Unknown Reality, Session 727
In your terms,
the land changes through the ages.
Mountains and islands arise, then disappear, to re-emerge in new
form. The oceans rise and fall also, and
in some cases the floor of the ocean becomes the surface of the planet, only to
be covered by water again. Yet through
all of these changes the earth retains a landscape, and at any given time the
features of the land are quite dependable and permanent enough for your
purposes.
So the islands
that I spoke about in our last session rose up from beneath the sea. Even as the dialogue of those islands took
place, the islands themselves were changing.
In somewhat the same way the psyche sends up counterparts of itself,
each with different features or characteristics. As the physical properties of the earth
distribute themselves in a certain given fashion about the surface of the
planet, so do the properties of the earth-tuned psyches distribute themselves.
As all physical
matter is connected in any particular time, or era, so the individual
consciousness of each being is also connected with every other. This applies to all consciousnesses as
you understand that term.
A mountain is
composed of many layers of rock that serve, as you think of it, as its
foundation. The top of the mountain
represents the present to you, and the tiers of rock beneath stand for the past. The mountain itself is not any one of these
rock layers that seemingly compose it, however.
There is a relationship between the mountain and those strata but the
term “mountain” is one that you have applied.
In greater terms the mountain and all of its components exist at once,
of course. You can examine the various
levels of rock structure. Geologists can
tell when, in terms of time, certain sedimentary deposits formed. The rocks themselves still exist in the
geologists’ present time, or they could not make such an examination. The mountain would not be a mountain without
that “foundation”. Again, however it is
not any one of those rock layers.
Now: In somewhat
the same manner, the self that you know is the mountain, and the rock layers
forming it are past lives.
You are not any of those past selves, even though they are a part of
the history of your being. They are
themselves in their own space and time.
They exist simultaneously with your own life, even as the strata of rock
exist simultaneously with the mountain.
Your present
existence, however, is highly related to those other levels of selfhood. Now what happens at the top of the mountain
affects all that goes on below, and so everything that you do affects those
other realms of selfhood, and there is an interchange that occurs
constantly. Physical conditions may be
quite different in the valley, in the foothills of the mountain, and at its
top. The very climate and vegetation
within the area are interrelated. Each
layer of life that composes the mountain is equally valid and important, and
each concentrates upon its own reality at its own level.
Like the
mountain, therefore, you have a history in terms of the present that is yours,
and yet not yours. It does not control
you, for you alter it with each thought and action, even as each motion at the
mountain’s top affects its base. The
layers at the bottom, however, are also constantly changing, so that the whole
area is a gestalt of relatedness.
In the physical
world, islands, valleys, plateaus, continents and oceans all have their place,
and serve to form the physical basis of your reality. Each blade of grass helps form the life of
the earth. So each consciousness,
however minute, is indispensable in its place and time.
Each flower on a
hillside looks out with its own unique vision of the world, and each
consciousness does the same thing, fulfilling a position impossible for
any other consciousness to fulfill.
In terms of time
only, there is an archaeological meaning that is hidden within your own
nature. To discover it you look “down”
through the levels of your own being, there to find the layers of selfhood that
in your world represent the past history of yourself, from which you emerged. You are not those selves psychically, however,
any more than you are your mother’s or your father’s in physical terms. You are as different from those reincarnational
selves, therefore, as you are from your parents, though you share certain
backgrounds and characteristics.
It is easy for
you to see how you affect your parents in your lifetime, though they are older
than you. In the same way, however, you
affect your reincarnational family.
When it rains,
water rushes in great exuberant gushes down the sides of the mountain, bringing
life and vitality to all of its parts.
In somewhat the same way, your own experiences flow down and into the
cracks and crevices of all the other times and centuries that compose your
current lifetime.
I have a
surprise for you, however, for I have been speaking of you as the top of
your mountain – for it certainly seems to you that you are at the top,
so to speak. Instead, your vantage point
and your focus is such that you cannot turn your head to look higher. Perhaps you are like a fine sunny cliff on
the side of the mountain, jutting out, looking down to the valley
beneath, not realizing that the mountain itself continues [up] beyond you. You are, then, in the position of any of the
other levels “beneath”, many also thinking themselves the top of the mountain,
looking only downward.
You are
convinced that you cannot see the future, and this means – in terms of our
analogy, at least – that you cannot look upward beyond your own time. While that is the case, you will always think
of reincarnation as occurring in the past.
Think instead of
strata of being, each simultaneously occurring.
Physically the human fetus bears a memory of its “past”. In your terms, it travels through the stages
of evolution before attaining its human form.
It attains that form, however, because it responds to a future
time, a future self not as yet physically created.
The fetus
itself, before its conception, responds to a self not yet physically
apparent; and the future, in those terms, draws new life from the past. A reality of selfhood, an idea not yet
materialized in the unformed future, reaches down into the past and brings that
future into realization. The cells are
imprinted with physical information in terms of space and time, but those data
came from a reality in which space and time are formed.
The knowledge of
probabilities brings forth present time and reality. Voices speak through the genes and
chromosomes that connect the future and the past in a balance that you call
the present form. The history of the
private psyche and the mass experience of the species, again, resides in each
individual. The archaeology of the past
and the future alike is alive within the layers of the consciousness that
compose your being.
In many ways
your language itself has a history that you do not understand.
The past is
obviously built into words in terms of time.
When you speak a given word you may not know the history of its changes
through the years, yet you speak it perfectly.
You seldom realize that the present state of your language, whatever it
is, will for others someday seem to be an archaic version. In whatever terms, again, you think of
yourselves as being at the top of the mountain.
In your terms, language presupposes a particular kind of development of
mind, and when you think of language you tie the two together.
There are
languages that have nothing to do with words – or with thoughts as you
understand them. Yet some of these
communicate in a far more precise fashion.
Cellular
transmission, for example, is indeed much more precise than any verbal
language, communicating data so intricate that all of your languages together
would fall far short of matching such complexity. This kind of communication carries
information that a thousand alphabets could not translate. In such a way, one part of the body knows
what is happening in every other part, and the body as a whole knows its
precise position on the surface of the planet.
It is biologically aware of all the other life-forms around it to the
most minute denominator.
This applies to
the future as well as to the past. The
body itself knows the source of water, for example, and food. Natives divorced from technology do very
well, as wild animals also do, in probing the life of the planet and their
positions within it.
A simple tree
deals with the nature of probabilities as it thrusts forward into new
seeds. Computations go on constantly
within it, and that communication involves an inner kind of language innocent
of symbols and vowels. The tree knows
its present and future history, in your terms, but it understands a future that
is not preordained. It feels its own
power in the present as it constructs that future. In deeper terms the tree’s seeds also realize
that there is a future there – a variety of futures toward which they grope.
The fetus also
understands that it can respond to a stimulus – to any stimulus it chooses –
from a variety of probable futures. So
do you unconsciously grope toward probable futures that to one extent or
another beckon you onward.
You choose your
futures, but you also choose your pasts.
There is only so much that I can say, since I am using a verbal language
that in itself makes a tyrant of time.
This book is paced in such a way, however, that if you follow it an
inner language will be initiated. This
in itself annihilates your stereotyped concepts and releases you from time’s
dictatorship. Some of the exercises to
be given in this section will be geared to that purpose.
An archaeologist
or a geologist examining “old” rock strata will find dead fossils, just as from
your viewpoint you will discover “dead” past lives as you look “downward”
through your psyche. You will seem to
view finished reincarnational existences, even as from his present the
geologist will discover only inanimate fossils embedded in rock. Those fossils are still alive, however. The geologist is simply not tuned in to their
life area. So reincarnational lives are
still occurring, but they are a part of your being. They are not you, and you are not your
reincarnational past.
To a future self
no more illuminated than you are, you appear dead and lifeless – a dim
memory. When you look out into the
universe from your viewpoint, it seems as if you look into the
past. Scientists tell you that when the
light from every distant galaxy reaches you, the galaxy is already dead. In the same way, when you look “backward”
into the psyche the life you may indistinctly view – the past life – is already
vanished. Why is it that your scientist’s
instruments do not allow them to look into the future instead, into
worlds not yet born, since they operate so well in discerning the past? And why is it, with all of your ideas about
reincarnation, there is precious little said about future lives?
The answer is
that your language is limited. Your verbal
language – for your biological communication is quite aware of probable future
events, and the body constantly maintains itself amid a maze of probabilities.
Note 7 – Trees
Seth’s material
on trees reminded me of his 18th session … “As to Jane’s feeling
about trees having [a certain kind of] consciousness, of course this is the
case … The tree is dissociated in one manner.
It is in a state of drowsiness on the one hand, and on the other it focuses
the usable portion of its energy into being a tree.
“… the inner
senses of the tree have a strong affinity with the properties of the earth itself. They feel their growing, as you listen to
your heartbeat … They also experience pain [which] while definite, unpleasant,
and sometimes agonizing, is not of an emotional nature in the same way that you
might feel pain. It as if your breath
were to be suddenly cut off.
“A tree knows
human beings also … by the vibrations in the air as they pass, which hit the
tree’s trunk from varying distances, and even by such things as voices. The tree does not build up an image of man,
but a composite sensation which represents an individual. And the same tree will recognize the same
person who passes it by each day …”
And from the 453rd
session (see the Appendix for The Seth
Material):
… “To your way
of thinking, some lives are lived in a twinkling (in various systems), and others last for centuries. The perception of consciousness is not limited,
however. I have told you, for example,
that trees have their own consciousness.
The consciousness of a tree is not as specifically focused as your own,
yet to all intents and purposes, the tree is conscious of 50 years before its existence,
and 50 years hence. Its sense of
identity spontaneously goes beyond the change of its own form. It has no ego to cut the “I” identification
short. Creatures without the compartment
of the ego can easily follow their own identity beyond any change of form.”
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