My Thoughts from Inside…Praying without ceasing…

What are some of the signals that we are shifting out of communion with our Lord God and into some ritual-of-the-mind, habit, or addictive behavior? At times like these, we go “unconscious.” This is usually most obvious “after” the fact when we look back on our behavior and it was not what we would have chosen from our highest and best or from Who We Really Are.

What would we look like if we spent our time “hooked up” with Spirit? If Spirit moved us? If Spirit filled us and acted us?

We would look as described in the 15th Chapter of the Tao Te Ching…

—The ancient masters were subtle, mysterious, profound, responsive.

—The depth of their knowledge is unfathomable.

—Because it is unfathomable,

—All we can do is describe their appearance.

—Watchful, like men crossing a winter stream.

—Alert, like men aware of danger.

—Courteous, like visiting guests.

—Yielding. like ice about to melt.

—Simple, like uncarved blocks of wood.

—Hollow, like caves.

—Opague, like muddy pools.

—Who can wait quietly while the mud settles?

—Who can remain still until the moment of action?

—Observers of the Tao do not seek fulfillment.

—Not seeking fulfillment, they are not swayed by desire for change.

Probably the clearest model for reality is holographic. In a hologram, each piece contains the whole.

The larger the piece, the more clarity. This applies to time as well as space. This means that each moment and each place contains within it all the moments of the universe — past and future. In like manner for space. Since space/time is one fabric with different qualities, we could simply describe it as What Is.

Advice from Christ, Buddha, Lao Ise and other mystic spirit mentors is consistent around the idea that less is more. Knowledge is increased by adding things, wisdom is increased by losing or dropping things.

To be described as the “ancient masters” the Tao would be:

Subtle: open to the next moment’s change, not committed or blindly running down some previously discerned path towards a perceived destination that may have since shifted.

Mysterious: hard to predict from external viewpoints. Subject to unfathomable motivations or directions.

Profound: obviously containing a depth that goes beyond the norm. Solutions, answers coming from deep, powerful and wonderful places.

Responsive: Response able. Awareness of constantly shifting needs in the environment and in people around me and able to shift my internal orientation to accommodate and adjust to those needs. To love fully and appropriately.

Unfathomable: Probably reference to the “emptiness” or “void” that field of infinite potentiality into which we can go in the moment of NOW. Deep within. If we don’t go within, we go without.

Watchful: Where are the rocks? Where the ice? Where is the strongest part of the snowbridge, undercut least by the stream?Watching for cracks or settling of the snow. Listening for changes in the sound of moving water beneath. Mesmerized by the beauty of the crystalline whiteness. We wish to continue moving, following our own flow above that of the cold stream below. To drop in and get stuck is to expend unnecessary effort for survival — jeopardizing the journey. Watch. Wait. Move forward. Move backward. Move around. Pick your path carefully.

Alert: All senses up like radar. The opposite of frozen with fear, this is flowing with alertness. For some reason, Smiling during the crux, enhances the relaxation reflex. Allowing your awareness to expand. Relying on all of your senses. The Buddhists include the Mind as a Sixth Sense. Go from Small Mind (of worry and anxiety) into Large Mind (of expanded awareness of surroundings and feelings)

Courteous: Humbly appreciative of that which has been provided by our Host as we sojourn on this planet this day and this moment. We extend simple courtesies to those around us realizing that we have no genuine ownership or familiarity and are simply guests in this time and place.

Yielding: There is great power in water and great resistance in ice. Unlike most substances, water’s solid form is less dense (and thus floats and forms from the top down, not the bottom up). The tiny hydrogen bonds and hexagonal structure give ice great strength. Strength to split granite. Ice about to melt is strength unhurriedly and gently giving way to action.

Simple: As it is. Can we look at the world and see it “as it is” without dressing it in dazzling raiment woven from the threads of past judgments and future concerns? We weave and spin these two threads into of fabrics of intrigue, meaning, and fear? Less is more. Simple is beautiful. The uncarved block has a purity, vibrancy and life unencumbered by Ego’s accoutrements. No hidden agendas.

Hollow: Empty. Open. Available. Able to be filled and fulfilled. A place for shelter from the storms of life.. A place to echo our feelings and thoughts. A place of safety from which to venture and return to rest. Profit comes from what is there, usefulness comes from what is not there.

Opague: Clarity is not a constant. When following the Tao, change and flow are the constant. From the outside perspective, things often need to settle before being able to see.

Heisenberg Principle. Once clarity is attained, the elusive Now of Change has of course moved on and we are simply left with the artifact — to discuss, catalog and embalm for our tomes.

Who can wait quietly while the mud settles?

Things are often not clear. Especially under the pressure of deadlines and anticipation. We have become a world that highly values productivity. I suspect because it has been tightly tied to self-esteem which is related to earning money for stuff and status. If we are to be more and more productive, then we need to work smarter, better and faster. We are so efficient that we often lose our effectiveness and do something 3 times in a hurry faster than we once did it the first time properly.

Who can remain still until the moment of action? Who can wait upon the Lord? Who can pray without ceasing? Who can then be moved by that praver and not merely jump-started by the ego and circumstances?

Observers of the Tao do not seek fulfillment. Fulfillment from what? Others’ opinions? For how long? What have you done for me lately? Oh, we long for something permanent. If we work hard to produce it from our splendid productivity, then its value is related to how long it lasts before change makes it irrelevant or even obsolete.

Not seeking fulfillment, they are not swayed by desire for change. Not seeking permanence, they can go with the flow, enjoy the ride and the creations, without attaching to their permanent existence. So not being swayed by desire for change from “the way it is” to the “way it ought to be.”

Doing not-doing. Wei wu-wei. Acting as nature acts to do huge things. They are accomplished with many minute steps and then forgotten. In that way they last forever.

My Thoughts from Inside…the Power of Words

Once upon a time, we communicated with gesture and interpreted with intuition — a sixth sense of knowing. In those days, life was very inter-connected, organic, whole, alive and changing

As we began to label things, That and Not-That arose. Separateness became the norm over Unity. Mechanics prevailed over Flow.

Judgment elbowed aside Wonder/Fascination.

Awe gave way to awful.

As our science grew, our labels expanded exponentially toward greater specificity and a lessening relationship to the living holistic nature supposedly described. It was cool to follow our curiosity to deeper and wider horizons — needing more and more word-markers to sign-post our path into the labyrinth. And so grew the body of knowledge.

As our judgment grew, our arguments expanded exponentially toward greater legalism and a lessening relationship to the common sense inherent in the natural whole. It was fear and fairness driving us to be right and just — “just right” — requiring more and more glossaries, lexicons, and interpretations of words that were once clear in meaning. And so grew the body of rules for right and wrong and of course, the differences between people who were right and wrong.

The path through science led to efficiencies, increased productivity, incredible advances, and amazing mechanics. We can DO things precisely as never imagined.

The path through judgment led to entanglements, structure-for-its-own-sake, methodical reinterpretations, and juris-paralyzed-with-prudence. We can now FEAR doing wrong with unimagined precision.

While we name and label every little thing, we lose track of the essence en-livening.

While we fearfully judge every little action, we lose track of the love connecting.

Perhaps we are steadfastly in search of better and faster which results from heightened productivity and effectiveness. In this view, more is certainly better. The first shall be first and the last suckers.

Pre-modern native groups managed tasks with spontaneity — not a set of rules, roles and directions. Nature seems to manage intricate, seemingly chaotic movements of myriad pieces effortlessly in harmonious flow (wheeling flocks of birds, herd movements, etc.)

It is a question of RESULTS not process.

Thus has evolved our Judeo-Christian interpretation of Jesus’ Aramaic adjectives of “ripe” and “unripe” into the arbitrary and authoritative “good” and “evil.”

What happens if I give up my need to have myself and those around me always say the right and correct-to-my-world word? An interesting shift occurs. I spent most of my first 50 years debating, defining, clarifying and teaching others what was “right” from my (and of course reasonable and correct) point of view.

Lately, I’ve begun to have an awareness (see/feel of some of the other levels of communication which occur regardless of the actual words spoken or written. When I look for that awareness, the actual words often make little difference to the message. As I see/feel that awareness, I notice this illusive yet wonderful creation of “we” that occurs between the speaker and me. That “we” is fragile and is quickly shattered by judgment and fear of being wrong. This “we” often enables a much wider awareness of the possibilities and solutions. It flows and shifts, a living being, and can offer much richness to the participants.

What if another’s view is X, while mine is Y, and both are true and fascinating at once?

What if we pretend, for a moment, that Z may be born of the union of X and Y? That would make the moment pregnant with possibility.

How does the Word show up in our lives?

We hear auditory vibrations through our ears and interpret with our brains. We pick up sub-liminal, assumptions, free-floating anxiety, vibrational effect of tone, pitch and decibel levels. We speak aloud for others and often ourselves to hear. We all have a nearly continuous internal dialogue (chitta vritti in the Yoga Sutras). We read words and see pictures.

Look for glimpses of “we” in the gaps.

365 TAO Daily Meditations by Deng Ming-Dao (excerpts)

Putting on the Mind of Christ: the Inner Work of Christian Spirituality (excerpts) by Jim Marion

A Theory of Everything (excerpts) by Ken Wilber

The Dance (some excerpts) by Oriah Mountain Dreamer

Story of the Five Balls — Living a Balanced Life

Dr. Fulford’s body exercises

Chinese Medicine Info

Miscellaneous Wisdom from different Traditions