Common folks tired with traditional Western spirituality often look to the East--to Buddhism, Vedanta, or forms of Yoga--for more expansive takes on the spiritual and mystical. Or else they (more commonly nowadays) submerse themselves in eclectic mixes (or mishmashes) of various New Age, New Thought, and/or Neopagan hybrids that draw from Eastern spirituality, pop culture, folklore, and fakelore. Mysticism and spirituality focused on nondualism and self-actualization, however, is hidden as it were, in the Western Mystery Tradition and dates back to at least the time of Pythagoras, who lived about the same time as Buddha. A strand of the philosophy and mysticism of the pre-Socratics, including Pythagoras, carried over into Neoplatonism, a type of thinking first attributed to Plotinus, who lived in the third century of the common era (about the time that Christianity started to gain legitimacy and become standardized). With the rise of Christianity, however, the work of Plotinus and those who followed him, such as Iamblichus, was sidelined to be picked up and reframed centuries later during the Italian Renaissance.
I came across this insightful YouTube presentation of Plotinus' discourse on Time and Being. Truths spoken by a largely forgotten Western seer thousands of years before Buddhist or Vedantist thought hit this side of the globe.
The magical and mystical art, illustration, and insights on Eastern spirituality and Western Mystery Tradition of writer and/artist Dee Rapposelli (Soror ZSD23), author of The Seal of Secrets of the World and the Sorcerers and Magi series
Showing posts with label Vedanta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vedanta. Show all posts
Saturday, January 23, 2016
Time and Being. Plotinus and Forgotten Western Enlightened Seers
Labels:
enlightenment,
eternal,
finding peace,
higher self,
life and death,
Neoplatonism,
nondualism,
Plotinus,
present moment,
spirituality,
Vedanta
Monday, September 14, 2015
At Peace in the Maw of the World
From the unreal, lead us to the Real
From death, lead us to Immortality
Reach us through and through ourselves
And evermore protect us by Thy sweet, compassionate face.
--Vedantist
prayer derived from the Vedas
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Master Peace Sigil September 11 2015 |
Although the satsang
took place on a campgrounds, I roomed on a compound that was part Buddhist
abbey, part Druid sanctuary, and part organic farm with a fabulous view of
Mount McAdams and the Clackamas mountain range. I would’ve been happy enough to
just meditate and muck-about at that place, but I did sit through about 28 hrs
of lecture/discussion (the satsang)
that didn’t need to be more than 3. Still, it was insightful, and I think I
returned home a little changed. A bit more dispassionate, temperate, and observant
perhaps . . . reflective of what spaciousness is like and what the imposition
of a middle-aged human body and its personal circumstances is like, too.
I came home to the 9-11 anniversary, the Syrian refugee
crisis, a media circus surrounding a serially adulterous Christian
fundamentalist anarchist “martyr” who refuses to do her job and issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples, conflagrations across the US West Coast, and the usual
morass of American anarchy, zombie apocalypto, and anti-intellectualism.
I got the idea to make an image of being at peace in the midst of the horrific mayhem we too eagerly like to remind each other that life
is—even when it is not in our personal world sphere.
I
pulled out my tin of Caran d’ Arche wax crayons and had a little fun building the image. Then I goaded some friends who follow a kind of New Agey, Wicca lite, manifestation spirituality into building a Chaos Magic-type sigil with me by embellishing the crayon sketch with stickers and cabochons. I then made a series of digital and painted images of the sketch.
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Digital version of my sketch (upper left) and two versions of being at peace within that ferocity. Images print as 18 x 24 Copyright Dee Rapposelli 2015 |
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At Peace in the World Maw Acrylic on stretched sail cloth 24 x 36 copyright Dee Rapposelli 2015 |
Labels:
9-11,
chaos magic,
Dee Rapposelli,
digital art,
finding peace,
Kali,
life and death,
sigil,
spirituality,
Vedanta,
world machine
Sunday, September 6, 2015
Seeking the Original Self
I'm looking for the face I had before the world was made. WB Yeats
Although I’ve spent the past several years delving into
folk magic, Neopaganism, and the Western Mystery Tradition, my primary
spiritual orientation is Advaita Vedanta. Advaita Vedanta is a form of Hinduism
that I was introduced to nearly 40 years ago. It is a system that dates back to
about the 6th century CE and is primarily founded in the Upanishads.
The spiritual journey in Advaita Vedanta is a reclamation
of the atman, a philosophical term
that is translated from Sanskrit to English as “The Self.” Finding Self is
realizing who/what you really are. That Self is not your body or personality or
“baggage” or the drama of your life. It is also not what you want to become,
spiritually speaking. (See my blog entry on my Spiritual Ideal project for more
on that). The Self, in Vedantist philosophy, is the mechanism out of which all
these interdependently arising things express themselves like suds on the
surface of water or a movie against a movie screen or dream in the REM sleep of
a dreamer.
The question is: What is it to wake up from the idea of
yourself?
Becoming truly real, conscious, and capable
of free will begins by realizing the whimsical and fabricated nature of one’s
own being—the idea of self—and then detaching from the automaton (the robot) of
its personality, habits, and conditioning. Then the person who is the life
beneath the mask of selfhood opens her eyes and watches herself reveling
through the motions of daily life like a dreamer reveling in lucidity. The
dreamer is pristinely aware of what she and everyone and thing around her is and
has the ability to truly exercise free will within the field of consciousness
and experience. Spiritual types call this “enlightenment.”
This past summer, I became an
isolation-tank enthusiast. Yes, a few times a month, I enter a pitch black and virtually
soundless chamber and float on my back in buoyant saline for an hour or so.
In the tank, all there is to do is watch
the mind as it sinks into a theta state. Ontological thoughts emerge during
these sessions—thoughts about being and meaning. And I sometimes think, “What
is it to wake up from the idea of myself?” Who am I when I am not the
circumstantial preferences, habits, and conditioning the world made into me? In
the words of poet W. B. Yeats, what is “the face I had before the world was made”?
In working through how to express this in
my art work, I found, in a box of old photos, an elegantly brooding picture of
myself at age 3. Its background depicts Christmastide, and there I am standing
with a gift-box bow on my head, like a grumpy house cat on the head of which an
ornament has been unwantedly placed.
I excised, cleaned up, and colorized the
figure in the photo but then opted to use it in monochrome to better convey the
brooding composure. The child here is contemplating all those questions raised
in that Talking Heads song Once in a
Lifetime:
And you may ask yourself
What is that beautiful house?
And you may ask yourself
Where does that highway go to?
And you may ask yourself
Am I right?...Am I wrong?
And you may say to yourself
My God!...What have I done?!
That image is juxtaposed with a stairway to heaven where
perhaps those answers reside ....
Favorite quotes on "Self-Realization":
“If you dissociate from the body and rest in consciousness, you will be
happy, serene, and free from bondage.”
--Ashtavakra Samhita 1:4
“He sees
the totality of objects appearing and disappearing in the space of
consciousness, like reflections in a mirror. Suddenly, all of his thought
constructs are destroyed through the recognition, after a thousand lives, of
his true, essential nature, which surpasses ordinary experience and is replete
in unprecedented bliss. He is struck with awe, mouth gaping. Upon attaining the
experience of spaciousness, his true essential nature comes forward. –Spandakarikas,
from section 1, verse 11 (from the advaitic Kashmir Shaivite tradition)
Labels:
Advaita,
consciousness,
Dee Rapposelli,
digital art,
enlightenment,
self-realization,
spiritual ideal,
spirituality,
Vedanta,
W B Yeats
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