Friday, August 3, 2007 membership
In the Gurdjieff work, and in spiritual work in general, we may gradually begin to appreciate the idea that there needs to be a relationship between the "lower" and the "higher."
Put differently, there needs to be a point of contact established between levels, and the individual manifestation of human consciousness can help provide that point of contact. But how?
The outer form of any work becomes a strong attraction. When I first saw this, I was cynical about it; I have often observed that many people in the Gurdjieff work seemed determined to manifest as faux Sufis. Others don Zen Buddhist robes or Hindu attire, fill their house with paraphernalia from other cultures (I'm guilty myself) and so on. If we're not donning the garments of pious religious practices, we're donning the gay apparel of popular culture, piercing or tattooing our flesh in a desperate attempt to become a member of whatever the tribe du jour may be. Even atheism becomes a bauble to be worn as adornment.
Admittedly, my cynicism on this matter may be misplaced, but my observations, I think, aren't.
Everyone ends up in works, or religions, to some extent because of their outer form. Outer forms, like cells, create "receptive surfaces" to attract and bind members- or, in the case of cells, molecules. The tricky thing is that molecules that get bound firmly to the surface never penetrate to the inside of the cell.
And the inside of the cell is where all the action is.
Inside us is where all our work ultimately needs to take place. In addition, we have to find our Being within our life. That is, within our life as it is. Devoid of trappings or attachment to trappings, divorced from the superficial appearances of form, we have to learn to dwell within this exact life of our own, as it is.
If that life is being a rock and roll guitarist, or a business executive, or a registered nurse-- whatever it is, here in this modern world, that is what it needs to be. None of us need to adopt the styles, motifs, fashions, or habits of past or foreign cultures in order to be what we are.
So here we are, within what we are, as we are. It's this question of the organic experience of inhabiting our life that interests me: if we are here, within this body, within this life, breathing in and out, what else do we need?
Do we need to look like we "belong" to Buddhism, to Christianity, to America-- or to the Taliban? Is that where our inner identity comes from? Or do we all need to look like we belong to the human species?
We say we live in the "information age." What does that mean? What is the inner form? What is in-formation?
What we really need to become a member of is...
ourself.
May your trees bear fruit, and your wells yield water.
Saturday, August 4, 2007 discipline
So far, so good. I have made it to the airport in Seoul, and the internet is working.
As I got off the plane at about 3:40 a.m. local time, I noticed- having just woken up- that I was rather negative. I often notice this state first thing in the morning when the parts are not properly connected yet. This leads me to conclude that the first thing in the morning is not a good time to take a barometric reading of our emotional state; it isn't likely to be accurate, and we shouldn't let the first impressions of how we feel prejudice the possibilities of the day. Best sit back an hour or two and wait to see just exactly how it is once the centers get a better channel of communication up between them.
Now, on to today's subject matter.
The impressions of life are like a torrent of water rushing into our organism. As they arrive, they encounter the solid, stony resistance of our personality. Turbulence results; water needs to seek the lowest point, it has a wish to descend and to feed the ocean. The stone, however, stands in its way.
There is something miraculous about this exact set of conditions: under other circumstances, in other temperatures, water would be solid or stone might be molten. But here we are, in these exact conditions. We're in luck! Special things can happen.
Stone channels water; water erodes stone. Eventually the process of erosion produces soil.
Finer particles, imbued with the moisture, create new possibilities. A new factor- the vibrant green of organic life- emerges. Intimately assembled from the finest particles of both elements, water and earth, it breaths air and sustains itself on its own inner fires.
The water has to submit to the discipline of interaction with stone in order to reach its destination. In doing so, it alters it: the stone softens, the water informs it, even as the landscape guides it. In Lila, Robert Pirsig describes these forces as the static and dynamic forces of life.
We have to take in the impressions of our lives whether we want to or not. They arrive on the doorstep of consciousness relentlessly. The question is whether we take them in superficially, habitually, and let their seed fall on fallow ground, or whether we take them in more consciously, thereby creating new possibilities within ourselves.
Undertaking the effort of learning how to take in impressions with more attention—so that they fall deeper within the organism-involves discipline. The concept is common to just about every spiritual work on the planet. The question in front of me today is under what authority the discipline is understood to be.
The famous parable of the centurion (Matthew, 8:5) whose servant was healed by Christ underscores the idea that just an understanding of authority alone makes miraculous things possible for man. The palsied servant was not present, but because the legionnaire understood what authority meant, Christ healed him, commenting, "I have not found so great faith, no, not in Israel."
In life, we encounter authority in many forms. One could discuss conventional authority at length, but today we’re going to stick to the question of what spiritual, or inner, authority a man agrees to submit to.
With extraordinarily few exceptions, every human being’s “original spiritual authorities” are their parents. Indeed, Gurdjieff advised his pupils that they should learn to properly honor their parents for this very reason.
Typically, when humans grow older, unless they are atheists or agnostics, they submit to the authority of a religion, the external structure. Within that context they may submit to a hierarchy of individuals, but the overarching principles are those of the church or temple itself.
Within more esoteric works, one initially agrees to submit to the discipline of a teacher. It’s usually considered a terrific thing to find a teacher because then one has guidance.
It strikes me, however, that all of these logical steps fall short of the mark. It’s all still an outsourcing of authority.
The discipline that a man or woman ultimately must learn to submit themselves to is their own discipline. We cannot assume responsibility for ourselves, for who and what we are, unless we agree with ourselves to undertake our own work.
We must make our own efforts, not the ones others suggest for us. It is just this effort to discover and submit to the higher inner authority that already lies within us that is necessary.
So why aren’t we willing to come to something more definite for ourselves in our own work?
There is a tendency for us to actively wish that everything within remains as amorphous and undefined as possible. It’s nice if the picture’s fuzzy. As long as we fail to focus the lens, we can imagine all kinds of fantastic imagery that is just… about… to… emerge and make for a very beautiful picture. Any minute now. Until that happens best keep the lens unfocused, because, well, it might just ruin everything.
I don’t think this works. The inner lens needs to become more focused, the picture needs to become clearer. We need for ourselves to make an effort to know what the image we are composing consists of.
So we have to learn to demand of ourselves that we sharpen our attention to inner study, that we redouble our efforts at seeing just exactly what it is that is going on inside us. If we are going to make any profit from living in the midst of this rushing waterfall of impressions—and in this we appear to have little or no choice, do we?—we need to keep our wits about us.
What do we ask of ourselves in this daily life? When we see our negativity, how do we meet it? What inner tasks do we set for ourselves? Under whose authority do we work?
Life flows inward.
If we truly have a wish to be, we must cultivate an inner discipline that helps us to be there as it arrives.
Stay tuned for more reports from China.
May your trees bear fruit, and your wells yield water.
Share with your friends: |