For Entertainment Purposes Only
by
Robert Rabbin
The publisher of an Australian magazine
asked me to write an article for his next issue.
He said the theme would be "How
much deeper am I willing to go?" I liked that. I like the spirit, the edge, the
almost-dare of his simple question. I like the way "how much deeper" challenges
the complacency of the known and disturbs the comfort of the familiar. If
spiritual work does anything, it challenges and disturbs with just as much force
and surprise as it illuminates and enlightens. In fact, if our spiritual work
does not challenge what we know, if it does not disturb our habitual patterns of
thought, perception, and action, then it is not spiritual work at all; it is
merely a form of self-medication.
One of the ways in which students and teachers alike self-medicate themselves is
to believe what they say.
This is epidemic in spiritual circles.
"The world is an illusion," "Only the Self is real," "Everything is an
expression of the Divine" are common mantras of self-medication. Some of the
most beloved spiritual concepts --
ego death,
Christ Consciousness, Buddha-nature,
Self-realization, enlightenment --
have a similarly narcotizing effect.
I don't believe anything I say, and I state that several times during my talks
and workshops. I make of point of saying, "Everything I say comes stamped with
For Entertainment Purposes Only.
Do not believe anything I say; I
don't. And I don't believe anything you say."
People think I'm joking, or being
glib. I'm not. I'm being quite sincere, and as honest as I can be. I have
tremendous respect for people who explore reality, who question and examine
their ideas, images, and beliefs, who seek to discover the wellspring of
universal wisdom within themselves, who are willing to abandon the prison of the
known to live in the wild and free wilderness of the
capacity to know.
I do not regard these efforts lightly, nor those who make them. I number myself
among those who have.
Which perhaps explains why my words often affect people very deeply; my words
have even been accused of causing minds to awaken and hearts to open, of
stimulating intuitive centers of knowing, of setting off fire-alarms of
Kundalini. If I don't believe anything I say, how can this be? If my words are
for entertainment purposes only, how can this be? From where do my words find
their power if not in their respective meanings and collective concepts?
I was at a dinner party in Sydney last week. We got to talking about talking,
since a number of the guests were lecturers, workshop leaders, and coaches. One
man asked me what I spoke about, "What is your topic?" I said that my topic was
not about content, but context. That raised a few eyebrows. I explained, "I talk
so as to create a context, or field, of Silence. I talk to enchant the Silence
beyond the mind into full view within those present. I talk to dissolve the
meaning of words in favor of the significance of their halos of Silence. I talk
to undermine concepts and conceptual knowing, not with a mean spirit, not
aggressively, but with compassion and humor and, yes, a fair bit of focus that
crosses, from time to time, the border of intensity. I talk so that the capacity
to know replaces knowing, so that openness replaces dogma, so that curiosity
replaces certainty, so that the eternal present replaces time, so that
creativity replaces imitation, so that Self replaces self, and ..." Then I
stopped talking; after all, it was a dinner party, not a workshop. (Where were
my manners?)
Just as cigarettes have been described as a delivery device for nicotine, I
might describe my words as a delivery device for
shakti,
cosmic energy-juice, which when aroused from its dormancy within individuals
induces profound psychic stillness and inner Silence. Within this Silence, the
mind awakens and the heart opens naturally. Within this Silence, the menu gives
way to delicacies and maps to a living paradise. My brother Rumi was about as
close as one can get when he said, "However you think it is, it's different than
that." By extension, however you say it is, it's different than that.
Whereas all students and most teachers believe everything they think and say, my
thoughts and words come tagged with
For Entertainment Purposes Only.
The disclaimer of Don't believe
anything I say! is, as I see it,
the source of the power of my words to affect transformation in people, if we
understand transformation as moving from virtual to actual reality.
Transformation is not realized by adopting a different set of beliefs,
refurbishing your self-image, joining a particular sect, being a disciple of one
guru or another, or parroting "spiritual" phrases. Transformation is realized
only when one awakens to and within reality, which is wholly transconceptual and
well beyond the grasp of thought or language.
I analogize believing in what we think and say to living in
virtual
reality.
The technology "that generates more or less realistic illusions of reality"
is language. The "operating system that simulates reality" is the thinking mind,
version Concept OS X (for all manner of people-computer platforms and browsers).
As long as we believe what we think and say, as long as we believe what our
teachers think and say, as long as teachers believe in what they think and say
-- we shall live together in virtual reality. And so long as we live in virtual
reality, our spiritual practices are sedatives, our sadness and despair will
persist, our confusion and conflicts will grow, and our longing for wholeness
and freedom will be unfulfilled.
What can we do about this? How can you discover for yourself the difference
between your virtual reality, and the reality you had hoped to experience?
First, a metaphor, then a few suggestions.
A movie is created as individual frames of celluloid are projected onto a white
screen at 24 frames per second. The
projection speed creates the
illusion of the movie and its world of beginnings and endings, of sound and
drama, of past and future, of characters and plot. The movie seems so real it is
easy to believe in the illusion and be swept away by the on-screen events,
forgetting that we are sitting in a theater eating popcorn. But, if we were to
slow down the speed of the projector so that the individual frames were
projected at, say, 15 frames per second, the "reality" of the movie would break
apart. The sound would become garbled and unintelligible, picture itself would
flicker terribly. If we slowed down the projector even more, to say 3 frames per
second, we'd have a slide show, wouldn't we? One celluloid frame after another,
interspersed with glimpses of the white screen. Nothing would make sense.
The virtual reality of the movie cannot be sustained when the projector slows
down: the illusion falls apart. We see what we had not seen before: the white
screen as the unchanging background on which our "movie" is projected. In this
metaphor, the screen is Silence, the capacity to know, the freedom to create.
We create our virtual reality in much the same way in our own lives. We believe
in illusions that seem so real. In this case it is our own mind that creates the
movie by projecting thoughts, concepts, beliefs, memories, and future fantasies
on to the white screen of reality. We believe everything we think and say,
because we think and speak with such speed that we lose sight of the white
screen of Silence, except as a concept within the virtual reality movie we are
watching. As we slow the speed of our mind-projector, we begin to see the white
screen of reality on which we project our movie until, finally, the illusion of
virtual reality falls apart.
Now, various forms of meditation are supposed to slow down the mind-projector
enough for us to glimpse actual reality. But Concept OS X is so powerful, so
habitual, that immediately begin thinking and talking about what happened in
meditation, and we, of course, believe everything. The movie is again rolling
along, and we are trapped within it.
Now, the suggestions. The experiments. The possibility of awakening from virtual
to actual reality.
Between each thought and around each word is a space of Silence and eternity.
Put your attention on that space of Silence between each thought and around each
word. Let the thoughts and words pass through you. Leave them alone. Just focus
on Silence. Develop a sensitivity to this still space, to Silence, even while
being active -- especially while being active. Monitor the speed of your own
mind-projector; calibrate the critical point at which you begin to believe in
what you think and say, losing yourself to a virtual reality in which everything
seems real and yet nothing is real.
Be aware of each breath, as it enters and leaves your body, and as it settles
deep within you for the timeless instant. Our breath is life itself, grounding
us in the here and now, linking us to all creation. Our belly is the belly of
the Earth herself, and of planets we have not yet seen, and stars we have not
yet known, waiting to be discovered.
When you speak, listen to your speaking: to the chosen, and unchosen, words, and
to the boundless space of Silence surrounding each word, chosen or not.
When you listen, listen to your own listening: is it open, welcoming, and
loving? Or is it suspicious, insistent, and arrogant? Are you listening to
learn, to grow, to understand; or are you listening to judge, criticize, and
defend?
If we become still enough, we will be filled with Silence, and in this Silence,
if you want, you can be an irresistible magnet towards which anything and
everything from everywhere and nowhere can come at any time to illuminate,
thrill, and enchant every cell of your infinite being. You can dissolve all
ideas and identities we project onto Life, thus separating ourselves from Life
and its mystery, which can be known only in Silence.
What is Silence? It is before words. It is before thought. It is before self. It
is before everything. It is the unmanifest, formless, wordless Reality slowly
manifesting within you, coming in to form, into words, hovering between and
surrounding these two seeming separate worlds: unmanifest and manifest, formless
and form, wordless and words.
Before words create confusion and doubt, before all the holding tight and
pushing away, before all the rushing from here to there, before all the right
and wrong, the me and you, self and other:
Isn't this what you are: unending openness and pure delight?
Isn't this what you want: to breathe with the Earth and see the secret flowers
blooming in your soul?
Isn't this what you know: Silence, Silence, and more Silence, and
then...mystery...and then love? And then, more love, then Silence, then love.
Back and forth from Silence to love dissolving self and other, right and wrong,
knowing and not knowing, confusion and clarity, meaning and
meaninglessness...all gone, nowhere to stand, only Silence and love, Silence and
love.
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Robert Rabbin,
president of center/SourceSolutions, Inc. and founder of Radical Sages, is a
contemporary mystic, keynote speaker, executive coach/consultant, and writer who
is currently living in Australia. He is a leading exponent of Silence and
self-inquiry as a way of revealing our authentic being and of living in wisdom,
love, and peace. For contact and further information, please visit
www.centersourcesolutions.com and www.radicalsages.com.

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© 2006/Robert Rabbin/All Rights
Reserved
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