There are different kinds and degrees of yaqueen or  certainty. Yaqueen is very much tied to the sort of experiences one has  had.
 
 Consider some of the ways in which an individual might come to learn  about, say, one, or more, of the oceans of the world. There are various degrees  of certainty associated with different kinds of knowledge or  understanding.
 
 For example, let us imagine there is a person who has  overheard some puzzling conversations by travelers passing through the region  about something called an "ocean". These wayfarers even may have described  various aspects of this 'ocean'.
 
 If the individual does not know the  travelers and does not know about oceans, she or he has no way of knowing if  they are telling the truth or telling stories. All the person knows is that,  prior to the overheard conversation, he or she had never encountered such an  idea.
 
 Next, let us suppose, the individual goes to a regional library and  begins to look up information on oceans. The person: reads a few books on  oceanography; sees a variety of photographs of different oceans; and, maybe,  watches an educational film or two about oceans.
 
 Certainly, the person  now has more information at his or her disposable than before. However, this  information still is secondhand and removed from the actual ocean.
 
 The  individual begins to think a lot about oceans and desires to see one.  Consequently, the individual makes arrangements to go on a journey to the ocean  described in the library material as being closest to where the person  lives.
 
 The individual goes on a trip to the ocean and reaches the desired  destination. Soon, the person is walking along the shore and gazing at the  ocean.
 
 Let us assume the person eventually comes to a marina where there  are boats for rent. The individual is the adventurous sort and decides to take a  small boat out on the bay.
 
 While rowing or sailing about, the person sees  some people in the water engaged in various kinds of activity. Later, after  describing the activity to someone on shore, the individual finds out these  people were swimming.
 
 Swimming seems a rather intriguing thing to do.  Therefore, after buying the appropriate apparel, the individual proceeds to wade  into the water and splash about in the shallows near the shore.
 
 During  this "swimming" session, the person comes across some people who are getting  ready to go scuba diving. Questions are asked, and answers are  given.
 
 When the individual comes out of the water, someone gives the  person a flyer about a school for scuba diving which has just opened at the  marina. Naturally, the individual signs up.
 
 After receiving the  appropriate instruction, the person rents some equipment and begins seeking  someone with whom to dive. As luck would have it, such a person is found, and  they begin diving at various locations near the marina.
 
 During various  conversations with the new found companion, our wayfarer finds out one can go  much deeper in the ocean than had been the case on their previous dives.  However, different equipment is necessary, depending on how far down one wants  to go. 
 
 Having come this far, our wayfarer is not interested in being  limited to diving only a hundred feet, or so, beneath the surface. This  individual wants to go as deeply into the ocean as possible.
 
 The person  begins finding out all about deep-sea submergible vehicles. One of the things  learned during this period of study is how dangerous such voyages can be and  that only a fool would try to undertake such a project alone.
 
 Therefore,  the individual sets about trying to find a knowledgeable diver who would be  willing to tolerate the ignorance and inexperience of the wayfarer. Not being  sure where to look first, the individual goes to the Yellow Pages.
 
 The  Yellow Pages contain listings for: deep-sea tele-presence; deep-sea mapping;  deep-sea secrets; deep-sea advisory boards; deep-sea consultants; deep-sea  vision; deep-sea explorations; deep-sea books; deep-sea imaging; deep-sea  mining; deep-sea virtual reality; deep-sea resources; deep-sea junk; deep-sea  mysteries; deep-sea salvage; deep-sea treasures, and quite a few other entries.  The individual is confused with all the choices.
 
 Eventually, after  spending considerable time and effort in checking out various possibilities, and  after a few false starts, the individual stumbles across the path of an  authentic expert. Fortunately, this expert also has a weakness and compassion  for training novices in the area of deep-sea diving.
 
 The expert,  nevertheless, sets one condition on the arrangement. At some point, the  individual must choose between the life on land or the life at sea.
 
 The  individual spends a number of years learning about submergible vehicles,  currents, navigation and so on under the guidance of the veteran diver. Finally,  the time comes for the individual to dive into the depths of the  ocean.
 
 As the two get prepared for the dive, they are beset by people  protesting their proposed venture into the deep. Some of the protesters believe  the dive is in contravention of various laws. Others among the protestors  believe the resources being assigned to the dive could be put to better use  elsewhere. Some of the people fear the dive could upset the balance of  nature.
 
 Protests notwithstanding, the dive is made. During this dive, the  individual sees and witnesses all kinds of incredible, beautiful things which,  previously, had not been conceived of by the individual.
 
 The individual  reaches a depth which is beyond the scale of the vessel's gauges. Suddenly,  there is incredible light all around, where previously there only had been  darkness. The light is alive with knowledge, love and many other qualities as  well.
 
 The person wonders if this is a symptom of some form of depth  psychosis about which the individual once read. The veteran diver says this is  not the case. The person is told something similar happens almost to everyone  who reaches this depth, although the precise character of the experience varies  with the individual.
 
 The wayfarer comes away from this voyage determined  to commit the rest of his or her life to being a deep-sea diver. The experiences  encountered in the depths of the ocean have had a transforming effect on what  the individual feels and thinks about the purpose, meaning, value and  significance of life.
 
 Moreover, this new found understanding is not  conceptual in nature. It is experiential, direct, and essential.
 
 When the  two deep sea divers return to land, there are some media people waiting to  interview them. These reporters have come to find out both: about the  controversy created by the encounter between the divers and the protesters, as  well as about some rumors concerning their extraordinary experiences during  their dive. 
 
 Most of what transpired during the dive is really beyond  description. However, the two divers try their best to give the media people a  sense of what the dive was like.
 
 The reporters ask a lot of questions and  seem rather skeptical about the story of the two divers. With all due respect to  the two individuals, the account of the divers, nonetheless, seems to the  reporters to be rather vague, phantasmal and far-fetched. 
 
 A number of  the media group have advanced degrees of one sort or another. However, none of  them has ever done anything more than a little snorkeling. 
 
 The reporters  all feel, based on their years of media experience, quite certain there are  ample reasons for not taking the accounts of the divers seriously. Consequently,  if they report about the divers at all, the pieces will be treated, at best, as  some sort of entertaining, weird human interest story and not as hard news.  
 
 The two divers invite the media people to join them in the next dive as  participant-observers. The veteran diver indicates one really cannot understand  the experience of deep-sea diving unless one undergoes the experiences oneself.  
 
 Details concerning departure time and so on are given. Several of the  reporters indicate considerable interest in following up on this invitation.  
 
 When the time arrives for the next dive, none of the media people show  up. Apparently, the reporters have something else in mind when they speak of  investigative reporting.
 
 The veteran diver reminds the individual of the  condition set some time ago when the person first came seeking assistance in  deep-sea diving. More specifically, the individual has to make a choice between  the ways of life on land and the ways of life in the ocean depths.
 
 The  veteran diver points out that, now, the wayfarer knows what people, such as the  reporters, and those influenced by the reporters, think about deep-sea diving.  The individual is asked: "Which is more important: the theories, opinions and  conjectures of others concerning experiences which they have not had, or one's  own experiences which have been confirmed by an expert in such matters?"  
 
 The wayfarer says the latter is more important. Therefore, the choice of  the individual is to opt for the way of life of the ocean depths.
 
 The two  divers proceed to head out to sea. They again dive to the depths and find it as  exhilarating and joyous as the last time.
 
 During this voyage, there are  many difficulties and problems which arise. As a result of these challenges and  tests, the individual comes to learn many important things concerning life,  character and identity.
 
 Over the years, a deep bond of love and  friendship arises between the two divers. The veteran diver shares a wealth of  understanding, knowledge, wisdom and experience with our  wayfarer.
 
 Several decades later, there are reports the two have been lost  at sea. Some say they are dead. Some say they found a hidden treasure in the  deepest part of the ocean. Some say they are in the Bermuda Triangle or aboard  the Flying Dutchman. God, alone, knows the truth of any of these accounts.  
 
 The disappearance is covered by the same group of media people who  interviewed the divers many years earlier. These reporters really don't know  anything more now concerning the ocean than they did before. Furthermore, they  know very little about the lives led, or the experiences encountered, by the two  divers since they last were all together.
 
 Nonetheless, at least, these  reporters had some personal contact with the divers. Therefore, they go about  reporting their stories. This is, after all, what they do for a living.  
 
 Every year, around the time of the reported disappearance, there are  public gatherings. These functions commemorate the spirit of commitment and  exploration exemplified in the lives of the two divers.
 
 On these  occasions, learned speakers come and deliver various kinds of addresses. Some of  these lectures are based on studies and experiments, completed under simulated  conditions in the laboratory, concerning the lives of deep-sea divers.  
 
 Some of the speakers talk about their computer models of deep-sea  diving. Still others have worked out an impressive array of mathematical  equations and formulae which purport to capture the spirit and essence of  deep-sea diving.
 
 There are some people who commemorate these occasions in  a slightly different way. On the basis of a variety of evidence, including  eye-witness reports, they feel certain the divers still are alive. Consequently,  they organize search parties to go looking for the divers who have disappeared.  
 
 The travelers, the library, the marina, the boat, the swimmers, the  person passing out handbills, the scuba-diving school, the scuba divers, the  organizations and businesses in the Yellow Pages, the deep-sea divers, the  protestors, the media people, the learned scholars, and the search parties, all  have a relationship with the ocean. All of these relationships are rooted in  experiences of one kind or another.
 
 Some of these experiences are quite  removed from the realities of the ocean. Other experiences come from the ocean  depths. Still other experiences fall somewhere in between the foregoing two  possibilities.
 
 All of the parties feel varying degrees of certainty  concerning the truth of their experiences. Some of those who feel certain  actually may be correct. Still others not only may be correct, but they actually  also may know this to be so.
I have only recently found your wonderful writings on the internet, I enjoy reading it. Keep up the good work may Allah reward you.
ReplyDeleteI have aborted my spiritual journey many times because of the reasons that you give, 'lack of courage', 'ego', fear etc.. I hope I can get myself out of the hole I find myself soon.
Happy birthday to my favorite deep sea diver!
ReplyDeleteAnab,
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful analogy! You have inspired me with your eloquent writing.
The veteran diver (the spiritual teacher), the traveler (the student) and their journey into the ocean are what some get the pleasure of experiencing. One can read about such journeys all they please, but they don't get to actually *know* about it until they actually experience it. Like the reporters, people can read about spirituality all they want, but they won't ever experience spirituality into they take a dive themselves, and hopefully with someone who trulty knows the way, who can be their guiding light.
Thank you for writing this.
And, I see it is your birthday, so happy birthday to you, too!
-Stacey
Apparently it is certain that it is your birthday, congrats.
ReplyDeleteYes! Thank You!
ReplyDeleteBlessings, Bethie
beautifully explained!!!
ReplyDeleteIts amazing that synchronicity is part of our daily lives and yet we ignore it.