mind. Keep your eyes closed. Become aware of whatever perceptions reach
you, but this time do not judge or evaluate.
Then in a flash open your eyes, alert your body, and try to bring
all of your perceptions together again as brilliantly and clearly as possible.
When you have the sense world before you
this time, let it climax, so to speak, then again close your eyes and let it
fall away. Do not focus. In fact, unfocus.
When you have done this often enough so
that you are intimately aware of the contrast, you will have a subjective
feeling, a point of knowing within yourself, that will clearly indicate to you
how your consciousness feels when it is at its finest point of focus in
physical reality.
As you go about your day, try now and then
to recapture that point and to bring all data into the clearest possible
brilliance. You will find that this
practice, continued, will vastly enrich your normal experience. You find it much easier to concentrate, to
attend. To attend is to pay attention
and take care of. So this exercise will
allow you to attend – to focus your awareness to the matters at hand as
clearly and vividly as possible. The
subjective knowledge of your own point of finest focus will serve as a
reference point for many other exercises.
Practice Element 12
You must work from your own subjective
experience, so when you find your own finest focus point, that is your clearest
reception for your own home station. You
may feel that it has a certain position in your inner vision, or in your head,
or you may find that you have your own symbol to represent it. You might imagine it, if you want to, as a
station indicator on your own radio or television set, but your subjective recognition
of it is your own cue.
In our just-previous exercise, when I spoke
of having you let your clear perception drop away, and told you to disconnect
your vision from hearing, you were drifting in terms of your own home
station. Your consciousness was straying. This time begin with the point of your own
finest focus, which you have established, then let your consciousness stray as
given. Only let it stray in a particular
direction – to the right or the left, whichever seems most natural to you. In this way you are still directing it and
learning to orient yourself. In the
beginning, 15 minutes at most for this exercise; but let your awareness drift in
whatever direction you have chosen.
Each person will have his or her own
private experience here, but gradually certain kinds of physical data will seem
to disappear while others may take prominence.
For example, you might mentally hear sounds, while knowing they have no
physical origin. You may see nothing in
your mind, or you may see images that seem to have no exterior correlation, but
you may hear nothing. For a while
ordinary physical data may continue to intrude.
When it does, recognize it as your home station, and mentally let
yourself drift further away from it.
What is important is your own sensation as you experience the mobility
of your consciousness. If ever you grow
concerned simply return to your home station, back to the left or right
according to the direction you have chosen.
I do not suggest that you use “higher” or “lower” as directions, because
of the interpretations that you may have placed upon them through your beliefs.
Do not be impatient. As you continue with this exercise over a
period of time you will be able to go further away, orienting yourself as you
grow more familiar with the feeling of your mind. Gradually you will discover that this inner
sense data will become clearer and clearer as you move toward another “station”. It will represent reality as perceived from a
different state of consciousness.
The first journey from one home station to
another, unfamiliar one may bring you in contact with various kinds of
bleed-throughs, distortions, or static. These
can be expected. They are simply the
result of not yet learning how to tune your own consciousness clearly in to
other kinds of focus. Before you can
pick up the “next” station, for example, you may see ghost images in your mind,
or pick up distorted versions from your own home station. You have momentarily dispensed with the
usual, habitual organizational process by which you unite regular physical
sense perceptions, so while you are “between stations”, you may well encounter mixed
signals from each. When you alter your conscious
focus in such a fashion, you are also moving away from the part of your psyche
that you consider its center. You are journeying through your own psyche,
in other words, for different realities are different states of the psyche –
materialized, projected outward and experienced. That applies to your home station or physical
world as well.
Even your home station has many programs,
and you have usually tuned in to one main one and ignored others. Characters in your “favorite program” at home
may appear in far different guises when you are between stations, and elements
of other programs that you have ignored at home may suddenly become apparent to
you.
I will give you a simple example. At home you may tune in to religious
programs. That means that you might
organize your daily existence about highly idealistic principles. You may try to ignore what you consider other
programs dealing with hatred, fear, or violence. You might do such a good job of organizing
your physical data about your ideal that you shut out any emotions that involve
fear, violence, or hatred. When you
alter your consciousness, again, you automatically begin to let old
organizations of data drop away. You may
have tuned out what you think of as negative feelings or programming. These, however, may have been present but
ignored, and when you dispense with your usual method of organizing physical
data they may suddenly become apparent.
If you tell yourself that sexual feeling is
wrong, and organize your daily programming in that fashion, then when you “meditate”,
or dispense with that orientation, you may suddenly find yourself presented
with material that you consider unsavory.
You cannot deny the reality of the psyche, or those natural feelings
that you experience in the flesh. When
you begin to alter your perception, then, and your habitual picture of reality
drops away, you may well find yourself encountering in distorted fashion elements
of your own reality that you have up to then studiously denied or ignored.
This
is most apparent with those who use the Ouija board or automatic writing as
methods to alter consciousness.
In your home station, events are
encountered clearly in space and time. When
you move away, however, you may meet events in time but not in space, and
reality that you have tried to deny may then appear vividly. If you understand this you can gain
immeasurably, for as you move your focus away from your organized reality,
other portions of it upon which you have not concentrated will come into view.
This can show you what was missing from
your home station if you know how to read the clues. You form your home station according to your
beliefs. If you firmly believe, again
that sex is wrong, then your home station may involve you in a life “programming”
in which you constantly try to deny the vitality of the flesh. The sight of a nude body might upset you. You might undress in the dark, or think, if
you are married, of the sexual act of intercourse as dirty. If you are a man, you might be ashamed of
what you consider to be your need.
I have an example in point. A young man I will call Joe wrote Ruburt a
letter. He left his home in San
Francisco to travel to India to study with a guru. He has been told that sexual desire mitigates
against spiritual illumination. His home
program involves him with no sex whatsoever.
Joe tries desperately to abstain.
At the same time, when he meditates and alters his consciousness, he
immediately finds himself with a blinding headache, images of nude women, and
fantasies of female goddesses out to tempt him from his celibate state.
Joe thinks of such images as wrong. Instead, they are telling him something –
that his home program is impoverished, for he has been denying the reality of
his being. If he ignores the advice of
his psyche, then his journeys into the unknown reality will be highly
distorted. Seductive goddesses will
follow him wherever he goes.
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