The Sufi Path is a process of amanesis (remembrance, realization). In pre-eternity, God asked the spirits: Alastu bi Rabikum (Am I not your Lord)? When we come into this material existence, we forget about pre-eternity and the task of life is to remember our way back to the truth concerning the nature of our essential relationship with God. This process of remembering or recollecting is known as amanesis.
Sunday, February 24, 2013
Dumbing Us Down: The Attempt to Exterminate Critical Thinking
The six functions of education (both public and private) are: (1) Adjusting; (2) Diagnosing; (3) Sorting; (4) Conforming/Unifying (5) Tagging; and (6) Preserving/Perpetuating. These functions are obsessively and compulsively pursued by a set of "overlords and overladies" in order to establish and realize a means of imposing a process of framing and filtering reality upon a population.
The first paragraph is not a conspiracy theory since I am not necessarily contending that a group of people gather together in secret in order to bring about the instituting of such a set of functions. Rather, I am suggesting that there are a group of people who are so enamored with themselves that they each individually, and in their own inimitable style, develop a delusional disorder which whispers to their egos that they have the right to control and rule over the lives of other people, irrespective of what the costs of such control might be to society or the world in general.
The foregoing process of six functions is instituted as a means of: dumbing that population down, controlling them, and perpetuating an arbitrary, and rigged system of: militarization, economics, monetary policy, legal process, politics, together with a system of policing (which is not intended to 'serve and protect' the people, but, rather, the elite). Moreover, the purpose of such a system of dumbing people down is to ensure that the few (the overlords and overladies of control ... i.e., the aforementioned elites) may benefit materially, financially, and through a progressively enhanced accruing of power (the Anaconda Principle), while the many are educated and trained to serve and worship the likes and dislikes of that elite. The foregoing is true of all religious (including Muslim), communist, socialist, capitalist, democratic, and monarchical nations.
I have gone through the educational offerings of some of the best institutions in the world, both in the United States and Canada. Whatever I have learned that is of value to me either has to do with: (a) coming to understand the nefarious purposes of such institutions, despite their best efforts to induce me to become caught up in their illusory and delusional practices of conceptual/emotional legerdemain, and/or (b) realizing that pretty much everything of substantive worth which I have learned has been accomplished independently of the official channels of educational practice.
Education has become just another psychoactive pharmaceutical that is heavily marketed through the media. The media (for a price and because they believe they have the right to control the dissemination of information which serves their own interests) helps to manufacture an array of fears and aspirations in the general population. This is done so that significant portion of the general populus might become hooked on an expensive snake-oil which people are encouraged to consume for the rest of their lives, despite the many destructive side-effects entailed by that potion (one of which is the dampening down of critical thinking), and despite the fact that those who drink the Kool-Aid will become so financially over-burdened with the cost of purchasing the drug that they can exist only as indentured servants who will be compliant with the agenda of the psychopathic/narcissistic push and manufacturers of that drug who, like the loan sharks they are, hold the papers of debt over the heads of those who were tricked into acquiescing to such a scam ... much like the liar-loans that were foisted on unsuspecting people leading up to the financial meltdown of 2007-2008.
The following 7-plus minute video is an animated commentary by a former New York teacher of the year -- John Gatto -- who has come to realize the nature of the former beast he served and who, as a result, wishes to share with you some of what he has learned about that hydra-like creature.
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Fracking the Atmosphere: A Weapon of Mass Destruction
I began hearing about chemtrails a number of
years ago (chemtrails are toxic-laden aerosol sprays released by high-altitude
airplanes and these sprays are not to be confused with the water vapor-based
contrails produced by jet engines). However, I always associated chemtrails
with something that seemed to be happening only in the western part of America
(e.g., California, Arizona, and so on).
Last summer and fall, I began to see the
chemtrail grid and ‘X’-patterns being laid down by airplanes in the skies over
Bangor/north central Maine. On one occasion, I saw six or seven high-flying
aircraft involved in one day’s operation.
Chemtrails are an expression of geo-engineering.
In fact, one might refer to it as the ‘fracking
of the atmosphere’ – not only because, like ground-fracking, the process injects all manner of
toxic chemicals into the environment (in the case of chemtrails, these include:
barium, arsenic, aluminum, silica, polymer fibers, and boron), but, because, as
well, the chemtrail process is connected with the release of methane gas.
In the case of the kind of fracking which takes
place in conjunction with the ground (e.g., the Marcellus Shale of the eastern
United States ), various greedy, self-absorbed, and reckless energy entrepreneurs
are interested in retrieving the methane as a profitable by-product which just
happens to be accompanied by an intense polluting of the ground water. As such,
fracking is a bit of technological wizardry that injects about 43 different
toxic chemicals into the Earth (exactly how many of these sorts of molecules
are involved is hard to say because the precise identity of the ingredients of
the poisoning process is considered to be proprietary, corporate information).
Fracking of the atmosphere, on the other hand, is
due to a secret, government-mandated spraying program (a secret which is
imminently viewable in the skies above us ... only the steps which led to the
spraying decision are hidden from public view). This process of air-fracking is
speeding up the release -- into the oceans and atmosphere -- of a gasified form
of the methane hydrate deposits that have been laying at the bottom of the
ocean (where they had been resting in frozen form) ... furthermore, in one form or another, the
air-fracking work is probably being contracted out to private entities who, like
their Earth-fracking corporate counterparts and the government which authorized
them, don’t really seem to care what happens to people or the environment as
long as such activities generate a profit and keep them in control of the
profit franchise).
Supposedly, one of the theories underlying the application
of geo-engineered chemtrails to the skies above is the belief that chemtrails
are capable of degrading – into a less harmful form -- the rising levels of
methane which, currently (and for number of years now) are being (and have
been) released into the seas and atmosphere at an alarming rate. One of the geographical
areas of concern with respect to the release – into the oceans and atmosphere
-- of gaseous forms of once-frozen methane hydrates is situated near the
eastern Siberian shelf of the Arctic. That reservoir contains enough frozen
methane (estimated by some to be about 10 thousand giga-tons) that should it be
released in gasified form (or, if even a sizable portion of it were so released),
then this event would be capable of extinguishing most life on Earth.
Another geographical region of concern is the
Bermuda Triangle. More specifically, it is quite possible – perhaps fairly
likely -- that sudden transformations of frozen methane to a gaseous state -- and
not aliens or other paranormal phenomena -- are responsible for some of the
anomalies (such as sea-fairing ships suddenly disappearing) which have been
reported in that region. The gas aerates
the water and, as a result, ships lose buoyancy and sink to the bottom, and, as
well, if methane were suddenly released in sufficiently large quantities and
under the right conditions, airplanes flying through the region might be problematically
affected as well.
Unfortunately, as is the case with respect to the
genetically modified life form controversy, some geo-engineering scientists don’t
appear to understand the nature of the dynamics involving problematic
feedback-loops which they have introduced into the ecological equations of life
through the use of chemtrails and HAARP. Rather than constructively degrading
methane and, thereby solving a problem, there is considerable evidence to indicate
that chemtrails could be one of the primary causes (although not necessarily
the only one) for assisting frozen methane hydrate deposits on the bottom of
the ocean to become released, in gasified form, into the oceans and the
atmosphere.
In other words, chemtrail spraying is having
exactly the opposite effect from the one which, purportedly, was intended when
that geo-engvineering program began. Moreover, unfortunately, instead of
backing off from the chemtrail spraying (as any reasonable, observant, and
moderately cautious scientist might do), the government is, instead, doubling
down – apparently believing that if a certain amount of chemtrail spraying is
causing considerable difficulties, then increasing the dosage will, somehow,
magically, solve the problems which have been created by that very same process.
As a greenhouse gas, methane is many times more
problematic than is carbon dioxide. When considered across the time-frame of,
say, a century, methane has 20 times the capacity of carbon dioxide to generate
greenhouse gas effects (i.e., global warming/climate change), but when
considered over the much shorter time scale during which geo-engineering projects,
of one kind or another, have been taking place, methane’s potency as a
greenhouse gas (relative to carbon dioxide) rises five-fold to, about, 100
times.
When one factors-in the chemtrail effects with
the problematic manner in which HAARP (the High-frequency Active Auroral
Research Program -- located in the Gakona region of Alaska) is affecting both
the atmosphere and the Earth, one might well be generating the conditions for
environmental catastrophe. In addition,
to add insult to injury, there is one group of scientists that has proposed a
plan for using the HAARP facilities in different localities around the Earth
(the United States is not the only country that possesses such instruments of
mass destruction) to extensively zap the ionosphere in a last-ditch, desperate,
frenzied attempt to set in motion a process that, allegedly, will degrade the
rising levels of methane in the atmosphere ... when all such a proposal is
likely to do is further destabilize the atmosphere in a problematic fashion.
In combination, the two aforementioned
government-designed programs (along with their counterparts in other countries)
are adversely affecting the environment – not just locally, but world-wide. More
specifically, ocean currents are being adversely affected -- e.g., warm, ocean
currents that used to run southward have had their courses altered by
geo-engineering processes (HAARP interferes with atmospheric currents which, in
turn, affect ocean currents) and, now, warm waters are flowing into the Artic
regions and, among other things, thawing frozen methane deposits.
Moreover, recently, during the ‘melt season’, the
Arctic Ice Cap has been losing about 100,000 square kilometers of ice surface per
day. Near the end of the ‘melt season’ the loss of ice surface per day approached
130,000 square kilometers. If this rate of decline in ice surface continues,
the Arctic Ice Cap could be completely devastated in a matter of years, not
decades or centuries.
As the ice surface of the Arctic disappears, an
increasing amount of the Sun’s thermal energy will be absorbed by the
ocean. Among other things, this means
that the frozen methane hydrates on the bottom of the Arctic Sea will thaw at
an increasingly rapid rate and, in the process, release substantial quantities
of gaseous methane into the ocean and the atmosphere ... all thanks to the hard
work of geo-engineering where progress means business.
Furthermore, the ozone layer also is being
adversely affected by chemtrail sprays – e.g., the degradation of this portion
of the atmosphere has been tied to the particulate matter contained in the
chemtrail sprays, and not just as a result of the presence of CFCs – that is, chlorofluorocarbons.
Such chemtrail-induced degradation of the ozone layer is a further reason why frozen
methane deposits are thawing and escaping in gaseous form into the ocean and
the atmosphere since more of the Sun’s thermal energy will be entering the
atmosphere rather than being intercepted by an intact, functional ozone layer.
Besides the aforementioned problems concerning ocean
currents and the ozone layer that are a function of geo-engineering activities
such as chemtrail spraying, there are also additional problems. For instance, the acidity of oceans is rising as
a result of the way in which methane in a gaseous form is being released due to
a thawing oif the methane hydrate deposits and which are entering into solution
in the ocean water. In addition, the jet stream is being experimented with courtesy
of the geo-engineering effects of HAARP, and this affects both ocean currents
and weather patterns.
The boreal forests -- thanks, in part, to the
role of geo-engineering projects such as chemtrail spraying – also are dying.
Boreal forests are comprised of northern latitude forests covering portions of Siberia
as well as the Pacific Northwest, especially Canada.
These forests constitute a significant part of
the ‘lung-like’ system of the planet as far as the manner in which forests
breathe in carbon dioxide and, then,
breathe oxygen back out into the atmosphere is concerned. As they are dying, the
boreal forests are becoming less and less a sink for various forms of carbon that
are in the atmosphere, and, instead, they are becoming an increasing source of
carbon dioxide generation as the forests decay and the carbon that had been
trapped within life is released upon death.
Finally, overall
climate patterns are being destructively disrupted and affected by the
activities of geo-engineering. Apropos of this situation, Mark Twain is
reported to have said: “The trouble with the world is not that people know too little; it's that they know so many things that just aren't so”. Indeed, the fact-challenged
processes of geo-engineering that are being employed by the government and its
corporate allies are touted – if only to themselves -- as incorporating deep
insights concerning reality, when, in truth, they only give expression to a profound
ignorance concerning the ecological dynamics of nature.
If the foregoing possibilities are not enough to
strip the varnish from one’s hopes concerning the future, there also seems to
be a form of ice nucleation – chemically induced ice/snow-formation – which is
occurring in relation to many forms of precipitation and, as a result,
constitutes another kind of fallout from the spraying of chemtrails. Ice and
snow are forming under conditions where, except for the presence of the
nucleation process, it might not be happening (e.g., too warm), and, as well,
the ice formed from this process stays longer -- even after temperatures have
risen above freezing -- than if the underlying chemicals responsible for the
phenomenon had not been present.
The chemicals involved in the foregoing process
are unknown – except to the perpetrators. More importantly, the kind of impact
that such chemicals are having on the environment is also unknown.
Under such circumstances of uncertainty, wisdom
would warrant pursuing the Precautionary Principle ... a course of action which
calls for rigorous, critical reflection and additional empirical data before making
the kind of weighty decision that could affect all life on Earth. Unfortunately, the perpetrators of
chemtrails and HAARP appear to be operating in accordance with the Arrogance
Principle or the Indifference Principle which such individuals seem to believe
justifies enacting whatever delusions happen to bubble to the surface of their consciousness
... and, in the process, drag everyone else along on a potentially hazardous,
if not fatal, journey irrespective of whether, or not, the rest of us wish to
be dragged along on such a reckless, ill-conceived, irresponsible delinquent
joy ride.
Unless government-sanctioned geo-engineering scientists
stop spraying the chemtrails and using HAARP to interfere with the natural
order of things, the Earth, and its many species, may soon be placed on code
blue ... if this is not already the case. The oceans, the atmosphere, ground
water, the jet stream, the ozone layer, and millions of species are all being
subject to the process of government-encouraged air and ground fracking with
demonstrable catastrophic results
For example, there are estimates from some
researchers that as many as 100-250 species of life-forms (including insects,
plants, birds, and mammals) might be disappearing from the Earth every day as a
direct, and indirect, result of the methane release issue (along with the
effect of the HAARP emanations). If this is true (and, certainly, more research
must be done to verify that such estimates are reliable ... even though we
might be running out of time needed to be able to carry out such research),
then one could be witnessing the greatest mass-extinction set of events since
the dinosaurs were forced to leave the building approximately 65 million years
ago.
Moreover, if the foregoing estimates are correct
– and the operative word is “if” – then, perhaps, somewhere among the upcoming
attractions involving the ‘Chemtrail Horror Picture Show’ (the accompanying
music is available for download through your favorite internet distributor) could
be the extinction of such mammals as, say, human beings. Yet, even if the
foregoing bleak scenario is not the case, tremendous damage is still accruing with
respect to many different species and ecological systems of Earth as a result
of the synergistically negative impact which chemtrails and HAARP are having
upon the environment.
As tragic as the wars in Afghanistan, Iraq,
Libya, Syria, Palestine, and elsewhere are (as if millions of lives lost is not
sufficiently nightmarish), those conflicts are but a Machiavellian-constructed smokescreen
of political theater that is intended to hide the real destruction which is
taking place across the Earth – and the issue of chemtrails is but one
manifestation of that agenda -- in a war being waged against all forms of life in
order that a very few individuals can realize their pathological dreams
concerning money, power, and worldly delights ... irrespective of the costs to:
other people, the environment, or the future. In an ancient ritual of
governmental and corporate prestidigitation, the attention of the people is
being misdirected away from the manipulative character of the sorcerer’s underhanded
covert actions in order to create the desired illusion – that everything is
under control and being made safe – and it is – but the control being exerted and
safety being established (whether by governments or corporations) is entirely
dysfunctional -- both currently and into the future ... at least whatever might
be left of the latter.
If left to itself, nature does quite well, and
this has been so for millions of years. Geo-engineering is the work of hubris
and, if the current ecological situation continues to deteriorate under the relentless
pressure of such artificial activities, governments and corporations are
shameless enough to try to claim – when some of the dire facts noted in the
foregoing commentary begin to increasingly infiltrate the awareness of the
general public -- that geo-engineering is the Earth’s last, best hope, when, in
reality, that diabolical process has been playing a major destructive role for
a number of decades ... as such, geo-engineering is a major part of the
problem, and not at all the sort of solution that it is being -- and will be -- sold as by the marketing gurus of
government and corporations. Caveat emptor!!!!
If you would like to learn more about the potential
downside of geo-engineering, please go to:
or, view:
which is a 28-minute interview with Dane Wigington
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
Bushmasters and Drone Masters
My heart and soul commiserate with the parents and families of those whose lives have become so tragically entangled in the Sandy Hook Elementary School shootings in Newtown, Connecticut. As a result of the events of last Friday -- as well as in conjunction with other school shooting tragedies over the past several years -- many people in the United States want to place a ban on assault weapons.
Indeed, many citizens are outraged about, and deeply troubled by, the intrusion of so much mass violence into American society. Yet, nearly ten times as many innocent children have been massacred by U.S. drones along the Pakistan/Afghanistan border than perished in Newtown on Friday ... but barely a whisper is being heard about any of this among American citizens.
If people want to ban assault weapons, then, all the more power to them, but the logic of their argument should extend to the role that drones play in killing equally innocent children in other countries. Or, is it only the lives of American children that matter? If so, then there is considerable hypocrisy and bigotry in the arguments which call for the cessation of senseless deaths with respect to innocent American children, while turning a blind eye, ear, mind, heart, and soul to the senseless deaths of children in far away places through a weapon -- i.e., American drones -- which is far more destructive than a Bushmaster assault weapon.
There are places along the Pakistan/Afghanistan border, as well as elsewhere, which have drones flying over them 24/7. Those people do not know who will be bombed or when, and the result has been a reign of terror which is deeply affecting the psychological well-being of innocent citizens and leading to, among other things, not only widespread cases of severe post traumatic syndrome disorder among those people who must live under the sense of doom that those constant drone flights inflict upon the inhabitants of those regions, but, as well, constitutes a focal issue which is leading to the generation of a great deal of resentment against the United States ... what is happening in those regions is comparable to an armed gunman stalking the halls of the elementary schools of America 24/7 without any of the students, teachers, or parents knowing if today is going to be the next tragic incident.
To put a truly pathological seal upon all of the foregoing, the people in the Pakistan/Afghanistan border areas have reported that on numerous occasions, they have been subject to what is known as a 'double tap.' More specifically, this means that after a drone strikes a village, the drone comes again a short while later to bomb the village a second time just as first responders have arrived to assist with the injured and traumatized. As a result, many people have become unwilling to go to the assistance of the injured because of the double tap policy involved with some drone strikes ... this is comparable to someone attacking the first responders who came to assist the students and teachers at Sandy Hook -- something which would be morally abhorrent and completely uncivilized if this were to happen here and, therefore, something which is both morally abhorrent and completely uncivilized when it happens elsewhere.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zf8bnYF-WxE&feature=player_detailpage
Indeed, many citizens are outraged about, and deeply troubled by, the intrusion of so much mass violence into American society. Yet, nearly ten times as many innocent children have been massacred by U.S. drones along the Pakistan/Afghanistan border than perished in Newtown on Friday ... but barely a whisper is being heard about any of this among American citizens.
If people want to ban assault weapons, then, all the more power to them, but the logic of their argument should extend to the role that drones play in killing equally innocent children in other countries. Or, is it only the lives of American children that matter? If so, then there is considerable hypocrisy and bigotry in the arguments which call for the cessation of senseless deaths with respect to innocent American children, while turning a blind eye, ear, mind, heart, and soul to the senseless deaths of children in far away places through a weapon -- i.e., American drones -- which is far more destructive than a Bushmaster assault weapon.
There are places along the Pakistan/Afghanistan border, as well as elsewhere, which have drones flying over them 24/7. Those people do not know who will be bombed or when, and the result has been a reign of terror which is deeply affecting the psychological well-being of innocent citizens and leading to, among other things, not only widespread cases of severe post traumatic syndrome disorder among those people who must live under the sense of doom that those constant drone flights inflict upon the inhabitants of those regions, but, as well, constitutes a focal issue which is leading to the generation of a great deal of resentment against the United States ... what is happening in those regions is comparable to an armed gunman stalking the halls of the elementary schools of America 24/7 without any of the students, teachers, or parents knowing if today is going to be the next tragic incident.
To put a truly pathological seal upon all of the foregoing, the people in the Pakistan/Afghanistan border areas have reported that on numerous occasions, they have been subject to what is known as a 'double tap.' More specifically, this means that after a drone strikes a village, the drone comes again a short while later to bomb the village a second time just as first responders have arrived to assist with the injured and traumatized. As a result, many people have become unwilling to go to the assistance of the injured because of the double tap policy involved with some drone strikes ... this is comparable to someone attacking the first responders who came to assist the students and teachers at Sandy Hook -- something which would be morally abhorrent and completely uncivilized if this were to happen here and, therefore, something which is both morally abhorrent and completely uncivilized when it happens elsewhere.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zf8bnYF-WxE&feature=player_detailpage
Monday, September 03, 2012
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
New eBook: The Pathology of Leadership: A Sufi's Perspective
The word "leadership" is, and has been for some time, a buzz
word which is espoused by many to be 'the' key to solving most, if not all, of
the problems in the world. If only there were the 'right' sort of leaders in the
world, then the political, economic, educational, business, scientific,
environmental, military, judicial, and spiritual difficulties facing humankind
could be resolved.
The desire for leadership is a pathological disorder which is engendered in others by those who already have succumbed to the malady. Leadership is a delusional belief system in which a human being believes that he or she should be given (or usurp) the authority to organize and control the lives of other human beings.
Chaos is not the opposite of leadership. The co-operation of equals stands in opposition to the idea of leadership.
Every human being is sovereign and has an inalienable right to seek to push back the horizons of ignorance free from interference as long as such efforts are consonant with honoring a like right in relation to others. Reconciling the boundaries of sovereignty among human beings is a dynamic, complex, and nuanced process ... a process that can only be successfully navigated by means of an exercise of co-operation among sovereign individuals and not through the leadership of the few with respect to the many.
This book explores different aspects of the pathological character of 'leadership.' Once the underlying principles of the delusional disorder are appreciated, an individual might be in a better position to realize the character of the pathology of leadership and resist its seductive, Siren-like wail.
The desire for leadership is a pathological disorder which is engendered in others by those who already have succumbed to the malady. Leadership is a delusional belief system in which a human being believes that he or she should be given (or usurp) the authority to organize and control the lives of other human beings.
Chaos is not the opposite of leadership. The co-operation of equals stands in opposition to the idea of leadership.
Every human being is sovereign and has an inalienable right to seek to push back the horizons of ignorance free from interference as long as such efforts are consonant with honoring a like right in relation to others. Reconciling the boundaries of sovereignty among human beings is a dynamic, complex, and nuanced process ... a process that can only be successfully navigated by means of an exercise of co-operation among sovereign individuals and not through the leadership of the few with respect to the many.
This book explores different aspects of the pathological character of 'leadership.' Once the underlying principles of the delusional disorder are appreciated, an individual might be in a better position to realize the character of the pathology of leadership and resist its seductive, Siren-like wail.
This book is now available at Smashwords, Amazon, and Barnes and Noble and soon will be released at Amazon in paperback.
To purchase the Kindle version, click this link: Amazon Kindle
Saturday, July 14, 2012
Saturday, June 30, 2012
Gardens, both wild and cultivated, appear to have an attraction of near universal proportions for human beings. Different races, ethnic groups, nationalities, religious traditions, and eras all have been drawn to gardens.
One might wonder why this should be the case. Why do gardens appeal to us in such a deeply satisfying manner?
To be sure, the flowers, shrubs, trees, grass and so on, have both individual, as well as collective, beauty. In addition, the diversity of shapes is intriguing, and the endless combination of flora arrangements is fascinating. Moreover, everything contributes to the wonderful bouquet of aromas which vary in character throughout the day and night.
Toss in the mystery of the unfolding of life going on in the garden, and one might suppose all of the foregoing explains why most people are inclined to gardens. The answer, however, may run deeper still.
We find gardens peaceful and restful. Gardens seem to induce us to reflect on life. We find varying degrees of contentment and joy from gardens.
We come away from gardens refreshed. There appears to be some kind of energy or source of renewal which we take away with us from gardens.
There is almost a timeless quality to gardens. Things do change, but, somehow, time often seems to be suspended. The rest of the world recedes.
Our senses are somewhat intoxicated from the effects of the garden. Our minds are massaged.
Gardens tug at our hearts and emotions. Every aspect of our being seems to be connected to, and affected by, gardens.
We are captivated by the balance and harmony in gardens. Thoughts and remembrance of God tend to arise naturally in the context of gardens.
Sufi masters indicate physical gardens are only one variety in a spectrum of infinite diversity. In fact, the gardens of the physical world are but a distant reflection of the gardens associated with spiritual possibilities.
Whatever contentment, peace, joy, happiness, rest, refreshment, wonder, beauty, fascination, intoxication and satisfaction we may receive from physical gardens is virtually nothing compared to what can be experienced in different kinds of spiritual garden.
Indeed, on the basis of experience and not theoretical speculation, the Sufi masters note there is no way to describe the intensity, depth, richness, subtlety and diversity inherent in spiritual gardens. At best, one only can allude, in a very limited way, to a few superficial dimensions of the experiences involving non-physical gardens.
Our senses, mind , heart and soul are drawn to gardens because their many qualities strike a resonance deep within our being. For people of insight and understanding, such as the Sufi masters, the qualities of the gardens of the physical world are but a sign of the existence of other non-physical gardens which have garden-like qualities capable of reaching even further into the possibilities of our essential being.
The meaning of "garden-like qualities" in the foregoing refers to the capacity of non-physical gardens to generate, albeit on a much grander scale of both majesty and beauty, a sense of peace, joy, refreshment, contentment and so on, just as physical gardens do. However, the ultimate character of these non-physical gardens may not have anything in common with the structural forms given expression through physical gardens. In fact, some spiritual gardens are without any form, per se, whatsoever, yet induce in us extremely intense experiences which are somewhat analogous - in a distant sort of way - to those experiences engendered in us in physical gardens.
One does not necessarily have to leave the physical plane in order to get some semblance of taste of a non-physical garden. For example, in the garden of association with one's spiritual guide, one experiences garden-like qualities.
When one is with one's shaykh or teacher, one feels at peace. One is happy, joyful, restful. One discovers a contentment in the presence of one's spiritual guide.
Time almost seems to be suspended. The rest of the world becomes relatively unimportant.
Life seems to have more balance and harmony while in the company of one's teacher. One finds thoughts of God and remembrance of God come more easily in the presence of the shaykh than when one is removed from the teacher. One is more given to spiritual reflection when associating with one's spiritual guide.
One is drawn to the inner beauty of one's shaykh. One keeps discovering new facets of wonder and fascination in her or him.
One can become extremely intoxicated or ecstatic in the presence of the teacher. One comes away from the spiritual guide refreshed and invigorated. One longs to return to the garden of spiritual association as quickly as possible.
Sufi masters refer to many other kinds of garden. There are, for instance, gardens of remembrance which are accessed through saying, and becoming absorbed in, the Names and Attributes of God.
When, by the grace of God, one is summoned into the reality of these Names and Attributes, as well as opened up to their infinite meanings of overwhelming beauty and majesty, one is transported to gardens unlike any in the physical realm. One is given entrance to gardens beyond all description.
There are gardens of forgetfulness in which one is released from the veils of the false self. There are gardens of subsistence in God when one's true, essential self is realized.
There are gardens of gnosis. In these gardens, one has direct, certain, unmediated knowledge of God. In these gardens, God discloses different dimensions or facets of Divinity.
There are gardens for every spiritual station. There are gardens of repentance and longing. There are gardens of dependence on God. There are gardens of gratitude, patience and sincerity.
One travels, if God wishes, from gardens of friendship to gardens of exclusive friendship. By the grace of Divinity, one is transported from gardens of passion to gardens of ardent affection.
There are gardens of intense love in which the spirit soars in flights of intimacy with Divinity. During such flights, one becomes both enslaved and bewildered by the infinite beauty of the face of the Beloved manifested through these gardens.
There are gardens of uniqueness. If God wishes, one is opened up to the mystery which is breathed into one's essential nature by Divinity at the advent of Self-realization.
There are countless other gardens. No two gardens are the same.
No two spiritual gardens give the same kind of joy and happiness. No two gardens give the same modality of contentment, peace and satisfaction.
No two gardens disclose the same Divine colors. No two gardens share the same wonder and beauty.
No two spiritual gardens bring the same flavor of ecstasy. No two gardens show the same kind of breathtaking balance, symmetry and harmony.
The point of embarkation for the possibility of journeying to any and all of the aforementioned gardens is, God willing, in the garden of spiritual association with the shaykh. Without this association and the grace and barakah, or blessings, of Divinity to which it gives expression, the nearest one will come to a first-hand experience of any of these other gardens is a spiritual travelogue such as the one being itemized in this essay.
Sunday, June 17, 2012
Friday, May 11, 2012
Kashf
There are two kinds of unveiling (kashf) which occur on the Sufi path. One of these is potentially detrimental to the mystical wayfarer. The other can be a source of great blessings for, and help to, the individual.
The first mode of kashf or unveiling concerns the nature and events of the world. The second form of unveiling gives expression to spiritual realities which transcend the realm of the world.
When, by God's command, an individual is provided with a method for: accessing foreknowledge of worldly events; or, being a witness to events going on elsewhere in the world, without leaving one's residence and without any modern technological assistance; or, becoming privy to the details of the past, present and future of whomever one likes, then such a mystical wayfarer is confronted with a very substantial trial and risk.
There are two options for dealing with this situation. The individual can use her or his discretion for determining whether or not to utilize the abilities which God has made available. The person can wait for instructions from Divinity concerning the use of those abilities.
Whenever the mystical wayfarer uses his or her discretion with respect to whether or not to access hidden knowledge concerning the world, two contingencies come into play. First, this individual will have to answer to God on the Day of Judgement for each and every discretionary use of worldly kashf. Secondly, every time one makes discretionary use of worldly kashf, one runs a risk that one's spiritual progress will come to a standstill.
An individual may believe she or he is using worldly kashf only to help others. This may or may not be so. However, one thing is certain. The intentions, motivations, attitudes, understandings, goals, and purposes of a person who makes discretionary use of worldly kashf will come under the closest of Divine scrutiny and cross-examination.
The individual cannot presume she or he will come through the rigors of this investigation in unscathed fashion. The ordeal of being subjected to the intensity of the aforementioned scrutiny is, in and of itself, likely to raise the question of just how necessary was such discretionary use of worldly kashf.
Nevertheless, on the Day of Judgement, second thoughts don't count. One must be prepared to accept the consequences of the choices one makes in the present life. So, as is sometimes said in the military: "Be advised!".
Having access to hidden knowledge concerning the world and its people, can be very seductive and tempting. One may start out in a seemingly innocuous manner, only to discover, if one is fortunate, one is getting caught up in the world in, yet, another way.
Whether one is entangled in the world through "normal" means or through non-ordinary channels, is a moot point. In either case, entanglement means one has lost one's spiritual purpose.
If one loses one's spiritual way on a "lower" level or on a "higher" level, one remains lost in both cases. In fact, one's predicament may be much worse in the latter case since more is expected of the individual. This individual should have known better than to get seduced by the allurements of hidden knowledge concerning the world.
The foregoing comments notwithstanding, there are occasions when use of worldly kashf or unveiling may be required in the service of others. This especially may be true with respect to the kinds of thing a shaykh may do, from time to time, to help an initiate at certain stages of the mystical journey.
Nevertheless, one is better off when directives in these matters come from Divinity. Waiting, with patience, for Divine assistance is, spiritually, far superior to trying, with impatience, to take matters into one's own hands. The former approach is the best form of spiritual etiquette in these matters.
Some people may wonder why individuals should be given access to hidden knowledge while, simultaneously, being told to refrain from taking advantage of this kind of knowledge. One reason for juxtaposing such extraordinary possibilities next to the challenge of restraint is to test the individual concerning whether he or she prefers lordship over servanthood.
Ultimately, the Sufi path is a journey toward perfect servanthood. Those who become attracted to, if not addicted by, the discretionary use of worldly kashf, are indicating a preference for lordship. This inclination or preference becomes an obstacle to making further progress on the Sufi path.
In a sense, one becomes all dressed up with the powers of worldly kashf but with no spiritual place to go. At best, wherever one may be spiritually, on whatever level, one becomes stuck there and unable to fully realize the spiritual purpose of one's life.
At worst, things begin to deteriorate spiritually. One falls further and further away from the mystical path. Yet, the tragedy of this is one may not be aware this is happening because one still has use of the "toys" of worldly kashf.
The other kind of kashf, mentioned previously, concerns spiritual unveilings. These are transcendent to the sort of hidden knowledge about the affairs of the world which is the focus of the worldly mode of kashf.
Spiritual kashf involves unveilings in the form of experiences involving states and stations of the mystical path. Through Divine "flashes", intuitions, visions and so on, one receives knowledge, wisdom and insights about various spiritual realities.
The understanding gained from this form of kashf can be extremely useful to wayfarers of the Sufi path. Such understanding serves to guide, support, strengthen, protect, purify, perfect and illumine the individual's mystical travels.
Worldly kashf, for the most part, cannot assist the individual in any of the above mentioned ways. In other words, with certain exceptions, worldly kashf really has no useful role to play on the mystical journey.
There is only one cautionary proviso which needs to be stated in relation to spiritual kashf. This mode of mystical unveiling is not the goal of the Sufi path. Spiritual kashf is a means, not an end.
The goal of the Sufi path is to become a perfect servant of God through realizing one's essential identity and capacity. Spiritual kashf assists one in the pursuit of this primary objective of the mystical journey.
If one should become preoccupied with spiritual kashf, in and of itself, and, therefore, somewhat divorced from the proper focus of the Sufi path, one becomes spiritually at risk. These risks may not be quite the same as those which are associated with discretionary use of worldly kashf, but the risks to further spiritual progress are, nonetheless, still there.
More specifically, if one wishes to reach a particular destination, one cannot permit the beauty and majesty of the landscape to distract one from the original goal. This is especially the case if one is under a time constraint concerning how long one has to complete the journey to the intended destination.
If one spends too much time by the roadside smelling the flowers, one may never reach one's destination in time. As with everything else in life, one must keep things in a balance of proper moderation.
There are two kinds of unveiling (kashf) which occur on the Sufi path. One of these is potentially detrimental to the mystical wayfarer. The other can be a source of great blessings for, and help to, the individual.
The first mode of kashf or unveiling concerns the nature and events of the world. The second form of unveiling gives expression to spiritual realities which transcend the realm of the world.
When, by God's command, an individual is provided with a method for: accessing foreknowledge of worldly events; or, being a witness to events going on elsewhere in the world, without leaving one's residence and without any modern technological assistance; or, becoming privy to the details of the past, present and future of whomever one likes, then such a mystical wayfarer is confronted with a very substantial trial and risk.
There are two options for dealing with this situation. The individual can use her or his discretion for determining whether or not to utilize the abilities which God has made available. The person can wait for instructions from Divinity concerning the use of those abilities.
Whenever the mystical wayfarer uses his or her discretion with respect to whether or not to access hidden knowledge concerning the world, two contingencies come into play. First, this individual will have to answer to God on the Day of Judgement for each and every discretionary use of worldly kashf. Secondly, every time one makes discretionary use of worldly kashf, one runs a risk that one's spiritual progress will come to a standstill.
An individual may believe she or he is using worldly kashf only to help others. This may or may not be so. However, one thing is certain. The intentions, motivations, attitudes, understandings, goals, and purposes of a person who makes discretionary use of worldly kashf will come under the closest of Divine scrutiny and cross-examination.
The individual cannot presume she or he will come through the rigors of this investigation in unscathed fashion. The ordeal of being subjected to the intensity of the aforementioned scrutiny is, in and of itself, likely to raise the question of just how necessary was such discretionary use of worldly kashf.
Nevertheless, on the Day of Judgement, second thoughts don't count. One must be prepared to accept the consequences of the choices one makes in the present life. So, as is sometimes said in the military: "Be advised!".
Having access to hidden knowledge concerning the world and its people, can be very seductive and tempting. One may start out in a seemingly innocuous manner, only to discover, if one is fortunate, one is getting caught up in the world in, yet, another way.
Whether one is entangled in the world through "normal" means or through non-ordinary channels, is a moot point. In either case, entanglement means one has lost one's spiritual purpose.
If one loses one's spiritual way on a "lower" level or on a "higher" level, one remains lost in both cases. In fact, one's predicament may be much worse in the latter case since more is expected of the individual. This individual should have known better than to get seduced by the allurements of hidden knowledge concerning the world.
The foregoing comments notwithstanding, there are occasions when use of worldly kashf or unveiling may be required in the service of others. This especially may be true with respect to the kinds of thing a shaykh may do, from time to time, to help an initiate at certain stages of the mystical journey.
Nevertheless, one is better off when directives in these matters come from Divinity. Waiting, with patience, for Divine assistance is, spiritually, far superior to trying, with impatience, to take matters into one's own hands. The former approach is the best form of spiritual etiquette in these matters.
Some people may wonder why individuals should be given access to hidden knowledge while, simultaneously, being told to refrain from taking advantage of this kind of knowledge. One reason for juxtaposing such extraordinary possibilities next to the challenge of restraint is to test the individual concerning whether he or she prefers lordship over servanthood.
Ultimately, the Sufi path is a journey toward perfect servanthood. Those who become attracted to, if not addicted by, the discretionary use of worldly kashf, are indicating a preference for lordship. This inclination or preference becomes an obstacle to making further progress on the Sufi path.
In a sense, one becomes all dressed up with the powers of worldly kashf but with no spiritual place to go. At best, wherever one may be spiritually, on whatever level, one becomes stuck there and unable to fully realize the spiritual purpose of one's life.
At worst, things begin to deteriorate spiritually. One falls further and further away from the mystical path. Yet, the tragedy of this is one may not be aware this is happening because one still has use of the "toys" of worldly kashf.
The other kind of kashf, mentioned previously, concerns spiritual unveilings. These are transcendent to the sort of hidden knowledge about the affairs of the world which is the focus of the worldly mode of kashf.
Spiritual kashf involves unveilings in the form of experiences involving states and stations of the mystical path. Through Divine "flashes", intuitions, visions and so on, one receives knowledge, wisdom and insights about various spiritual realities.
The understanding gained from this form of kashf can be extremely useful to wayfarers of the Sufi path. Such understanding serves to guide, support, strengthen, protect, purify, perfect and illumine the individual's mystical travels.
Worldly kashf, for the most part, cannot assist the individual in any of the above mentioned ways. In other words, with certain exceptions, worldly kashf really has no useful role to play on the mystical journey.
There is only one cautionary proviso which needs to be stated in relation to spiritual kashf. This mode of mystical unveiling is not the goal of the Sufi path. Spiritual kashf is a means, not an end.
The goal of the Sufi path is to become a perfect servant of God through realizing one's essential identity and capacity. Spiritual kashf assists one in the pursuit of this primary objective of the mystical journey.
If one should become preoccupied with spiritual kashf, in and of itself, and, therefore, somewhat divorced from the proper focus of the Sufi path, one becomes spiritually at risk. These risks may not be quite the same as those which are associated with discretionary use of worldly kashf, but the risks to further spiritual progress are, nonetheless, still there.
More specifically, if one wishes to reach a particular destination, one cannot permit the beauty and majesty of the landscape to distract one from the original goal. This is especially the case if one is under a time constraint concerning how long one has to complete the journey to the intended destination.
If one spends too much time by the roadside smelling the flowers, one may never reach one's destination in time. As with everything else in life, one must keep things in a balance of proper moderation.
Saturday, April 14, 2012
Thursday, March 01, 2012
The Unfinished Revolution: The Battle for America's Soul by Bill Whitehouse
If interested, the book can be purchased either through: Choice 1 (more expensive) or
through Choice 2 (less expensive).
Thursday, February 23, 2012
Monday, February 20, 2012
The Unfinished Revolution: The Battle for America's Soul
The Unfinished Revolution: The Battle for America's Soul by Bill Whitehouse is now available in the Amazon Kindle Store and soon will be available in the iBookstore, Barnes & Noble, and other bookstores as an eBook and a hard copy book.
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Click to go to the Amazon Kindle Store
To purchase this book from us click this link.
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The 'Occupy Movement' took many people by surprise with both its scope, as well as with the manner in which it resonated with the deep sense of discontentment that appears to be felt by many people in the United States concerning the economic and political character of American life. This book is intended to help bring a sharper focus to the concerns that are inherent in the dissatisfaction that people have concerning the idea of 'politics as usual' by offering a clear differentiation between the way of power (i.e., poltics as usual) and the way of sovereignty that gives expression to a very different notion of democracy ... one that is constructive, not destructive.
To purchase this book from us click this link.
Sunday, January 22, 2012
Autonomy - A Sufi's Perspective
The struggle to establish control over our lives is a theme which is intimately woven into the fabric of our existence. In one way or another, we all seek to carve out a place on which we can stand and defend ourselves against intrusions into, and possible threats to, our space, our privacy, our movements, our choices, our time, our possessions, and our identities.
From the very earliest days of our developmental odyssey, the story of our growth is influenced greatly by skirmishes and battles concerning the perceived locus of control in our lives. Our relationship with parents, siblings, relatives, playmates, neighbors, religious figures, school mates, teachers, adolescent friends, bosses, work mates, clients, romantic liaisons, in-laws, and children frequently revolve around problems of whom gets to set the agenda for how, or if, the relationship will proceed and under what set of conditions.
We tend to define who we are and aren't according to the character and outcome of all the different kind of locus-of-control issues which run through our lives. How serious were they? How intense? Were they protracted? What tactics were used?
How important was control in any given instance? Was it an atmosphere of take no prisoners or were there civil negotiations? How long were the periods of relative peace between significant differences of opinion concerning locus of control problems? Were there peaceful alternatives available to hostile encounters? Did the confrontations do lasting damage, or were they no big deal?
The answer to all the above questions, and many others of a similar nature that might be asked, will have a profound impact on us. They will affect our sense of: identity, integrity, self-esteem, and ability to function effectively in a variety of social settings.
If we are lucky, we come out of all this with, perhaps, a few bruises and a couple of scars. However, our basic feeling about ourselves as, in some nontrivial sense, worthwhile human beings is still intact.
One might even argue our sense of self has been enhanced by the rigors of, and lessons learned from, that developmental process. Moreover, we have " war" stories to swap with other people - stories that both link us to, as well as differentiate us from, other people who have gone through their own operational theater of developmental conflicts.
If we are unlucky, we end up as casualties. Even worse, we may end up creating other casualties.
We may survive these wars, but we do not always do so free of the horrendous ramifications which may ensue from the seemingly unending years of conflicts. Emotional trauma, arrested psychological development, inability to form intimate relationships with others, poor self-esteem, various kinds of stress syndrome, under-achievement, over-achievement, ambivalence, confusion, inability to commit oneself, debilitating anxiety, and a free-floating malaise are but a few of the dysfunctional possibilities which we may carry with us as mementos of the 'campaigns' marking different stages of our formative years.
There is a very fundamental sense in which much of what goes on in politics, economics, marriage, and other social institutions is dominated by contentious forays into battlefields strewn with bunkers of resistance involving locus of control, perceived or actual. Such battlefields are disasters waiting to happen because they bring together a highly volatile mixture of unresolved or problematically resolved locus of control issues from our collective developmental processes.
Issues of: right or wrong; just or unjust; democratic or undemocratic; equitable or inequitable; legal or illegal; and, reasonable or unreasonable often form only the playing field in which locus of control issues become the game within the game. We talk in terms of values, rights, freedoms, truth and the 'good' as being the reasons for struggling in, say, the political or economic arena. Yet, in reality, we frequently use such language in order to shift attention away from the fact that, more often than not, the issue which actually is being contended is a matter of locus of control in and of itself.
We want to do whatever appeals to us, and we want to do it whenever it appeals to us to do so. Moreover, what appeals to us may not be a function of what is, ultimately, actually true or good or right or just; rather, what appeals to us tends to be a function of our own desires, independent of considerations of truth, justice, and so on.
Indeed, we often try to argue that our desires necessarily reflect what is true or good or just or right. As a result, we convince ourselves that the alleged equivalence between our desires and all that is good and true justifies the locus of control being under our tender, fiduciary care.
From the Sufi perspective, true autonomy is not primarily a question of how we fare in conflicts involving locus of control issues vis-a-vis other people, whether in the past or the present. A Sufi is only free when she or he has realized the essential self and acts in accordance with that nature.
For the Sufi, an individual could be in prison or in chains or limited by the constraints imposed by others. Yet, the individual still could have autonomy if the person were to respond to those conditions in terms of the individual's essential nature and true self.
On the other hand, a person might, seemingly, possesses the locus of control concerning the lives of other people. Nevertheless, this individual might have no substantive autonomy because the person's essential nature was in bondage to, and imprisoned by, the person's own desires - the entity which actually is setting the agenda.
Such an individual may be " free" to desire. However, this person does not have autonomy over those desires.
The Sufi does not seek control over the lives of other people. The Sufi does not enter into conflict with others over matters of locus of control.
The true locus of control is with God. The Sufi attempts to discern how that locus of control is being manifested in any given set of circumstances. Once this has been determined, then, the individual, according to the person's capacity and God's support, will merge horizons with the structural character of that locus of control as it unfolds over time.
The locus of control is a manifestation of God's will and gives expression to the passion play of existence. The more attuned one is to God's will, the greater will be one's ability to detect, and adapt to, the shifting currents of the manifestation which are being expressed through the passion play as it reflects the will of God.
We adapt ourselves to the will of God not by trying to change or control others but by changing, and having autonomy over, our desires and intentions and attitudes. In fact, the great tragedy of so much of the developmental process is that very few people involved in the struggle over issues of locus of control have any understanding of, or insight into, what the real issues of locus of control are.
More specifically, the issue is not about which of the people engaged in a conflict is able to win the battle of dominance in any given set of circumstances. The issue is how do we collectively realize our essential autonomy so we can find harmonious and creative ways to align ourselves with the will of God as it manifests itself through the currents and eddies of the passion play of existence in which we are participant observers.
There is something deeply, intrinsically attractive about those people who are able, by the Grace of God, to accomplish this kind of transformation. In fact, it is deliciously ironic that such people who do not seek or wish to have control over others end up influencing the desires of so many people who are inspired by their example and want to follow in their footsteps and seek the same sort of transformative essential autonomy exemplified in the lives of individuals such as the Sufi masters.
From the very earliest days of our developmental odyssey, the story of our growth is influenced greatly by skirmishes and battles concerning the perceived locus of control in our lives. Our relationship with parents, siblings, relatives, playmates, neighbors, religious figures, school mates, teachers, adolescent friends, bosses, work mates, clients, romantic liaisons, in-laws, and children frequently revolve around problems of whom gets to set the agenda for how, or if, the relationship will proceed and under what set of conditions.
We tend to define who we are and aren't according to the character and outcome of all the different kind of locus-of-control issues which run through our lives. How serious were they? How intense? Were they protracted? What tactics were used?
How important was control in any given instance? Was it an atmosphere of take no prisoners or were there civil negotiations? How long were the periods of relative peace between significant differences of opinion concerning locus of control problems? Were there peaceful alternatives available to hostile encounters? Did the confrontations do lasting damage, or were they no big deal?
The answer to all the above questions, and many others of a similar nature that might be asked, will have a profound impact on us. They will affect our sense of: identity, integrity, self-esteem, and ability to function effectively in a variety of social settings.
If we are lucky, we come out of all this with, perhaps, a few bruises and a couple of scars. However, our basic feeling about ourselves as, in some nontrivial sense, worthwhile human beings is still intact.
One might even argue our sense of self has been enhanced by the rigors of, and lessons learned from, that developmental process. Moreover, we have " war" stories to swap with other people - stories that both link us to, as well as differentiate us from, other people who have gone through their own operational theater of developmental conflicts.
If we are unlucky, we end up as casualties. Even worse, we may end up creating other casualties.
We may survive these wars, but we do not always do so free of the horrendous ramifications which may ensue from the seemingly unending years of conflicts. Emotional trauma, arrested psychological development, inability to form intimate relationships with others, poor self-esteem, various kinds of stress syndrome, under-achievement, over-achievement, ambivalence, confusion, inability to commit oneself, debilitating anxiety, and a free-floating malaise are but a few of the dysfunctional possibilities which we may carry with us as mementos of the 'campaigns' marking different stages of our formative years.
There is a very fundamental sense in which much of what goes on in politics, economics, marriage, and other social institutions is dominated by contentious forays into battlefields strewn with bunkers of resistance involving locus of control, perceived or actual. Such battlefields are disasters waiting to happen because they bring together a highly volatile mixture of unresolved or problematically resolved locus of control issues from our collective developmental processes.
Issues of: right or wrong; just or unjust; democratic or undemocratic; equitable or inequitable; legal or illegal; and, reasonable or unreasonable often form only the playing field in which locus of control issues become the game within the game. We talk in terms of values, rights, freedoms, truth and the 'good' as being the reasons for struggling in, say, the political or economic arena. Yet, in reality, we frequently use such language in order to shift attention away from the fact that, more often than not, the issue which actually is being contended is a matter of locus of control in and of itself.
We want to do whatever appeals to us, and we want to do it whenever it appeals to us to do so. Moreover, what appeals to us may not be a function of what is, ultimately, actually true or good or right or just; rather, what appeals to us tends to be a function of our own desires, independent of considerations of truth, justice, and so on.
Indeed, we often try to argue that our desires necessarily reflect what is true or good or just or right. As a result, we convince ourselves that the alleged equivalence between our desires and all that is good and true justifies the locus of control being under our tender, fiduciary care.
From the Sufi perspective, true autonomy is not primarily a question of how we fare in conflicts involving locus of control issues vis-a-vis other people, whether in the past or the present. A Sufi is only free when she or he has realized the essential self and acts in accordance with that nature.
For the Sufi, an individual could be in prison or in chains or limited by the constraints imposed by others. Yet, the individual still could have autonomy if the person were to respond to those conditions in terms of the individual's essential nature and true self.
On the other hand, a person might, seemingly, possesses the locus of control concerning the lives of other people. Nevertheless, this individual might have no substantive autonomy because the person's essential nature was in bondage to, and imprisoned by, the person's own desires - the entity which actually is setting the agenda.
Such an individual may be " free" to desire. However, this person does not have autonomy over those desires.
The Sufi does not seek control over the lives of other people. The Sufi does not enter into conflict with others over matters of locus of control.
The true locus of control is with God. The Sufi attempts to discern how that locus of control is being manifested in any given set of circumstances. Once this has been determined, then, the individual, according to the person's capacity and God's support, will merge horizons with the structural character of that locus of control as it unfolds over time.
The locus of control is a manifestation of God's will and gives expression to the passion play of existence. The more attuned one is to God's will, the greater will be one's ability to detect, and adapt to, the shifting currents of the manifestation which are being expressed through the passion play as it reflects the will of God.
We adapt ourselves to the will of God not by trying to change or control others but by changing, and having autonomy over, our desires and intentions and attitudes. In fact, the great tragedy of so much of the developmental process is that very few people involved in the struggle over issues of locus of control have any understanding of, or insight into, what the real issues of locus of control are.
More specifically, the issue is not about which of the people engaged in a conflict is able to win the battle of dominance in any given set of circumstances. The issue is how do we collectively realize our essential autonomy so we can find harmonious and creative ways to align ourselves with the will of God as it manifests itself through the currents and eddies of the passion play of existence in which we are participant observers.
There is something deeply, intrinsically attractive about those people who are able, by the Grace of God, to accomplish this kind of transformation. In fact, it is deliciously ironic that such people who do not seek or wish to have control over others end up influencing the desires of so many people who are inspired by their example and want to follow in their footsteps and seek the same sort of transformative essential autonomy exemplified in the lives of individuals such as the Sufi masters.
Sunday, October 30, 2011
Saturday, October 29, 2011
Sufi Reflections Podcast 41
The latest edition of the Sufi Reflections Podcast is now available for downloading. If you don't already have an RSS feed to the podcast, then, you can download a copy of the foregoing at: Podcast 41
Friday, October 14, 2011
A new book from Bilquees Press: Science, Spirituality and Symmetry by Bill Whitehouse
The premises at the heart of this 100 page extended essay are the following: (1) the principles that constitute the methodological processes of science and spirituality/mysticism closely mirror one another; (2) in addition, both sets of methodological processes entail the property of symmetry -- which, reduced to its essential nature, involves the preservation of invariant properties (that, hopefully, reflect some aspect of truth) across the set of transformations that give expression to the respective methodologies of science and spirituality. In the process of developing the foregoing two premises, this book also takes the reader through an overview of a number of the unsolved mysteries of modern science, together with a biographical synopsis of some of the life events that led the author along the path toward formulating the ideas which make up the essence of this work.
This book is now available in the Amazon Kindle store:
http://www.amazon.com/Science-Spirituality-and-Symmetry-ebook/dp/B005V253WM/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1318607020&sr=8-1
This ebook is also available at Barnes and Noble and will soon be available in the iBookstore and Kobo Books.
This book is now available in the Amazon Kindle store:
http://www.amazon.com/Science-Spirituality-and-Symmetry-ebook/dp/B005V253WM/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1318607020&sr=8-1
This ebook is also available at Barnes and Noble and will soon be available in the iBookstore and Kobo Books.
Tuesday, October 04, 2011
Spiritual Capacity - A Sufi's Perspective
Spiritual Capacity
From the perspective of the Sufi path, every human being has a unique spiritual capacity. However, not every capacity necessarily will be realized to its full extent, or even in part.
Life is the opportunity provided by God to become busy with doing the things required for bringing one' s essential capacity on line. Whether or not we take advantage of the chance extended to us, is a matter of choice and an exercise in free will.
Spirituality is only one of the potentials we have been given. We each have been outfitted, so to speak, with other non-spiritual capacities. For example, the capacity for life itself is expressed through our biological nature. Our bodies, including the brain, have been equipped with sensory and locomotor modalities. In addition, we have, in varying degrees: intellectual abilities; creative capacities; a spectrum of emotional possibilities; talents of one sort or another, and a capacity for language.
The Sufi masters also sometimes talk of a wide variety of other powers and capabilities which are, under the right circumstances, available to human beings. These capacities range from: the ability to dream, to various kinds of so-called psychic and occult powers.
Many of these latter kinds of capacity are so infrequently accessed or encountered in any direct way, they are considered to be fictional in nature by most of us. Nonetheless, although such abilities are not really part of, nor pertinent to, the Sufi path, the masters of the way do confirm their existence.
Our numerous capacities generate a multiplicity of experiential possibilities, each of which is conducive to extended exploration. In fact, as human beings, we have such a diverse set of capabilities, potentials, capacities, and powers available to us, we easily become confused about, or distracted from, the purpose of life.
According to the Sufi masters, even if we succeed in developing a whole slew of our many abilities, yet, ignore our spiritual possibilities, we will have failed in life' s primary mission. On the other hand, if we sincerely attempt to realize our spiritual capacity, but fail in relation to some of the other capacities, we, nevertheless, will have chosen the right priorities in life as far as the Sufi path is concerned.
To be sure, there are individuals who, by the grace of God, realize their spiritual capacity and, as well, realize one or more other capabilities. These people may be great musicians or artists or poets or leaders and, yet, not have neglected their spiritual dimension.
The foregoing sort of people tend to be relatively rare. They certainly are individuals of immense ability and good fortune.
They are not necessarily the standard by which most of the rest of us ought to gauge our lives. We can appreciate such lives without either feeling compelled to emulate them or feeling one' s life is somehow impoverished for not having been as accomplished as them in various ways.
The primary focus should be on realizing our essential, spiritual capacity. Indeed, according to the Sufi masters, if one goes about the task and challenge of spiritual realization properly, one, generally, will have little interest in, or inclination toward, doing anything else - except in some minimally necessary manner that still will permit justice to be done to other facets of one' s life.
When one becomes absorbed in God, everything else becomes arranged and organized as a function of that absorption. Priorities are set, and attention is given, in relation to how possibilities and activities can be accommodated to, or become expressions of, one' s spiritual orientation.
God may inspire us to do great things. Nevertheless, this is God' s will acting on us for Divine purposes. For us, on our own, to seek to do great things above and beyond the business of realizing one' s spiritual capacity is a sign of the presence of ego. Many of us sometimes mistake the call of the ego for the call of God.
God has a part waiting for us in the Divine passion play. Whether we opt for the role of the fool who squanders his or her spiritual potential, or we strive for the part of the servant of God who struggles to realize her or his essential spiritual capacity, will make no difference to the beauty and majesty of the play.
In either case, we will bring our own, inimitable style to the existential stage. In success or failure, our contribution will be unique.
Either kind of uniqueness will fit equally well into the unfolding of the play. Our choices will neither improve nor diminish the quality of the production or staging process.
There is room for heroines and heroes. However, villains and villainesses are welcome as well. If anything, the presence of antagonistic forces merely heightens the dramatic tension of the whole affair.
In one sense, the choice of roles is entirely up to us. On the other hand, there are a variety of twists, turns and mysteries involved in the plot line.
Sometimes we can have our heart set on playing the bad guy and, suddenly, our world is turned upside down and we start acting, much to our disgust, the part of the hero or heroine. At other times we may be quite prepossessed with being on the side of right and good only to find ourselves falling head first into the underside of life.
Some of these role reversals are temporary. Some of them are permanent. In all cases, they are reflections of capacities within us, and we all wonder where we will end up when the music stops and the house lights are turned on.
We have a unique potential to know God and to experience Divinity. We each have a unique capacity to give expression to the Names and Attributes of God.
Sufi masters maintain that human beings, alone in all of creation, have the capacity to reflect all the Names and Attributes of God. Other aspects of creation do reflect various dimensions of the Names and Attributes of God according to their capacity, but none of the rest of creation has the potential given to human beings.
As indicated previously, there are differences in spiritual capacity among human beings. However, each of these capacities, if realized, can reflect the full, infinite spectrum of Divine Names and Attributes. Each has the potential to do so in a unique fashion.
Because spiritual capacities are unique, there really is no basis for comparison. All jewels have their own beauty and appeal. Each jewel brings something that cannot be offered by any other jewel.
The only ground for comparison lies within the individual. The sole criterion for such comparison is what a person has been able to actualize in the way of spiritual realization, as measured against that individual' s essential spiritual capacity. The degree of success or failure in life is a function of the status of the ratio of these two factors
Life is the opportunity provided by God to become busy with doing the things required for bringing one' s essential capacity on line. Whether or not we take advantage of the chance extended to us, is a matter of choice and an exercise in free will.
Spirituality is only one of the potentials we have been given. We each have been outfitted, so to speak, with other non-spiritual capacities. For example, the capacity for life itself is expressed through our biological nature. Our bodies, including the brain, have been equipped with sensory and locomotor modalities. In addition, we have, in varying degrees: intellectual abilities; creative capacities; a spectrum of emotional possibilities; talents of one sort or another, and a capacity for language.
The Sufi masters also sometimes talk of a wide variety of other powers and capabilities which are, under the right circumstances, available to human beings. These capacities range from: the ability to dream, to various kinds of so-called psychic and occult powers.
Many of these latter kinds of capacity are so infrequently accessed or encountered in any direct way, they are considered to be fictional in nature by most of us. Nonetheless, although such abilities are not really part of, nor pertinent to, the Sufi path, the masters of the way do confirm their existence.
Our numerous capacities generate a multiplicity of experiential possibilities, each of which is conducive to extended exploration. In fact, as human beings, we have such a diverse set of capabilities, potentials, capacities, and powers available to us, we easily become confused about, or distracted from, the purpose of life.
According to the Sufi masters, even if we succeed in developing a whole slew of our many abilities, yet, ignore our spiritual possibilities, we will have failed in life' s primary mission. On the other hand, if we sincerely attempt to realize our spiritual capacity, but fail in relation to some of the other capacities, we, nevertheless, will have chosen the right priorities in life as far as the Sufi path is concerned.
To be sure, there are individuals who, by the grace of God, realize their spiritual capacity and, as well, realize one or more other capabilities. These people may be great musicians or artists or poets or leaders and, yet, not have neglected their spiritual dimension.
The foregoing sort of people tend to be relatively rare. They certainly are individuals of immense ability and good fortune.
They are not necessarily the standard by which most of the rest of us ought to gauge our lives. We can appreciate such lives without either feeling compelled to emulate them or feeling one' s life is somehow impoverished for not having been as accomplished as them in various ways.
The primary focus should be on realizing our essential, spiritual capacity. Indeed, according to the Sufi masters, if one goes about the task and challenge of spiritual realization properly, one, generally, will have little interest in, or inclination toward, doing anything else - except in some minimally necessary manner that still will permit justice to be done to other facets of one' s life.
When one becomes absorbed in God, everything else becomes arranged and organized as a function of that absorption. Priorities are set, and attention is given, in relation to how possibilities and activities can be accommodated to, or become expressions of, one' s spiritual orientation.
God may inspire us to do great things. Nevertheless, this is God' s will acting on us for Divine purposes. For us, on our own, to seek to do great things above and beyond the business of realizing one' s spiritual capacity is a sign of the presence of ego. Many of us sometimes mistake the call of the ego for the call of God.
God has a part waiting for us in the Divine passion play. Whether we opt for the role of the fool who squanders his or her spiritual potential, or we strive for the part of the servant of God who struggles to realize her or his essential spiritual capacity, will make no difference to the beauty and majesty of the play.
In either case, we will bring our own, inimitable style to the existential stage. In success or failure, our contribution will be unique.
Either kind of uniqueness will fit equally well into the unfolding of the play. Our choices will neither improve nor diminish the quality of the production or staging process.
There is room for heroines and heroes. However, villains and villainesses are welcome as well. If anything, the presence of antagonistic forces merely heightens the dramatic tension of the whole affair.
In one sense, the choice of roles is entirely up to us. On the other hand, there are a variety of twists, turns and mysteries involved in the plot line.
Sometimes we can have our heart set on playing the bad guy and, suddenly, our world is turned upside down and we start acting, much to our disgust, the part of the hero or heroine. At other times we may be quite prepossessed with being on the side of right and good only to find ourselves falling head first into the underside of life.
Some of these role reversals are temporary. Some of them are permanent. In all cases, they are reflections of capacities within us, and we all wonder where we will end up when the music stops and the house lights are turned on.
We have a unique potential to know God and to experience Divinity. We each have a unique capacity to give expression to the Names and Attributes of God.
Sufi masters maintain that human beings, alone in all of creation, have the capacity to reflect all the Names and Attributes of God. Other aspects of creation do reflect various dimensions of the Names and Attributes of God according to their capacity, but none of the rest of creation has the potential given to human beings.
As indicated previously, there are differences in spiritual capacity among human beings. However, each of these capacities, if realized, can reflect the full, infinite spectrum of Divine Names and Attributes. Each has the potential to do so in a unique fashion.
Because spiritual capacities are unique, there really is no basis for comparison. All jewels have their own beauty and appeal. Each jewel brings something that cannot be offered by any other jewel.
The only ground for comparison lies within the individual. The sole criterion for such comparison is what a person has been able to actualize in the way of spiritual realization, as measured against that individual' s essential spiritual capacity. The degree of success or failure in life is a function of the status of the ratio of these two factors
Sunday, August 28, 2011
Baqa - A Sufi's Perspective
Deep within us there is a longing for permanence and stability. We dream of a place or condition in which we can feel completely at rest in some fundamental way.
In our heart of hearts we fervently hope that an abiding, essential sense of peace and security will somehow come into our lives and embrace us. We scan the horizons within us and around us for some trace of the very archetype, as it were, in which the idea of home, in the best sense of the term, is rooted.
This deep sense of longing or dreaming or hoping shadows us for much, if not all, of our lives. It is pervasive and persistent, and, yet, seems like a will-o'-the-wisp which cannot be pinned down in any concrete, determinate manner.
We have a feeling we might be able to recognize the object of this longing if we ever were to come face to face with it. However, in the meantime, the longing just manifests itself as: an ineffable emptiness waiting to be filled; or, as an amorphous cosmic alienation waiting to be dissipated.
Many of the activities we pursue throughout our lives are actually attempts to satisfy the aforementioned longing. We entertain a wide variety of candidates during the course of our existence on Earth.
We seek to derive experiences of essential belonging in different organizations, groups, political parties, institutions and communities. We try to resolve the longing through relationships, marriage, sexual intimacy and families. We look to careers to fill the emptiness which haunts our waking hours.
Sooner or later, most of us discover that none of the foregoing, either individually or in combination, are capable of satisfying our longing. As a result, many of us pursue activities which will either anesthetize the pain or distract us from such pain.
Thus, some of us drink to excess and take drugs. Some of us become promiscuous. Some of us take up hobbies. Some of become sports fanatics.
Some of us gamble. Some of us go shopping. Some of us become inveterate party-goers or fitness buffs. Some of us bury ourselves in our work and so on.
Sometimes we plunge into these sorts of activity as a kind of distant consolation. In other words, they don't necessarily quench the longing inside, but we find them enjoyable and, perhaps, even satisfying in certain ways.
Many of us, for the most part, have given up on ever finding a way to resolve our essential longing. Therefore, we try to find whatever small consolations in life we can and let it go at that.
In addition, due to our lack of success in locating the key or keys that will unravel the puzzle of unrequited longing, many of us gravitate toward bitterness, frustration, and disillusionment. As a result, we become prone to depression and cynicism.
Furthermore, since many of us are ill at ease with ourselves due to our feelings of alienation from things in general, as a result of our inability to experience a sense of being at home within ourselves and within the universe, many of us become easily annoyed with other people. Consequently, we tend to become involved in endless rounds of bickering, conflict and disputations.
Most of us may not even have any inkling why we do these things. They kind of just happen. We have plenty of rationalizations but no real answers.
In fleeting moments of reflection, we may feel the reverberations of the longing. However dimly we understand its significance, we often sense that satisfying that hunger is the key to many of our problems.
Yet, the solution to our dilemma remains as elusive as ever. Time moves on. The reverie evaporates before our eyes.
We long for stability and permanence, but we are inundated by transience and instability. Whatever happiness we find, it does not last. Whatever joy we find, it comes to an end. Whatever peace we stumble onto is but a brief reprieve in the eye of life's storms.
Like a roller coaster, our lives creep ever so slowly up the track to that first peak. Childhood and adolescence seem to last forever. Suddenly, our stomachs slam into our throats, and the descent of our lives takes us careening down the track through a few twists and turns to the end of the line.
We cannot get off. We cannot stop it. We only get one ride.
Desperately, we try to make sense of the ride. However, this is very difficult to do because everything is changing so quickly. Moreover, almost all of our attention and energies are spent screaming and trying not to regurgitate our lunch.
The Sufi masters indicate that essential permanence (baqa) can be realized, if God wishes, under certain circumstances or conditions. The Sufi path gives expression to these circumstances and conditions.
To find permanence and stability in the midst of fluctuation, one must permit God, through the exercise of one's free will, to remove everything except the will of God from one's soul, heart and essential being.
God alone is permanent. Consequently, everything which veils the presence of such permanence must be dissolved.
The guidance of the Sufi masters, the practices, the moral training, the struggle, the litanies, and so on are all supports provided by God to assist the individual to work toward permanence. Permanence is realized when the true self is, and the false self is not.
Only the true self is capable of giving expression to the will of God in an undistorted fashion. Only the true self is capable of participating in the quality of permanence. Only the true self has the capacity for essential and complete servitude before God. Only the perfect servant is able to reflect the will of God as God wishes it to be reflected through such a capacity.
God desires permanence for us. This is so because through permanence human capacity realizes its purpose and potential as an expression of God's will.
The reality of permanence cannot be described. It can only be experienced. Nonetheless, the experience of permanence colors, directs, shapes, informs and orients everything which the individual thinks, says, feels, does and is. This is what is entailed by those whom abide in God's permanence and, as a result, journey with, and by, Divinity.
In our heart of hearts we fervently hope that an abiding, essential sense of peace and security will somehow come into our lives and embrace us. We scan the horizons within us and around us for some trace of the very archetype, as it were, in which the idea of home, in the best sense of the term, is rooted.
This deep sense of longing or dreaming or hoping shadows us for much, if not all, of our lives. It is pervasive and persistent, and, yet, seems like a will-o'-the-wisp which cannot be pinned down in any concrete, determinate manner.
We have a feeling we might be able to recognize the object of this longing if we ever were to come face to face with it. However, in the meantime, the longing just manifests itself as: an ineffable emptiness waiting to be filled; or, as an amorphous cosmic alienation waiting to be dissipated.
Many of the activities we pursue throughout our lives are actually attempts to satisfy the aforementioned longing. We entertain a wide variety of candidates during the course of our existence on Earth.
We seek to derive experiences of essential belonging in different organizations, groups, political parties, institutions and communities. We try to resolve the longing through relationships, marriage, sexual intimacy and families. We look to careers to fill the emptiness which haunts our waking hours.
Sooner or later, most of us discover that none of the foregoing, either individually or in combination, are capable of satisfying our longing. As a result, many of us pursue activities which will either anesthetize the pain or distract us from such pain.
Thus, some of us drink to excess and take drugs. Some of us become promiscuous. Some of us take up hobbies. Some of become sports fanatics.
Some of us gamble. Some of us go shopping. Some of us become inveterate party-goers or fitness buffs. Some of us bury ourselves in our work and so on.
Sometimes we plunge into these sorts of activity as a kind of distant consolation. In other words, they don't necessarily quench the longing inside, but we find them enjoyable and, perhaps, even satisfying in certain ways.
Many of us, for the most part, have given up on ever finding a way to resolve our essential longing. Therefore, we try to find whatever small consolations in life we can and let it go at that.
In addition, due to our lack of success in locating the key or keys that will unravel the puzzle of unrequited longing, many of us gravitate toward bitterness, frustration, and disillusionment. As a result, we become prone to depression and cynicism.
Furthermore, since many of us are ill at ease with ourselves due to our feelings of alienation from things in general, as a result of our inability to experience a sense of being at home within ourselves and within the universe, many of us become easily annoyed with other people. Consequently, we tend to become involved in endless rounds of bickering, conflict and disputations.
Most of us may not even have any inkling why we do these things. They kind of just happen. We have plenty of rationalizations but no real answers.
In fleeting moments of reflection, we may feel the reverberations of the longing. However dimly we understand its significance, we often sense that satisfying that hunger is the key to many of our problems.
Yet, the solution to our dilemma remains as elusive as ever. Time moves on. The reverie evaporates before our eyes.
We long for stability and permanence, but we are inundated by transience and instability. Whatever happiness we find, it does not last. Whatever joy we find, it comes to an end. Whatever peace we stumble onto is but a brief reprieve in the eye of life's storms.
Like a roller coaster, our lives creep ever so slowly up the track to that first peak. Childhood and adolescence seem to last forever. Suddenly, our stomachs slam into our throats, and the descent of our lives takes us careening down the track through a few twists and turns to the end of the line.
We cannot get off. We cannot stop it. We only get one ride.
Desperately, we try to make sense of the ride. However, this is very difficult to do because everything is changing so quickly. Moreover, almost all of our attention and energies are spent screaming and trying not to regurgitate our lunch.
The Sufi masters indicate that essential permanence (baqa) can be realized, if God wishes, under certain circumstances or conditions. The Sufi path gives expression to these circumstances and conditions.
To find permanence and stability in the midst of fluctuation, one must permit God, through the exercise of one's free will, to remove everything except the will of God from one's soul, heart and essential being.
God alone is permanent. Consequently, everything which veils the presence of such permanence must be dissolved.
The guidance of the Sufi masters, the practices, the moral training, the struggle, the litanies, and so on are all supports provided by God to assist the individual to work toward permanence. Permanence is realized when the true self is, and the false self is not.
Only the true self is capable of giving expression to the will of God in an undistorted fashion. Only the true self is capable of participating in the quality of permanence. Only the true self has the capacity for essential and complete servitude before God. Only the perfect servant is able to reflect the will of God as God wishes it to be reflected through such a capacity.
God desires permanence for us. This is so because through permanence human capacity realizes its purpose and potential as an expression of God's will.
The reality of permanence cannot be described. It can only be experienced. Nonetheless, the experience of permanence colors, directs, shapes, informs and orients everything which the individual thinks, says, feels, does and is. This is what is entailed by those whom abide in God's permanence and, as a result, journey with, and by, Divinity.
Friday, July 29, 2011
Saturday, July 16, 2011
Balance - A Sufi Perspective
One of the most sought after, yet elusive, qualities in life is balance. We are besieged with a plethora of problems and issues which are demanding our attention: finances, family, career, education, meaning, desires, spirituality, friends, politics, health, fears, love, pollution, identity, crime, purpose, death and so on.
How do we budget our time and set our priorities to do justice to these issues? Furthermore, even if we could find the time and energy to delve into these areas with something more than superficial commitment, what should we do? What exactly does doing justice to these issues entail?
How we view death often has a huge influence on how we go about living life. Our attitudes toward death affect our system of values, goals and choices.
Who we believe ourselves to be, has ramifications for education, family, career, politics, crime and love. Are we animals? If so, what kind of animal are we?
Are we rational beings? If so, what does it mean to be rational?
Do we have a soul? If so, what, if anything, follows from this with respect to the question of identity?
What does being healthy mean? One can be physically fit and, yet, be emotionally crippled. One can be emotionally and psychologically well-adjusted to a given set of societal norms and, nonetheless, turn a blind eye to injustice, abuse, homelessness, poverty, hunger and corruption.
Some might say the ability to shut out the world and stay focused on only the things one can control is the key to emotional and psychological stability in a complex world. Yet, how many times do we discover, much to our chagrin, that the world we have shut out has the capacity to radically affect what we can and cannot control in our own lives?
No one is an island because it is in the nature of the world to refuse to leave us alone. Even if we do not go seeking the world, nonetheless, the world will come looking for us.
We may be convinced we are, in some sense of the word, spiritual beings. We may even be very much involved in spiritual activities of one sort or another.
We may prioritize our lives as a function of spiritual values, orientation and the like. Yet, in our heart of hearts, in the stillness of the night, we may wonder about: why we still have doubts and why we feel so empty and estranged from everything - especially God.
We are constantly borrowing from Paul to pay Peter and, then, borrowing from Mary to pay Paul, and so on. More specifically, we devote time to our career by borrowing, if not stealing, time from our families. We borrow money in order to buy things in order to try to make up for what we have borrowed from our families. We steal time and energy away from the pressing social issues of the day in order to work to pay back the money we have borrowed to give to our families.
We borrow time from spiritual pursuits to devote toward satisfying various sorts of physical, emotional and psychological desires we have. We go to weekly religious services as a kind of down payment on our intention to do more spiritually in the future.
We borrow time from a whole set of activities in order to have the opportunity for an education to prepare for a career and, possibly, to learn the meaning of life. When our education is completed, we borrow some more time and energy in order to go fishing, or whatever, and reflect on why we always seem to be running behind on our payments to life.
Juggling is not taught in the vast majority of public schools, secondary schools, universities and colleges of the world. There are no post-doctoral programs in the art of juggling.
If you want to be a juggler, then join the circus or go to clown school. However, many of us feel very much like clowns because our lives appear, in so many ways, to be circus-like. Our lives are filled with: animal acts; high wire feats performed without a net; death-defying stunts; fast-foods; showmanship; a lot of moving from place to place, and, finally, a fairly substantial mess to clean up before we fold up our tents and silently steal away into the night.
We have a sense in which, as card-carrying circus performers we ought to know how to juggle the different parts of our lives. Unfortunately, most of us are unable to do so because no one has taught us the necessary skills.
The Sufi masters are very accomplished jugglers. They have dedicated the better part of their lives to learning the techniques, discipline, concentration and aesthetics necessary to be artful practitioners with respect to meeting the extraordinary challenge of keeping all the components of life in harmonious movement.
In order to be a proficient juggler in the mystical sense, one needs to learn when and how to grab hold of a component of life. Furthermore, in order to ply one's craft competently, one also needs to know when and how to let go of the various aspects of one's life. One also needs to know where to place these features as one releases them.
In addition, one needs to know how to simultaneously focus on what is at hand, as well as to be aware of what is going on around one. To be capable of juggling excellence, one must be prepared to improvise, on the spur of the moment, as unforeseen contingencies threaten the harmonious movement of the different components of one's life.
To be a Sufi juggler, one must learn to trust one's inherent capacity to juggle. However, before one can learn to trust oneself in this regard, one must learn how to trust the individual who is helping one to develop juggling skills.
Without trust of this latter sort, one will never find one's way to realizing one's inherent capacity for juggling. Without trust in one's teacher one will never come to understand, with any clarity or intensity, that learning how to juggle is a fundamental part of the calling and purpose of human existence.
To be a Sufi juggler, one has to have a deep, sincere and abiding desire to commit oneself to all that becoming a juggler presupposes. One must be prepared to make sacrifices and to accept the rigors of the training program. One must be ready to patiently deal with, and persevere through, the frustrations of protracted periods of juggling incompetence, before one experiences the joy and exhilaration of being, if God wishes, a successful participant in such an art form.
Ultimately, to be a Sufi juggler, one must understand that one is not the juggler but the jugglee. One is the object being juggled. One's life, in all its myriad aspects, is brought into harmonious movement by the Supreme Juggler. As such, learning to be a Sufi juggler involves giving oneself over to that process and not interfering with it, and, thereby, permitting the forces of balance and harmony to flow through one in an unimpeded fashion.
To be a Sufi juggler, one must abandon one's desire to be a juggler. To be a Sufi juggler, one must be content with being a witness to, and servant of, the acts of the one and only true juggler in existence.
To attain this station of understanding, may seem to be a rather dubious, if not trivial, achievement. Nevertheless, those individuals who have been permitted to bring this process to resolution, are deeply satisfied with the result and prefer it to all other possibilities. They indicate that all lasting and non-illusory meaning, purpose, identity, significance, direction, value, and balance are derived from, and through, such an understanding.
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
Sufi Reflections Podcast No. 39
Sufi Reflections Podcast No. 39 is now available for downloading. We hope you'll join us! This is our new staff member at Bilquees Press and the Interrogative Imperative Institute, Yuri, becoming acquainted with the podcasting microphone.
Sunday, April 24, 2011
Saturday, March 05, 2011
Saturday, February 19, 2011
Epistle to a Sam Harris Nation
Epistle to a Sam Harris Nation: Debunking the Moral Landscape by Bill Whitehouse is now available in the iBookstore and Barnes and Noble.
Saturday, January 29, 2011
Epistle to a Sam Harris Nation: Debunking the Moral Landscape by Bill Whitehouse (Anab) now in the Kindle Store
'Epistle To A Sam Harris Nation: Debunking The Moral Landscape' takes on the ideas of Sam Harris using his own chosen tools -- namely, reason and science. When those tools are turned back on his book, 'The Moral Landscape', one comes to understand that his perspective is very much like an onion since, after one peels away the various decaying layers of philosophy, reasoning, and science, there is really nothing left at the heart of his worldview.
Sam Harris has been raised by many of the citizens of a 'Sam Harris Nation' (i.e., his many followers and admirers) to an emperor-like status. Nonetheless, in reality, this would-be emperor has no genuine clothes of royalty since the material from which his conceptual garments are woven are fairly common, if not threadbare. In fact, his ideas are clothed in a way which gives them the appearance of being fashioned in a very sturdy and reliable manner, but such appearances are little more than an illusion.
He often claims that his kingdom is ruled through reason and science. Yet, when the topography of his ideas are carefully explored, there are many problems to be found hiding in the nooks and crannies of his thought processes.
His reasoning is not always rational; his science is not always factual; and his explanations are often problematic. Furthermore, he asserts that faith is for the naive and foolish, but his perspective is glued together by a variety of different grades of faith -- some of them quite faulty -- which he calls by other names such as: well-being, probability, theory, hypothesis, science, randomness, evolution, neurobiology, reason, and so on.
Sam Harris has harsh words for religious extremists -- as well he should. However, he apparently fails to understand how his own position incorporates a brand of irreligious fundamentalism which is inclined to be just as blind and unyielding as the religious people whom he wishes to criticize.
'Epistle To A Sam Harris Nation: Debunking The Moral Landscape' doesn't just criticize the perspective which is developed in Sam Harris' latest book, 'The Moral Landscape.' The former book introduces a variety of constructive ideas with respect to moral philosophy, political philosophy, evolution, science, the process of reasoning, and methodology that grows out of the process through which the problems and errors that are present in Sam Harris' 'The Moral Landscape' are corrected and refined.
Thursday, December 09, 2010
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