Message 10241 of 11023

Enlightenment Anyone??

A story from Ramesh S. Balsekar:

"The desire for enlightenment once drove an earnest and highly-determined individual to spend several years in the company of a spiritual teacher. During these years he proved himself a devoted disciple who was totally committed to the attainment of spiritual realization. When the time came for him to leave and return to his native place, his guru made him promise that he would write every month, reporting on his spiritual progress. The disciple gave his promise and received his guru's blessing. They said their farewells and parted.

The disciple had been gone just over a month when his first letter arrived. "I am experiencing the Oneness with the Universe," he wrote. The master said nothing, but crumpled up the letter and dropped it in the bin.

The next month's report came promptly and stated: "The Divinity present in all things has been revealed to me. I behold It in a flower, in a stone, in the very air, everywhere." Again the master read the letter, crumpled it up and tossed it into the bin without a word.

For four months the letters arrived regularly. In his third message the disciple declared: "The mystery of the One and the Many has been revealed to me. I now know and truly comprehend there is no difference between you and me or anything else." Once read, this missive also ended up in the guru's waste-paper basket. In the fourth letter the disciple said, "No one is born, lives or dies, because there is no one who exists." This letter too was read without comment and followed its predecessors, slipping with a rustle into the trash.

After the fourth month, however, no further letters arrived. No letter in the fifth month, no letter in the sixth month, no letter for a whole year! As the time passed and brought no news, the master became increasingly curious as to what had happened with his beloved disciple. Eventually, he wrote to him inquiring about his spiritual progress, and reminding the disciple of his promise to keep him informed.

Some time later, the guru was handed a letter addressed in a familiar hand. It was from his distant disciple. The guru opened it and read, and laughed out loud with obvious delight. His attendant disciples were puzzled as to what had prompted this outburst of joy. Beaming gladly, the guru passed them the letter. They saw that it contained just three words, and the three words were: "Enlightenment? Who cares!""

Here are a few questions raised by the story for you to consider--are we "participations in the divine life" with nothing more to do, nowhere to go--from a spiritual perspective? Are we already "perfect" from a spiritual (not worldly) point of view, so that all of our efforts to grow up spiritually are just so much nonsense--because we already ARE what we seek? And even if it is so that we have nothing further to do, does doing nothing work in the spiritual realm? Or do we, like the disciple, need to work diligently at a daily spiritual practice in order to arrive at an UNDERSTANDING (right to the marrow of our bones--not just an intellectual understanding) that we are what we seek? Or are the questions wrong? What dp you think?

agapejeff

agapejeff's profile
Wow, Jeff, glad to hear from you after so long! And a wonderful post to boot. I think we use the word "growth" to describe how we have opened a little each time to the awareness of who we are. I think of it as a veil that is slowly being lifted each time we experience the truth of who we are.
Duchess358's profile

over 2 years ago
I love stories that give us pause to ponder. I am reminded of the saying, "Before enlightenment, chopping wood and carrying water. After enlightenment, chopping wood and carrying water." Meister Eckhardt used to pray, "God, rid me of God that I may know God." In this spirit, I once wrote:
What any Sage Knows ~ one must be de-lighted before one can be en-lightened.

I do not believe the questions are wrong. They are not all of the questions, however. Do we, as spiritual beings having a human experience grow more God? Does God evolve? If we accept that we are already what we seek, are we what God seeks?

I particularly relate to Labrys' spelling of God - Godde. To me, this spelling implies that there is more God than the God that we know. Godde as an "isness", a "beingness" that becomes more "is" and more "being" through us.

In other words, do we have an impact on God? Impact as used here is in the sense of the power of an event or idea to produce changes, to move feelings. Certainly, we can see in the book of Genesis that man's actions impacted God. God became angry and threw humans out of the Garden of Eden. Perhaps then, it would behoove us to return to an earlier time, when God first spoke the word and brought creation into being. Can we teach God?

I can only offer to you a few poetic thoughts which have come to me:

Love Scare

Jesus suffered from too much love -
Is this what frightens us so?
That our own lives may be taken
By men who hunger for our soul?

Nay, say I
"Tis God who hungers so
----------------------------------------
Wouldn't it be great if
Along with adulation
We brought God
Stuff for contemplation?
----------------------------------------
Moments,
full with heartfelt gratitude
bring Breath for God
to speak yet another word
----------------------------------------
When we retun to God
with gifts from our experience
God's vocabulary increases
----------------------------------------
Cast down, 'round and 'bout
for every sliver, every shred of doubt
which brings to life pain and strife
dwelling darkly within
Raise! Raise! to the Son
Life, grateful,
Invites Love to dwell, instead
----------------------------------------
When God closed Eden
He meant for us not to return
But to grow our own Gardens
Where fruit so nourishes
God rejoices
in the beauty of Humans' soul
----------------------------------------
I dare you -
Draw a holy breath
Teach God innocence
Borne from deep, dark places

I dare you -
Become the cup -
Let life bubble over
and draw Love
from its source
----------------------------------------
And yes, enlightenment - who cares?

LadyEarth's profile

over 2 years ago
JEFF, Nice of you to pop in, it's always fun, and I see you gave us something fun to ponder. :) Great story for starters!

Well as I observe life( my myth) in the temporal, holds the spirit down, it's always there until it regains it's freedom after death. And it plays with us at times in the unconscious, realm of sleep. And if we are intune, we get glimpses of it. And if we be-come one with life, and all that is, we really open up.(on this plane)

What is perfect? No one can define that, we can only define it to what little knowledge we have. Perfect could only be a word use on this plane.
I just kick back and enjoy the dance of life, living it to it's fullest. And I try and love all, and really experience the temporal to the max. And I will use the words...Good over evil here. I think alot of us make way to much out of it all, don't waste time beating one's brain up over life, just kick back and be a big part of the dance. If you truly loose yourself in life, you'll find the real you. (and get as close to the joy of this life) So you can leave the temporal with a smile
.
But my friend, Not a one of us truly knows any of the answers to the questions, we need to believe we do. That's why man made myths~~
ASRAI's profile

over 2 years ago
This is a teaching story about the fulfillment of desire and the nature of mystical experience.

When you first start having a mystical experience it changes the way you see yourself relative to the Universe, and reorients your way of thinking. Miracles are revealed in the smallest of objects.

Then, that realization is expanded outwards into the Universe.

Afterwards, it contracts back into the body, and becomes a part of everyday life, just like breathing. The teacher was waiting for the mystical experiences he had awakened in the student to run their natural course and wanted to see if the boy had grown into a spiritual adult. The student realized that his desire for enlightenment was childish fantasies, and answered who cares?

It's the same way in Japanese martial arts when granting a black belt. A black belt isn't the ultimate goal, it just means you have become proficient in the basic skills. There are many more degrees in a black belt yet to attain.

In Chan ( Zen ) Buddhism achieving the state of satori means you have understood the nature of the mystical experience, have gotten the basics down.

Your questions at the end is like the famous statement " Am I a man dreaming he is a butterfly, or a butterfly dreaming he is a
man? " And the proper answer to them would be: WHO CARES? ;-)
guangping's profile

over 2 years ago
Duchess, LadyEarth, and Guangping, Great thoughts, your responses are always so stimulating :<)

Guangping, nice to see you up and about, hope all is good for you!
ASRAI's profile

over 2 years ago
ASRAI:

Thank you, I've been working at a new job at the local library, so I haven't been a regular browser on the sites I like...
guangping's profile

over 2 years ago
aqapejeff;
Thank you for sharing. After reading this story, the word choice came to mind. If one believes in such a thing like, "divine life", then he/she would be a participant & vice versa. However, after further contemplation I began to realize that many times (more times than one cares to admit to) the choice to follow a spiritual path stems from wanting to be part of the hip, cool & intellectual crowd. In this case, enlightenment will be all that one seeks. After that, if any works are involoved it becomes irrelevant.
1spirit

1spirit's profile

over 2 years ago
"participations in the divine life"?
Yes, absolutely! I believe that WE, individually, and enmass, are different 'expressions' of the many perspectives of ALL THAT IS' immense personality!
I believe that WE, each of US, has evolved into something, immensely different than WE perceive ourselves to be, but that, Like ALL THAT IS, WE continually reinvent / restucture ourselves, continually finding new aspects of our infinite personalities. And that, enmass, along with any and all other of IT's many creations, WE are part of the TOTAL of ALL THAT IS!
I don't think there are wrong questions, only misunderstood ones?!

Still not sweatin' the small stuff, and it's ALL small stuff, I AM, and remain...WW
Wisewolf's profile

over 2 years ago