Lead me from dreaming to waking. 
Lead me from opacity to clarity.
Lead me from the complicated to the simple. Lead me from the obscure to the obvious.   Lead me from intention to attention. Lead me from what I'm told I am to what I see I am. In silence there must be movement, and in motion,
There must be silence. A small movement is better than a big one.. No movement is better than a small one..listen! Silence is all the movement's mother.. In Movement you should be like a dragon or a tiger. In non Movement you should be like a Buddha. -- Wang Xiangzhai(November 26, 1885 - July 12, 1963}What is referred to as mindlessness is absence of the human mentality; what is referred to as mindfulness is mindfulness of the Tao. When one is free of the human mentality, the mutual sensing of the earthly and celestial is swift; when one is mindful of the Tao, effective practice endures. Swiftness of sensing comes about spontaneously, without cultivation, without striving; long perseverance comes about through effort, and involves action and striving. Striving and non-striving each has its secret; the distinction is all a matter of the absence of the human mentality and the presence of mindfulness of the Tao. After one has reached complete realization of the universal Tao, neither existence nor nonexistence remain; others and self are ultimately empty, and one enters the state of ultimate truthfulness, like a spirit. Here, it is not only the human mentality that cannot be applied; even the mindfulness of Tao is not applicable." - Liu I-ming
The consistent conduct of people of the Way is like the flowing clouds with no grasping mind, like the full moon reflecting universally, not confined anywhere, glistening within each of the ten thousand forms.
Dignified and upright, emerge and make contact with the variety of phenomena, unstained and unconfused. Function the same toward all others since all have the same substance as you. Language cannot transmit this, speculation cannot reach it. Leaping beyond the infinite and cutting off the dependent, be obliging without looking for merit.
This marvel cannot be measured with consciousness or emotion. On the journey accept your function, in your house please sustain it. Comprehending birth and death, leaving causes and conditions, genuinely realize that from the outset your spirit is not halted. So we have been told that the mind that embraces all the ten directions does not stop anywhere.
-- Hongzhi Zhengjue (1091-1157)
Lead me from opacity to clarity.
Lead me from the complicated to the simple.
Lead me from the obscure to the obvious.
Lead me from intention to attention.
Lead me from what I'm told I am to what I see I am.
Lead me from confrontation to wide openness.
Lead me to the place I never left,
Where there is peace, and peace - The Upanishads
https://kriptodanny.blogspot.com/2013/04/meditation-and-after-death-state-edward.html
Note..
That's why one needs a Master...to guide the grasshopper seeker on the path..ONE thinks is useless to even meditate.
Is like someone reading on some book..ok...there is this good tasting stuff like honey..they say is bliss and good tasting...let me meditate for 2 minutes to try to get it..MERDEEEEE!!(or shit in french?)...I feel nothing..so all this imaginary stuff about the holy spirit and kingdom of heaven must be some demented joke!..there is no honey!..no bliss!...no unconditional love...all there is ......is me making money and get some beer..maybe I meet that blonde and make her some kids...HEY!..I tried the 2 minutes meditation..didn't work!..so stop bothering me with ,,honey,,..It never exist!..I tried my best!
No comments...
I love you too grasshopper from heaven..
THERE is the BLISS..there is the Kingdom of Heaven!.there is the honey! FIND IT!
Now listen to Salim Michael explaining again about the Tibetan Book of Death..
Thus spokeths the Mahayogi!
-added by danny-
.......
As
 he is ordinarily, the human being does not realize to what extent, or 
in what manner, life and death are closely linked. During his whole 
lifetime, it never occurs to him that, at each moment that passes by, he
 is in the process of dying. And when the ultimate moment arrives when 
he has to leave his body, at the beginning — as stated in various 
mystical treatise — he does not know that he is dead. Habit being very 
strong, he believes that he still inhabits his physical body.
It
 happens so often, particularly in the West where the intellect 
dominates, one meets seekers who entertain the vague hope that, because 
they have understood intellectually what a spiritual teaching consists 
of, all will be well for them when they leave this world and that they 
will be able, without doubt, to break the circle of births and deaths 
and thus attain liberation.
In
 order to understand better what happens at the critical moment of 
death, when the future destiny of the deceased is at stake, it is 
necessary to draw a parallel between certain stages of the after-death 
state, as described in the Tibetan Book of the Dead, and what occurs 
during meditation.
The
 citations in the following paragraphs are quoted from the English 
edition translated by W.Y. Evans-Wentz and lama Kazi Dawa-Samdup (the 
Tibetan Book of the Dead, Oxford University Press).
At
 the very beginning of each one of his meditation sitting, for a very 
short instant, the aspirant may touch a most particular state of 
consciousness which gives him the impression of being simple emptiness 
only, but is, in reality, a state of immaculate consciousness of the 
highest subtlety and transparency. This state of consciousness which is 
so unusual and difficult to apprehend, only lasts for two or three 
seconds at first before being replaced by another state which, although 
not being his customary state of being, is, nevertheless, no more the 
same as what he experienced in himself initially.
Failing
 to understand and appreciate the real value of this state of 
consciousness— which is so alien to him that, at first sight, it gives 
him the impression of being a vacuum without importance—, the seeker 
cannot, due to ignorance and lack of practice, find the strength to stay
 in it.  He loses it very quickly and despite his efforts to continue to
 meditate, he descends to another state of consciousness which is not 
what he experienced in the beginning.
The
 same phenomenon — but on an entirely different scale — arises in a 
human being when he leaves his body, a phenomenon of which the 
implications prove decisive for his future.  In other words, as 
explained in the Bardo Thodol (the Tibetan Book of the Dead), 
immediately after leaving this world, the deceased is confronted with 
the Supreme Consciousness in Its original purity. But, failing to 
apprehend It, he descends to lower and lower levels in himself until he 
becomes lost in a mental world which manifests itself in the form of a 
most impressive panorama, spreading out in front of his mind in such a 
spectacular way that, because of ignorance and lack of discernment, he 
takes it for being a reality.
To
 be able to remain in this primordial state — which the Bardo Thodol 
calls either “Clear Light” or “Clear Consciousness” — represents a feat 
totally out of the ordinary, which can only be the result of long and 
persistent training, in the form of intense meditation practice as well 
as other concentration exercises carried out both at home and in outside
 active life.
It
 is precisely with the help of specific concentration exercises (such as
 those given in several of my books) which force the aspirant to remain 
intensely present during their execution that he can start to experience
 during his daily life moments of very particular self-awareness which 
come to him suddenly after varying lengths of time of inner absences. 
These moments of self-awareness are accompanied by the beginning of an 
inner awakening which he should try, with all his might, to prolong so 
that the day will eventually come when he will no longer lose it. At 
these moments, which will determine what his future will be, the seeker 
should realize that, in the same way he is faced throughout his life 
with choices to be made in order to be able to remain in this state of 
being and of consciousness which is not habitual to him, after death all
 incarnate beings will find themselves in a situation where decisive 
choices will be demanded of them.
In
 this regard, the Tibetan Book of the Dead continuously emphasizes that 
the deceased, after leaving his earthly body, will be faced, on several 
occasions, with two lights or two colors between which he must choose. 
Unfortunately, owing to ignorance and weakness, he will not be able to 
hold himself from turning toward that which is the duller.  Thus, unless
 he has devoted himself to a relentless spiritual practice during his 
life, he will begin to descend helplessly to lower and lower levels of 
being and of consciousness in himself, without being able to realize 
what is happening to him.
Self-awareness
As
 a reward for all the efforts that an aspirant has made to become 
detached from himself and remain as concentrated as is possible for him,
 both during meditation and during specific concentration exercises at 
different moments of the day, sudden returns of self-awareness will come
 to him, by Grace, at the most unexpected moments (when he was lost to 
himself, engulfed once more in his habitual state of hazy absence), in 
order to awaken him again and remind him of the imperative necessity 
there is for him to struggle to remain, both in length of time and 
depth, as present to himself as he can.
If,
 during his life, he does not grasp the importance of the struggle he 
must make — right throughout his life if necessary — to try to remain in
 this new state of being and of consciousness when it suddenly arises in
 him again at various moments during the day, how can he hope not to 
feel totally at a loss in the face of death when it stands before him at
 this supreme hour, to end irrevocably his days and drag him away into a
 world where conditions will be so different from those he has 
habitually known and which he will not be prepared to confront?
He
 must understand that, in the same way he let pass by and loses these 
precious moments of return of self-consciousness which arise so 
unexpectedly in him, preferring, unknowingly to him, to turn towards the
 states of being which are familiar to him and which require no effort 
on his part, after death, he will not be able to find in himself the 
necessary strength to seize the possibilities offered him by the Divine 
Misericord to free himself from his customary inner world.  He will 
prefer to turn to what is symbolically represented by duller lights or 
colors, rather than towards those that seem to him clearer and stronger,
 blinding and troubling him.
Thus,
 he will be unable to avoid gravitating towards undesirable levels of 
being in himself, becoming prey to phantasmagorical phenomena — in a 
rather similar way, but at a much more dramatic scale, to that which 
takes place in him during each of his nightly sleeps while he still 
inhabits his earthly body.
In
 any case, even whilst alive, a non-enlightened person cannot avoid 
being prey to each thought, to each desire and to each image which 
arises in his mind, and of which, by ignorance, he never puts into 
question the reality.  At each instant, he gravitates helplessly to a 
psychic place which is his alone, in accordance with his desires, his 
interests and the manner in which he forges himself during the time 
given to him to live.
The beginning of awakeningIn order to bring more light on a subject which is determining for the aspirant’s spiritual evolution, it is necessary to return to the importance of this inner battle which he must undertake whilst still alive. If, after all his meditation practice and certain concentration exercises that he has carried out during his active life, he has really come to recognize in himself a state of being and of consciousness totally different than that in which his existence has passed until then, he must realize, from the depths of himself, the value of this new feeling that he has, by Grace, been privileged to experience. From this day onward when an unhoped door has opened for him, he has to struggle with all his might (like a drowning person to whom one has thrown a rope to rescue him) so as to find again this new state of being and of consciousness, and try to maintain himself in it. It is vital for him to understand that to remain in this state, which is still very fragile, is Life, and that the loss of this state is Death.
He
 must appreciate that what has happened to him is the most important 
event in his life and look at this new state of being in himself with 
veneration and gratitude without limits. From this moment onward — when a
 priceless gift has been granted to him — he will find himself placed in
 situations where he will have to make continual choices between the 
superior aspect of his being which calls him from within and certain 
thoughts and desires unprofitable for what he seeks to accomplish in 
him, so as to succeed not only to stay in this state, but, even more so,
 to deepen it so as to arrive at understanding that it is truly the 
beginning of the awakening of which the Buddha spoke.
The
 seeker will see, through repeated experiences, how much this state of 
awakening in which he tries to maintain himself is fragile. Time and 
again, during his meditation practices or his spiritual exercises 
carried out during the whirl of external life, in spite of all his 
efforts to try to remain inwardly awake, he will not be able to avoid 
being taken by surprise at first and finding himself dragged down by his
 customary state of being and of consciousness, sleeping internally and 
daydreaming.
When
 a person is plunged in his night sleep, he is at the mercy of all the 
dreams that arise in his mind, whether they are pleasant or 
nightmarish.  When he wakes up in the morning, the fact that he is 
called again to respond to the various necessities of outer life and the
 pressing needs of his earthly body, he finds himself, in some way, 
sheltered from these night dreams which absorb him the whole time that 
they unfold in his being and against which he is in a situation of total
 helplessness.  However, after death, he will have neither his physical 
body to occupy himself, nor the incessant claims of external life which 
generally monopolize all his attention. He will then find himself, 
exactly as in his night dreams when he was still alive, incapable of 
controlling the confused wanderings of his mind, descending — depending 
on his level of being — lower and lower in himself, in a world which 
will be his alone, full of the most impressive hallucinations, until, as
 it is said in the Bardo Thodol, he finishes by becoming incarnate again
 into phenomenal existence. And it is in this way that the round of 
births and deaths will perpetuate for him.
The importance of recognizing a particular void
If
 he aspires to free himself from the prison of his tiny, illusory mental
 world, the seeker must arrive at recognizing in himself a very 
particular Void — which, contrary to what the common run of humankind 
can imagine, is not nothingness, but constitutes, in fact, his 
Primordial Essence —, so that, after long and tenacious meditation 
practice as well as spiritual exercises carried out in different life 
situations, he succeeds to remain in this state after his physical 
death, without dreading this condition of being in which he is going, 
inevitably, to find himself at this monumental instant.
Because
 of its major importance for the aspirant, it is necessary to return 
once again to the fact that this Void, or “Shunyata” as it is called in 
India, consists in fact of a very particular form of consciousness which
 has no common measure with the ordinary consciousness in which human 
beings generally pass their life. It is an Immaculate Consciousness of 
the highest subtlety which constitutes the very Essence of all beings, 
as well as an inviolable sanctuary in which the seeker can take refuge, 
not only during the time allowed him to live in this turbulent world, 
but also after his corporeal death.
Physically,
 it is impossible for him to escape from the force of gravity which, 
from his birth, has not ceased to be at work, pulling him ever 
downwards, until the day when, by an inexorable law which governs the 
whole of the manifest world, he finally loses his body. But, as 
previously said, he can escape psychically from this descending force — 
in so much as he dedicates his life to this end.
Since
 this form of existence is destined from the outset to be only 
temporary, should not one in this case infer that it is precisely what 
awaits the human being after the dissolution of his earthly body that 
proves to be the most important thing?
The hidden desire to stop meditating
At
 the beginning of his engagement on the spiritual path, when he is still
 struggling with the initial effort to remain as present to himself and 
as concentrated as possible during his meditation practice, if the 
seeker is honest enough with himself and truly seeks to know himself, he
 cannot fail to notice that, after a certain time, or even from the 
beginning, he has a hidden desire to stop meditating, and that he is 
relieved when that moment arrives.  And, what is more, he will discover 
that he is even secretly glad to come back to his habitual conditions of
 life and to find once again the ease of his customary state of being, 
his empty daydreams, his usual feeling of himself and his ordinary 
preoccupations, preferring all that — including the turmoils and the 
continual worries that this state of being drags in its wake  — rather 
than having to make the necessary effort to remain concentrated and 
inwardly present during the time that he devotes to his meditation. One 
can go so far as to say, that, strangely enough, he needs to escape in 
his external and internal problems in order to fill a gap in him that, 
otherwise, proves to be too intolerable to bear!
He
 should arrive to see clearly these subtle refusals which arise in him 
while he tries to meditate (and which generally escape his attention), 
in order that the reverse attitude can start to take place in him. That 
is, instead of secretly wishing to finish his meditation practice 
rapidly in order to go back to whatever is drawing him outwardly and 
find again the ease of his habitual way of being, he will, on the 
contrary, arrive at wanting, as soon as he terminates what occupies him 
externally,  to return to his meditation and his other spiritual 
exercises; failing which, a hidden conflict will always exist in him 
while he tries to concentrate, and his efforts will not lead him to the 
desired goal: to know the Princely Aspect of his double nature.  He can 
even end up by being tempted to abandon completely his meditation — as 
has happened with so many seekers without them understanding the true 
reason.  Nonetheless, what has just been explained should not under any 
circumstance signify that the aspirant may allow himself to neglect or 
badly fulfil his external obligations; because, to be able to rise to 
another plane of being and of consciousness in himself, he must use 
everything as a means to become more true, more noble and worthy of 
being united one day with his Celestial Monarch.
When,
 during meditation, the seeker begins to be touched by the radiance of a
 superior state of consciousness — in which he will feel mysteriously 
metamorphosed into an enigmatic silent Witness — he will start to 
recognize, through a tranquil discernment that will have imperceptibly 
germinated in him, the futility of the ordinary aspect of his nature in 
which he has spent the greater part of his earthly life. From then on, 
he will wish to return to this luminous aspect of his being each time he
 finds himself separated from it.
This
 ineffable state that he experiences at certain privileged moments 
during his meditation will become for him the sole reality within the 
conditions of the manifest world which, by its very nature, can only be 
eternally changing and painful. He will then yearn to be able to 
maintain himself in this state of consciousness, which is still not 
habitual to him, during his active life as well.
Evolution is recalling
He
 will have to understand that his evolution to another plane above time 
and space, and his eventual emancipation depend on what he implants in 
himself in the present, for he must realize that: evolution signifies 
recalling (in other words, a mysterious silent memory arises in a human 
being at a given moment of his existence to impel him to take up again 
what he has not been able to accomplish in an unfathomable past) and 
forgetting signifies involution! Furthermore, he must not lose sight of 
the fact that all manifestation in matter, including the Universe 
itself, moves towards an inevitable end and that the time allowed to him
 to reach this goal, so out of the ordinary, is limited!
A
 sincere seeker may have remarked that, at the beginning of his 
engagement on a spiritual path, not only his agitated mind refused to 
abandon what was preoccupying him, secretly inciting him to stop 
meditating in order to return to his ordinary activities, but also that 
he was using all sorts of arguments or pretexts to justify stopping his 
meditation and get up — invoking the necessity of having first to attend
 to all sorts of urgent matters.  In fact, what he cannot see in the 
beginning of this work on himself, is that he was and still remains 
painfully attached to everything that attracts him from outside — and 
even, curiously, to unpleasant things.
As
 said previously, a reversal of his feelings and of his way of being 
during his meditation practices is of extreme importance and should 
start taking place in him whilst he is still alive; failing which, in 
the same way that, when he tries to meditate, an aspect of himself 
refuses to let go of its preoccupations (to which, without realizing it,
 he is still very attached), at the crucial hour when he will be 
summoned to leave his corporeal envelope, all his being, all his 
feelings and all his thoughts will be turned toward the external world 
to which he will be on the point of, involuntarily, bidding farewell and
 to which he is so desperately accustomed — since that will be all that 
he will have known during his life.
His
 attention will be directed with an intense painful nostalgia towards 
the conditions of life that were familiar to him, towards his unappeased
 desires and his unrealized dreams, most of which will only be heavy and
 useless baggage, of no help to him during this long solitary journey 
for which he will find himself dramatically unprepared. He will then 
experience an inexplicable fear which will take the form of a refusal to
 be reabsorbed into this mysterious state of being unknown to him until 
then; an enigmatic state of the highest ethereal subtlety which will 
seem to him to be a mysterious disconcerting void, but which, in 
reality, is his true condition of being, the Source from where he and 
all living creatures derive their origin.
If,
 while he still has a mortal body, he has not arrived at recognizing 
this luminous state in himself and has not managed to become familiar 
with it — even if only a little — it will no longer be possible for him 
to understand it after having left his corporeal form, as the Tibetan 
Book of the Dead reminds him: “Up to the other day thou wert unable 
to recognize the Chönyid Bardo (the Clear Light), and hast had to wander
 down this far. Now, if thou art to hold fast to the real Truth, thou 
must allow thy mind to rest undistratedly in the nothing-to-do, 
nothing-to-hold condition of the unobscured, primordial, bright, void 
state of thine intellect, to which thou hast been introduced by thy guru
 (..) This is of great importance. Be not distracted.” p. 157
If
 the seeker wishes his meditation to become what it really should be, 
that is to say pure in the strictest sense of the term, it is essential 
that he perceive clearly the instant when this state of luminous 
consciousness, which is not habitual to him, starts again to become 
diluted and mixed with his customary state of being.  Meditation in its 
most authentic signification demands the aspirant’s whole vigilance and 
the greatest sincerity.
The
 effort which he must necessarily make to remain present and conscious 
of himself, even though firm, must be tranquil and approached with 
intelligence. In other words, the intensity of this effort must be right
 so as not to interfere with the eventual action of a higher force that 
may begin to manifest itself in him to help him.
Be not distracted
When
 the aspirant undertakes this work on himself, he will remark that 
hardly has he touched a higher state in him that his ordinary 
individuality and his habitual feeling of himself will immediately loom 
up again, like a tidal wave to engulf him.  After patient and persistent
 efforts, if he can find enough strength to hold to that state which is 
not habitual to him for longer periods, he will realize yet more clearly
 how difficult it is to retain the quality of this new consciousness of 
himself in all its purity for more than a short instant, and in what 
manner, before he apprehended what has happened to him, this superior 
aspect of his nature will have begun to be adulterated again and mixed 
up with his customary state of being and of feeling himself.
The
 seeker will notice that because of the instability of his mind, which 
has not yet went through sufficient training, the least desire that 
arises in him, the least image or thought that crosses his mind or even a
 simple word that appears suddenly in him, is enough to carry him away 
and make him forget his resolution to remain present inwardly and 
connected to the luminous aspect of his double nature.
He
 will see that his fall comes from the fact that his interest, which is 
not yet strong enough, has changed direction, inevitably carrying with 
it his attention to what attracted it.  He will have therefore to 
acknowledge that he still remains divided between his superior nature 
(which does not cease to call him inwardly) and the tangible world that 
continues to exercise too strong a pressure upon him.  The suffering of 
being split between these two worlds will make him realize that, without
 rigorous practice to master his rebellious mind, he will remain without
 defences to all that may come to his mind.
This
 instability of his mind will prove to be an even greater source of 
suffering after his death. In this regard, one finds in the Bardo Thodol
 the following injunction addressed to the deceased: “Oh nobly born,
 thy present intellect in the Intermediate State having no firm object 
whereon to depend, being of little weight and continuously in motion, 
whatever thought occurs to thee now (..) will wield great power”. (p. 172) And, in another passage of this same book, he is reminded : “Whatever
 thou desirest will come to pass (before Thee)… Be not distracted.  The 
boundary line between going upwards or going downwards is here now. If 
thou givest way to indecision for even a second, thou wilt have to 
suffer misery for a long, long time. This is the moment. Hold fast to 
one single purpose." (p. 177)
How
 much these words, addressed to the deceased, must be considered by the 
seeker as a precious teaching sent to him by Grace so that, while he is 
still alive, he can prepare himself for this monumental hour which 
awaits him!
He
 must realize that it is only by a constant struggle (which may, 
depending on his level of being, last throughout his life) to remain 
connected with a completely different state of consciousness in him — a 
subtle ethereal consciousness with which he ought to be familiar already
 — that he can hope to remain firm and undistracted at this fateful 
instant when he is called to leave the sensory world.
Fully
 recognizing this transparency of being and of consciousness as the 
Source from where he has emerged, is for the aspirant to have found the 
secret key with which to open the door of the prison in which he is 
enclosed, so as to be able to free himself one day from the tyranny and 
slavery of his inferior nature and from duality.  From then on, his 
purification and his deliverance from all the sufferings — which 
necessarily accompany this form of existence and his ordinary 
individuality — will have commenced.
This
 major discovery will also signify for him the extraordinary hope of 
being able finally to conquer death itself — on condition that he 
understood what death really is. In other words, in what sense it should
 be considered, in what manner one is ordinarily dying at each instant 
without realizing it, and which aspect of human nature is subjugated to 
it!Article published in the magazine le 3ème Millénaire.
Interview with Edward Salim Michael, Samsara magazine, january 2003 : 
Samsara:
 You have just published a new book whose title is most intriguing: “To 
Awaken: A Matter of Life or Death,” can you expand upon this title ?
Edward Salim Michael:
 Yes, with this title, I wanted aspirants who think they have embarked 
on a spiritual path to become aware to what point this is something 
serious and vital for them. In fact, it is the most important thing 
there is, that can give meaning to life and justify our existence on 
this Earth. Yet, most people don’t even know what they are really 
looking for in a spiritual practice and they often content themselves 
with a simple intellectual approach. Additionally, they find it very 
hard to understand the nature of the efforts which are required of them,
 as well as the type of difficulties they will encounter en route.
 
Samsara: Is ignorance not the primary difficulty ?
Edward Salim Michael:
 This is quite true: in the Dhammapada, the Buddha affirms that 
ignorance is the worst of taints. The type of ignorance in question here
 is actually not intellectual ignorance of the Buddhist doctrine or any 
other doctrine, but ignorance of our true nature, our Buddha Nature 
which we all have within us and which we must, through incessant 
efforts, succeed in discovering before death takes hold of us.
It 
is recognition of this Buddha Nature in us by a direct experience, and 
not by an intellectual conviction, which constitutes enlightenment. 
Nevertheless, it must be made clear that there exist several degrees of 
enlightenment and that enlightenment does not mean liberation. In fact, a
 certain degree of enlightenment represents the first crucial step in 
starting a true practice, because it is only then that one has clearly 
discriminated between the side of oneself which one must abandon and the
 higher and impersonal side in oneself towards which one must turn.
However,
 even then, it is still a very long road. Indeed, for as long as one is 
incapable of remaining all the time with this side of our nature which 
is already perfect, one will inevitably sink back into the other side of
 self, subject to impermanence and suffering; this lower side of oneself
 which is nothing but a jumble of influences and conditioning, as 
Buddhism has clearly explained.
 
Samsara:
 The Bardo Thodol (the Tibetan Book of the Dead) speaks about 
recognizing the “Clear Light,” is this the same thing as this higher 
side you speak of ?
E-S.M.
 Exactly. Furthermore, I have covered this matter of death and 
confrontation with this Clear Light in an entire chapter of this latest 
book. It is because we have this higher side of our double nature in us 
that in the Bardo Thodol, the dying person is addressed with these 
words: “O, nobly-born.” We are in fact of divine origin.
 
S. 
You said a strange word, and even stranger for Buddhists, the word 
“divine.” In your books, you use a vocabulary which is sometimes 
completely Buddhist, for instance when you stress the fragility and 
impermanence of earthly existence as well as the suffering of this form 
of existence, and sometimes, you speak more like a mystic. Do you 
consider yourself a Buddhist ? 
E-S.M.
 I consider myself a Buddhist in that I recognize in Buddhism the most 
complete spiritual path which emphasizes simultaneously the importance 
of work on oneself in life to transform undesirable tendencies, as well 
as intense meditation and concentration which are essential for 
discovering this impersonal side in oneself which is beyond time and 
space.
If 
one only sets out to study the functioning of the constituents of our 
ordinary personality, in other words the impermanent and imperfect ego, 
one is missing the purpose of a spiritual practice and one will never be
 able to attain the higher side that one has in oneself and which is 
none other than Being, Consciousness and Bliss.
In 
another respect; if one only wishes ardently to seek this higher side 
whilst neglecting study of oneself and one’s undesirable tendencies, one
 will not be able to go very far and one will always be weighed down by 
everything which is untransformed within oneself.
As 
you have stressed, my vision of the world merges with the Buddhist one; I
 see the impermanence of everything I lay my eyes on as well as the 
suffering which afflicts all beings; as their fundamental 
dissatisfaction cannot be fulfilled by something belonging to the world 
of senses.
Certainly,
 I do feel I am a mystic, because, through indisputable experiences, I 
know that something exists which is higher than the small ordinary self 
of man.
 
S: Would you say that mysticism exists in Buddhism ?
S.M.: For me, it cannot be otherwise as every true spiritual quest must lead to the experience of Transcendence.
The 
religious contexts of the world’s various traditions may be different, 
but the inner experience is the same. Catherine of Siena stated, “My me 
is God,” a famous sufi was killed for having asserted, “I am God,” and 
Ramana Maharshi said, “The Consciousness within purged of the mind is 
felt as God.”
Amongst
 many Buddhists currently, there is a lack of understanding as to the 
aim of their practice, which is most harmful to them and prevents them 
from even understanding the sort of effort required of them if one day 
they wish to succeed in Awakening.
Indeed,
 God is not the venerable old gentleman supported by angels as painted 
by Michelangelo on the spectacular ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. In the
 West, it is hard to free oneself from the word associations due to the 
cultural schemas representing an anthropomorphic God.
 
S: But what religion are you yourself ?
E-S.M.
 My parents didn’t practice any religion and, as a child I don’t 
remember ever having entered any place of worship. We lived in various 
countries of the Middle East where we experienced a fair amount of 
tribulations; as my parents were of Anglo-Indian descent, we escaped 
massacres perpetrated by religious fanatics on a number of occasions. 
From this, I have maintained a deep aversion to any blind belief.
Because
 of this particular situation, I never went to school and only learnt to
 read and write at the age of nineteen; we had just arrived in England 
when World War Two broke out. As a British subject, I was posted to the 
Royal Air Force as a simple infantryman. It was there that I met an 
extremely kind chaplain who taught me the basics of reading, writing and
 arithmetic. This lack of education has always been a serious handicap 
for me; and I required the help of my wife grammatically speaking to 
complete the translation of the Dhammapada successfully, as well as 
writing my books.
 
S. Can you relate to us the circumstances which decided your spiritual commitment  ?
E-S.M.:
 A few years after the end of the war, I made the acquaintance of a man 
who entertained high spiritual aspirations. It was at his home that I 
saw for the first time in my life a statue of Buddha. It was a rather 
large statue of a Buddha seated in the meditation position, of almost a 
meter in height, inlaid with colored stones which shone in the light. 
This serene face with its eyes closed conjured up a feeling in me which 
is impossible to describe, as if I wanted to remember something 
belonging to an unfathomable past without being able to express it in 
words. When I went back home, I felt impelled by I know not what 
mysterious force to put myself into the same position as this Buddha: I 
closed my eyes and I started to meditate !
Immediately,
 I felt the need not only for intense concentration during meditation, 
but also during active life, and to succeed in this, I invented all 
sorts of concentration exercises. I must say that I had the privilege of
 swiftly having powerful spiritual experiences which allow me to state, 
without any possible doubt, that something exists in the human being 
which escapes him, something which it alone can fulfill him.
The 
existence and nature of this Transcendence remain controversial subjects
 with those who only have an intellectual approach to Buddhism; but 
those who have had this experience to a sufficiently profound degree 
recognize it in each other and fully understand the descriptions which 
have been made about this down the ages, whether it be by a Zen Master 
like Dogen or a Christian mystic such as Meister Eckhart.
One 
has to get past the popular misconceptions and aversion (which result 
from conditioning) which one can sense towards certain words in order to
 understand that the Divine, or the Brahman (a Hindu term), represents 
the same experience as the “Buddha Nature.” And this Absolute can and 
must be experienced in oneself before death takes us. Is it not the most
 extraordinary thing to have, as a human being, the opportunity to make 
this monumental discovery ?
Through
 intense concentration during meditation, enabling a seeker to detach 
himself from his state of being and ordinary consciousness, the Infinite
 can be comprehended as a state of Pure Ethereal Consciousness, in which
 one loses one’s customary individuality; it is a sacred Emptiness which
 is not a nothingness, but the Dharmakaya, this Clear Fundamental Light,
 described in the Bardo Thodol in the following terms:
“And
 now you are about to experience in its Reality in the Bardo state, 
wherein all things are like the void and cloudless sky, and the naked, 
spotless intellect is like unto a transparent vacuum without 
circumference or center. At this moment, know you yourself, and abide in
 that state.”
In 
other words, this injunction “know you yourself” associated with “abide 
in that state” means that our true self, our true nature is a state, an 
impersonal state of the greatest subtlety, which frees us from all the 
limitations and imperfections connected with individuality.
 
S: 
The instructions of the Bardo Thodol are read precisely so that people 
who did not recognize this Clear Light when they were alive may be 
liberated at the time of their death.
E-S.M.
 These words must apply not only to the state one knows after death, but
 also to the state that one must, with appropriate efforts, succeed in 
experiencing during meditation. Although it is certainly important and 
necessary to prepare a dying person to turn his thoughts to something 
higher at the time he leaves this world, it should be understood, as is 
clearly repeated in the text itself and in the commentary of the Bardo 
Thodol, that if someone has not recognized, even to a small degree, this
 state while he is alive, it will no longer be possible for him to do it
 after death.
There
 is specific work to abandon the attachment that one has with the 
tangible and the world of senses which has to be done whilst one is 
still in a body, as well as abandonment of the customary individuality 
which people falsely believe to be themselves.
S: 
Exactly, what has differentiated Buddhism from Hinduism is the Buddha’s 
insistence on the fact that there is nothing permanent which one may 
call oneself.
E-S.M.
 A clear distinction has to be made between the ordinary self (which 
Christianity calls the old man) and the Self, which Hinduism also terms 
Atman (and which is equally called soul or spirit in current Christian 
terminology).
The 
Buddha has to be put back into the Indian context of his era. One has 
the tendency to forget that he was Indian and therefore that his 
teaching was nurtured by the cultural context of Hinduism.
He 
rejected the concept of “jiva,” i.e., the fact that a man, who has come 
to the end of his life, remaining what he is, simply casts off his worn 
out body to find a new one in an endless series of existences. He 
stressed the fact that the human being is changeable from one instant to
 another and that his customary individuality, resulting both from the 
influences of his environment and the manner in which he has lived, 
cannot survive as such after death—a concept which is the wish of many 
people and commonly encountered in India and even in the West.
On 
the other hand, however, the identity of the Atman and Brahman, i.e., 
the identity between the higher nature of the human being and the 
Supreme Divinity is something which was evident in the Hindu cultural 
context and was recognized by the Buddha in the sutra, “There is, monks,
 an unborn, unbecome, unmade, unconditioned. If, monks, there were no 
unborn, unbecome, unmade, unconditioned, no escape would be discerned 
from what is born, become, made, conditioned. But because there is an 
unborn, unbecome, unmade, unconditioned, therefore an escape is 
discerned from what is born, become, made, conditioned.” 
(Udhâna, VIII).
One 
finds this knowledge present in Christianity when it is said that man 
was made in God’s image, and that his soul is immortal. It should be 
understood here that this is the impersonal side of one’s being and not,
 as people naïvely believe, their ordinary self or ego.
It 
is this ignorance of that aspect of their being which is the source of 
all the suffering which afflicts human beings; this is why the Buddha 
said, “Abandoning this taint, be taintless, O Bhikkhus !”
To nourish the vital energy, keep watch in silence;
In order to subdue the mind, act with non-action. 
Of movement and stillness, be aware of their origin; 
There is no work to do, much less someone to seek. 
The true and constant must respond to phenomena; 
Responding to phenomena, you must be unconfused. 
When unconfused, the nature will stabilize by itself; 
When the nature stabilizes, energy returns by itself. 
When energy returns, the elixir crystallizes by itself; 
Within the pot, the trigrams of kǎn and lí(heaven and earth) are joined. 
Yīn and yáng arise, alternating over and over again; 
Every transformation comes like a clap of thunder. 
White clouds form and come to assemble at the peak; 
The sweet nectar sprinkles down Mount Sumeru. 
Swallow for yourself this wine of immortality; 
You wander so freely—who is able to know you? 
Sit and listen to the tune played without strings; 
Clearly understand the mechanism of creation. 
It comes entirely from these twenty lines; 
A true ladder going straight to Heaven.-Daoist text - 
"The  center of the cyclone is that    
rising quiet central low-pressure place  in which one can learn to live 
   eternally. Just outside of this Center  is the rotating storm of  
one's   own ego, competing with other egos in a  furious high-velocity  
circular   dance. As one leaves center, the roar  of rotating wind  
deafens on more   and more as one joins this dance.  One's centered  
thinking-feeling-being,   one's own Satoris, are in the  center only,  
not outside. One's   pushed-pulled driven states, one's  anti-Satori  
modes of functioning,   one's self-created hells, are  outside the  
center. In the center of the   cyclone one is off the wheel  of Karma,  
of life, rising to join the   Creators of the Universe, the  Creators of
  us.
Here we find that we have created Them who are Us... 
Lilly's Law
"In  the province of the mind, what  
is   believed to be true is true or  becomes true, within certain limits
  to   be found experimentally. These  limits are further beliefs to be 
   transcended. In the province of the(true mind..added by danny) mind, there are no limits."" -- John C. Lilly - 
Unless you know the emptiness and 
bliss  inside yourself..you'll be a robot forced by the same emptiness 
and  bliss trying to know itself..by pain..inside your self also..trust 
 me!..said the mahayogi!
 
The student asked: “A sage's response to changing conditions
  
is unlimited. Does he have to study beforehand?”
  
He should worry only about his mind's not being
  
clear, and not about the inability to respond to all changing conditions.”
— Wang Yang Ming (1472-1529)
To us all towns are one, all men our  kin. Life's good comes not from  
others' gift, nor ill. Man's pains and  pains' relief are from within.  
Thus have we seen in visions of the wise  !." - Tamil Poem- 
In order to subdue the mind, act with non-action.
Of movement and stillness, be aware of their origin;
There is no work to do, much less someone to seek.
The true and constant must respond to phenomena;
Responding to phenomena, you must be unconfused.
When unconfused, the nature will stabilize by itself;
When the nature stabilizes, energy returns by itself.
When energy returns, the elixir crystallizes by itself;
Within the pot, the trigrams of kǎn and lí(heaven and earth) are joined.
Yīn and yáng arise, alternating over and over again;
Every transformation comes like a clap of thunder.
White clouds form and come to assemble at the peak;
The sweet nectar sprinkles down Mount Sumeru.
Swallow for yourself this wine of immortality;
You wander so freely—who is able to know you?
Sit and listen to the tune played without strings;
Clearly understand the mechanism of creation.
It comes entirely from these twenty lines;
A true ladder going straight to Heaven.-Daoist text -
"The  center of the cyclone is that    
rising quiet central low-pressure place  in which one can learn to live 
   eternally. Just outside of this Center  is the rotating storm of  
one's   own ego, competing with other egos in a  furious high-velocity  
circular   dance. As one leaves center, the roar  of rotating wind  
deafens on more   and more as one joins this dance.  One's centered  
thinking-feeling-being,   one's own Satoris, are in the  center only,  
not outside. One's   pushed-pulled driven states, one's  anti-Satori  
modes of functioning,   one's self-created hells, are  outside the  
center. In the center of the   cyclone one is off the wheel  of Karma,  
of life, rising to join the   Creators of the Universe, the  Creators of
  us.
Here we find that we have created Them who are Us... 
Lilly's Law
"In  the province of the mind, what  
is   believed to be true is true or  becomes true, within certain limits
  to   be found experimentally. These  limits are further beliefs to be 
   transcended. In the province of the(true mind..added by danny) mind, there are no limits."" -- John C. Lilly - 
Unless you know the emptiness and bliss inside yourself..you'll be a robot forced by the same emptiness and bliss trying to know itself..by pain..inside your self also..trust me!..said the mahayogi!
The student asked: “A sage's response to changing conditions
is unlimited. Does he have to study beforehand?”
He should worry only about his mind's not being
clear, and not about the inability to respond to all changing conditions.”
— Wang Yang Ming (1472-1529)
To us all towns are one, all men our kin. Life's good comes not from others' gift, nor ill. Man's pains and pains' relief are from within. Thus have we seen in visions of the wise !." - Tamil Poem-
 
 
 
