To: K-list 
Recieved: 2002/04/02  19:10  
Subject: [K-list] Check this out 
From: el_bombastico256
  
On 2002/04/02  19:10, el_bombastico256 posted thus to the K-list: i found this on some web-site, i can't remeber where, but i found it  
kinda interresting.  See what u think 
============================================== 
All One
 
In the beginning, there was Existence alone --  
One only, without a second.  
It, the One, thought to itself:  
"Let Me be many, let Me grow forth."  
Thus, out of Itself, it projected the universe,  
and having projected the universe out of Itself,  
It entered into every being.  
All that is has its self in It alone.  
Of all things It is the subtle essence.  
It is the truth. It is the Self.  
And you are That. 
 
-- Chandogya Upanishad
  
This is an excerpt from Shared Transformation newsletter issue #44/45  
(Divine Encounters), orginally published March 2000. Part I of this  
article is an expanded version of a message I originally posted to  
several Internet Kundalini lists. Part II is an essay by Sylvia  
Hancock, and Part III is some of my closing thoughts on this subject. 
 
Part I
 
by El Collie
 I caught a very interesting program on TLC the other night  
called "Life After Death." During a segment on rare, hellish NDEs,  
there was a depiction of the God/Self/Source experience I had 32  
years ago. The narrator began this portion by intoning: "Darkness,  
Void, Vacuum, Loneliness, Absence, Nothingness, Nonexistence. . ."
 Nancy Evans Bush described a near-death-experience that happened to  
her 35 years ago. A voice or awareness informed her: "You never  
existed, you will never exist. You're not real. Nothing you ever knew  
existed. Nor does anyone you think you ever knew, nor your life, nor  
where you live. You made it all up." She goes on to say, "This meant  
that not only did I not exist, but the baby and her year old sister  
[her children] didn't exist. Your mother, your husband, nobody you  
know exists. You're not real, and nothing you know is real."
 She concludes: "I found it instant holocaust." Yet she was compelled  
to deal with this awakening for the rest of her life, and slowly came  
to terms with it: "There is a gift in these experiences. Now, it's  
not a gift we want to get, but if we're stubborn and hang in there,  
we work through a lot of issues. We come to discover our religious  
faith in incredibly deep ways that we couldn't if we just dazzled  
around on the happy level. So what I'm trying to do is go beyond the  
idea that pain = bad = punishment = hell = eternity = despair.  
Because the alternative to despair I think is joy, which is different  
than happiness. But the paradoxical nature of this is that in order  
to get to real joy, we have to be able to accept suffering as part of  
us. And I know that sounds bizarre. But I didn't make up the  
rules. . . and it just seems to work that way."
 The spiritual journey can veer into various levels of ego-loss in  
which our sense of self-identity is momentarily or permanently  
altered. The Eastern religions in particular extol the dissolution of  
ego -- the release of our sense of "me" as a separate and  
rigid "somebody" in the world. These traditions regard ego- 
transcendence as essential to spiritual liberation and enlightenment.  
Most of us have experienced some degree of ego-loss, often as a self- 
expansion or self-eclipsing in the presence of something awesomely  
vast or beautiful: the spectacular wonders of nature, the  
encompassing joy of love, or through powerful inner experiences of  
sublime, mystical states of consciousness. I've had episodes of grace  
when, as if something suddenly changed the channel on my perception,  
I've been shifted into states of euphoric bliss. Everything became a  
sweetly flowing effortlessness in which I felt carried along as  
ephemerally as a summer breeze.
 This, and other more common ego-suspension experiences mentioned  
above, are very different in their psychological impact than the  
stark confrontation with the illusory nature of existence which Nancy  
Bush and I encountered. The positive experiences have a melting- 
quality whereby ego-boundaries are blurred and we feel ourselves to  
be One with life. By contrast, being divested of all previous notions  
of self is a great shock to the psyche. At this deepest level, not  
only one's sense of individuality but one's total sense of reality  
implodes. One's entire perceptual orientation is turned upside down  
and inside out.  
In his classic compendium, The Perennial Philosophy, Aldous Huxley  
disclosed that "direct awareness of the 'eternally complete  
consciousness,' which is the ground of the material world, is a  
possibility occasionally actualized by some human beings at almost  
any stage of their own personal development, from childhood to old  
age, and at any period of the race's history." Spontaneous awakenings  
have apparently been known throughout history; the Vedantists,  
according to William James, acknowledged that "one may stumble into  
superconsciousness sporadically, without the previous discipline."  
(from The Varieties of Religious Experience)
 Awakening to the "eternally complete consciousness" isn't about being  
in the presence of the One or feeling union with God, both of which  
assume the existence of two entities, self and Divine. In this  
experience, one's personal identity is obliterated. Nothing exists  
but self-aware Consciousness that knows itself to be the single and  
whole reality subsuming all space and time. The collapse of the  
phenomenal world (which doesn't instantly vanish from view, but is  
seen to be a stupendous "trick" of the One Mind) is disemboweling to  
the psyche. This was the most harrowing, soul-shattering, and  
simultaneously the most illuminating and transcendent experience of  
my life. For me, the unbearable thing was not that El Collie had  
vanished; my self-deletion was akin to removing a costume. The  
problem was that what remained was a single Consciousness which  
existed in absolute aloneness.
 The "eternally complete consciousness," a. k. a. God/Goddess/Self is  
the Infinite One proclaimed by mystics from every tradition. Direct  
knowing of the One Consciousness dissolves the self who would be  
the "knower." There is no one standing apart from the One to bear it  
witness when awakening occurs. Rather, the individual self is  
understood to be an illusion of a separate identity. All duality  
ceases to have meaning; there is no opposition or division anywhere.  
In the deepest sense, no one can awaken to this truth. Becoming Self- 
Realized is the experience of knowing there never was and never will  
be anyone to become enlightened, and that nothing but Consciousness  
IT-Self is eternally real. Mystics throughout the ages have struggled  
to convey this apparently logic-defying Reality which seems to be  
saying that nobody is there when satori/samadhi occurs. But that is  
just it -- there is no body, there is only the One Eternal Self, the  
true Self who we all are. In this highest sense, we do not each have  
a distinct and separate Atman/Self. Rather, we are individuations,  
creative expressions of a Single Being. Throughout my life this  
knowledge has followed me as a reminder that nothing in this world is  
entirely as it seems, particularly not my own ego-self.
 
Whoever wrote the script for the TV program obviously found it  
inconceivable that Nancy Bush had a genuine revelation of  
Self/Source, so the narrator inserted the explanation that Nancy's  
story exemplified one of the hell experiences that Stanislav Grof  
says is the product of a terrible childhood. Wrong on every count.  
Grof actually discusses the type of awakening Nancy experienced on a  
tape called "The Cosmic Game." On this tape, Grof distinguishes  
between experiencing deities and divine personages (Buddha, Jesus,  
Shiva, Kuan Yin, Divine Light, etc. ) and experiencing the core  
God/Self -- the I-AM of pure consciousness. Many of the people who  
have this core experience (which a friend of mine calls "God-in-the- 
Void") seem to be exhilarated by the absolute freedom of realizing  
that everything and everyone is an illusion. But some -- like Nancy,  
me, and others I've met who are more love-and-relationship oriented -- 
 are devastated by the eternal aloneness of Self/God. And I've run  
across a number of people who have had this experience but buried it  
in rationalizations afterwards because they couldn't bear to carry  
the knowledge of eternal emptiness in which nothing/nobody really  
exists.
 The few people I've personally met who awakened to the "you don't  
exist, nothing is real, nobody you love is real" Source/Self have  
been mentally and emotionally eviscerated by the experience. Yet for  
me, while still in the egoless God/Self state, there was also a  
spontaneous shift into the joy that Nancy later discovered was the  
second half of the equation. So I didn't spend years working  
through "issues" to get to that completion. My joy came during the  
experience of God/Self's ecstatic love for all creation -- even while  
acutely aware that all creation is maya, dreamstuff, nothingness.
 So I came "back" from it both reverberating with love and shattered  
by the knowledge of God/Self's solitary predicament. Reconciling  
God/Self knowledge with just about any other facet of existence was a  
humongous challenge. For a very long time, although I continued to  
function normally on the surface, I was in a twilight world where  
nothing, including myself, seemed to have any substance. I pretended  
not to know what I knew, and I was ever in search of an illumined  
soul who might somehow help me bear the weight of my secret knowledge.
 There was always an element of absurdity in the attempt to find  
someone who understood. I was ever aware that "I" in the encapsulated  
form of a human El Collie was a hollow shell, a clever pretense that  
Consciousness used to deliberately disguise itself. I knew why the  
disguise was necessary, while at the same time, I knew there was  
nothing which could be hidden and no one to hide from. I had the  
acute sense that I was a transparent vessel through which God  
plaintively sought relief from being God. I found myself filled with  
tender envy for those who believed in a God who was "other" -- a  
deity they could adore from a distance, sweetly enfolded in a  
relationship of child to Father or lover to Beloved. The God that had  
exposed IT-Self to me could neither be approached nor escaped from.
 Trying to come to terms with my lasting sense that nothing was real,  
I went on a rampage of reading all the religious and occult  
literature of every sect and creed I could find in hopes that I might  
come across some piece of wisdom that would rescue me from the  
immensity of what I knew. I found what I had experienced being  
described over and over again, couched in myriad symbols and  
semantics.
 Most of the authors of the spiritual texts who described the God/Self  
realization were exultant and bubbling with promises of eternal  
bliss. Almost nowhere was there acknowledgment of the devastating  
part of the experience. I did, here and there, come across a poignant  
admonition that the spiritual path was a voyage into ego- 
annihilation, and anyone who could should run from it. Yet the irony  
was clear: the only ones able to understand what was being warned  
against were those who were already too far into the journey to turn  
back.
 I had repeated episodes of going fully into God/Self consciousness  
over several years. After the initial shock, it was never again so  
harrowing. Even so, having this realization so early in life, before  
I had come across all the hoopla in the religions about it, seemed  
for a long time like a strange kind of cheat: I was finished before I  
had in earnestness begun. I knew too much but I didn't know what to  
do about it except to play dumb and carry on with my mundane life.
 Although most people seem to think that the God/Self awakening is the  
culmination of the spiritual journey, Irina Tweedie said that while  
in other yoga systems, God realization is the ultimate goal, in the  
Sufi system in which she was being trained, it was "only the  
beginning. . . the first step" (from Daughter of Fire). This seemed  
even more so in my case than hers, for her Kundalini awakened years  
before she reached this awareness, while my own Kundalini was  
apparently dormant at the time of my realization. It was certainly  
was not the end of the journey for me; my life is testimony to that.
 The Hindus describe the qualities of the God/Self as Sat, Chit, and  
Ananda, which translate as Being, Awareness and Bliss. The first two  
fit my experience; the third, bliss, seems too small a word for the  
quasar-intensity love which I experienced as the Creator's adoration  
for everything in existence. This Oneness experience differs from the  
blossoming of the seventh chakra. The spectacular union with the  
divine which occurs at this seventh center is still an I/Thou  
relationship, a sense of being rhapsodically united with God. In this  
awareness, one knows oneself to be of and in God, to be an emanation  
of everlasting Divine Light. The realization that "God and I are One"  
at this level is very different from God-realization at the eighth  
plane.
 At the seventh chakra level, as Dr. R. P. Kaushik says, "Your  
consciousness of your achievement, your height, your status is not  
gone. This feeling that you are the greatest yogi, or the greatest  
mystic, or a great personality, does not go" (from The Ultimate  
Transformation). By contrast, the revelations of the eighth level  
negate the very concept of there being any levels at all. One is  
thrust into a position of utter humility by default.
 Contrary to myth, individuals who have awakened to their God/Self are  
not immediately recognizable to others as somehow special or  
spiritually radiant. Ramana Maharshi spontaneously realized his  
God/Self when he was a sixteen-year-old schoolboy, but neither his  
family nor anyone at his school recognized the change in him. It was  
not until many years later, when he began to teach, that his  
illumined status was widely acknowledged.
 The experiential realization that the singular, seamless, cosmic  
consciousness (aka "Absolute Mind", "God" or "the Godhead") and one's  
eternal self are one and the same does not confer permanent  
omniscience or omnipotence, nor does it guarantee spiritual clarity.  
Individuals who are mentally ungrounded may blur the spheres of the  
One and the Many. I know several people who spun into psychosis after  
this awakening because they couldn't handle the implications. I know  
a woman who couldn't allow herself to accept that ultimately nothing  
but consciousness exists, so she twisted it into believing that she  
was God which everyone else secretly knew. She convinced herself that  
everyone hated her, since she was solely responsible for all the woes  
of the world. As harrowing as her egocentric delusion was (she would  
scream and weep with grief and guilt and horror for weeks on end), it  
was less painful to her than accepting that at the level where she is  
God, there is nothing but God. . . and no "others" to hate her or to  
love her. That there was no one in existence to love her was the  
absolute worst, as she had an insatiable need to feel adored by other  
people. I felt more grief in the discovery that the people and  
creatures (animals, nature, etc. ) I love were all illusions than in  
finding out that there isn't really an El nor is there anyone else to  
give a rat's ass about me (not even a rat, ha!).
 The initial part of the experience is hellish for those I know who  
have had it (me included). Being absorbed into God isn't the same  
level as being embraced by God's Light -- the ecstatically beautiful  
experience of Lover and Beloved. Instead, it's like falling into a  
Black Hole where everything is sucked into nothingness except a  
Single Consciousness which is the one thing that exists. And you are  
It. There is an overwhelming loneliness and despair that comes with  
the awareness (which is also a tremendous sense of "remembering")  
that everything else -- all creation -- is a stupendous  
hallucination, a multidimensional holographic movie where the script  
writer, the producer, the director, all the actors, all the scenery  
and props -- it's all just One Being imagining it and pretending that  
it's real.
 Years after I had this experience I came across a Hassidic Jewish  
teaching that God needs man as much as man needs God, and this is  
definitely true. God needs creation as much as creation needs God,  
just as all of us need each other. We were created to be a loving  
universal family and to be beloved children of God forever. Yet the  
paradox is that although we have been "created" as eternal souls, we  
have never left the mind of God and in that sense we don't really  
exist, we're just God-thoughts. In some of the Eastern religions,  
they don't speak of God (or Goddess), but of "Self" because there is  
a level where there isn't anything to be drawn into the Light, there  
is just One mind dreaming the universe.
 People imagine that non-duality means perfect bliss, yet my  
experience of non-duality was a paradoxical fusion of all opposites:  
ecstasy/agony, joy/sorrow, existence/nonexistence, form/formlessness,  
abundance/desolation. . . Non-duality isn't the absence of things we  
don't like, but the presence of everything on all-levels and no- 
levels simultaneously. All One equals alone equals all-one equals  
alone equals all-one in a never-ending cosmic spiral-loop.
 I had a realization that joy and suffering aren't opposites, but  
balancing sides of a sort of yin/yang seesaw which can't be  
separated -- eliminate either side and the cosmic seesaw is broken,  
the whole momentum is lost. Once I experienced divine suffering of  
the profound, agonized Aloneness of God/Self and discovered that from  
that original pain came the capacity for perfect Love which regards  
everything as precious, I knew that all creation carried an echo of  
that suffering/love/joy. Love is supreme; it is the sacred life-giver  
of the universe. I don't think it matters much what level of  
revelation/epiphany/awakening we've had -- if we don't get that love  
is the key, we're still blind. And if we get just that much, we're  
blessed.
 
Part II 
by Sylvia Hancock
 I often think when we try to explain what we mean by the void that  
not only do words fail us, but it is hard to know what is real and  
what is unreal. Isn't it a Buddhist prayer that says "lead me from  
the unreal to the real"?
 As far as I can understand any of it, the void where the sense of the  
one who is totally alone and responsible for all manifestation, is  
the blackness which to me is synonymous with the blackness of the  
dark areas of space. The light is the manifestation or the beginning  
thoughts of the darkness. This would make the stars part of that  
early manifestation, and the patterns they form, for example the  
zodiac, may even in some geometrical or other way represent the  
thinking of the void. It may be a kind of blueprint for the later  
material manifestation.
 I have experienced the black areas of space and the total awareness,  
and feelings of being alone. I also have encountered a 'being of  
light' that looked like a star but behind the light manifestation it  
had a face made up of the black voidness of space. I appeared to  
enter that star, and then passed out (I wanted to say blacked out --  
may have been a more appropriate expression here). That did lead me  
to speculate the stars are simply manifestations of the blackness of  
space. This was a revelation to me, because before this I had tended  
to think of stars as being part of the creation principle who were  
impressing a kind of pattern on the black space out there. This  
experience led me to think the opposite, that the black space is the  
real thinking mechanism and the light of the stars the result.
 As far as the void and the sense of aloneness is concerned, if we  
relate this to God, or as near as we can get to God with these brains  
of ours, it makes sense that when God said "let there be light." God  
thought in a particular way that created starlight. If we as part of  
His/Her creation are like God in every way, then the same is true of  
us, we also create to avoid the aloneness and isolation. Most of us  
have experienced creative moments in which while being physically  
alone, we have felt at one with the universe because of something we  
were creating.
 Another thought was expressed that if we are only one, are we  
responsible for everything? Well I suppose if you want to get really  
depressed you could think of it like that. I prefer to think of the  
humorous, or the joyful side of things. I think it was Joseph  
Campbell who expressed it this way: The universe looks like a great  
thought in which the creator dreamed up various creatures who in  
their turn are also dreaming up states of being and so on ad  
infinitum (not an exact quote). If this is true, I prefer to think  
I'm one of the dreamers somewhere near the bottom of the pyramid  
rather than at the top. Otherwise I would find the loneliness and  
responsibility too much.
 Of course it begs the question, if God dreamed this universe up, how  
many others did God also dream up, and does God regret this universe,  
find it amusing or what? And was there any other purpose, such as a  
learning curve for the creatures dreamed up, or was the whole thing  
simply to alleviate loneliness? I prefer to think that each dream  
creature is a means for the dreamer to learn something and each of  
us, wherever we are on the dream pyramid, is part of the universal  
mind and everything we experience adds to that single knowingness or  
all-knowledge of the void. 
 
Part III
 
by El Collie
 The knowledge of the One God, One Consciousness -- the primordial and  
eternal Intelligence which is the sustaining force and power of  
existence -- is enshrined by every major religion. "The records left  
by those who have known, " wrote Aldous Huxley, "make it abundantly  
clear that all of them, whether Hindu, Buddhist, Hebrew, Taoist,  
Christian or Mohammedan, were attempting to describe the same  
essentially indescribable Fact." (from the Introduction to Song of  
God: Bhagavad-Gita). The essence of awakening to the God/Self is the  
same for everyone, as evinced by countless firsthand spiritual  
accounts which uncannily overlap in their descriptions of this sacred  
territory. Yet the meaning individuals derive from their awakening is  
colored by their personal background and ability to understand what  
they have been shown. While no one can perceive or know the whole  
picture, we are all vantage points of God/Goddess describing the  
picture back to Itself. This is why there are widely divergent views  
between different religions (for example, the chasm between the  
Buddhist and Judaic conceptions of divinity) and why there are  
innumerable splinter-sects and schisms within the same traditions.
 I had no idea at the time of my realization that so many others  
throughout history had experienced this same awakening. Even if I had  
known, the last thing I wanted or needed to do after my enlightenment  
was to proclaim myself any kind of advanced soul. This would have  
been in contradiction to the realization itself, since it had been  
made wholly clear to me that at the ultimate level, there was no one  
in existence but the One, and that even God-asleep-to-God in so  
many "dream" forms of multiplicity was by divine design. There was no  
one else for me to attempt to awaken. "On seeing through the illusion  
of the ego, it is impossible to think of oneself as better than, or  
superior to, others for having done so," Alan Watts aptly put it. "In  
every direction there is just the one Self playing its myriad games  
of hide-and-seek." (from The Book: On the Taboo Against Knowing Who  
You Are)
 The God I experienced had not set up the universe as a labyrinthine  
game of solitaire, the sole purpose of which was to find the way back  
to the starting point and win. The game, if one would call it that,  
is infinite, and both poles are necessary: self as individual and  
Self as Cosmic Source; world as Self-creation and world as  
everlasting mystery; yin and yang in eternal embrace. "One has to  
live in the two extremes; like the snake, up and down, right and  
left," wrote Jung. "One cannot take the road of life without taking  
both sides of it because one side alone would lead to a standstill;  
if one wants to live one must endure the opposites because the way is  
two-fold." (from The Visions Seminar)
 My awakening bore more resemblance to the Zen depictions ("Before  
enlightenment, chop wood and carry water; after enlightenment, chop  
wood and carry water") than to the celebrated yogic Self-Realized  
superhero playing paranormal stuntman blissfully ever after.  
Supernatural powers were available to me in my God-Realized state,  
but they held no allure. (I use the term "supernatural powers" with  
reservation. From the view of the God/Self, neither "supernatural"  
nor "power" is relevant. Rather, there is unlimited creativity, in  
which anything imagined is easily and effortlessly produced. At the  
God/Self level, all manifest existence is demonstration of this  
creative process and perceived as simultaneously "miraculous"  
and "nothing special.") Nor was there anything the world offered that  
drew me back except the possibility of relationship. It was only  
here, in the sphere of sweet duality, that I could experience  
communion with other selves.
 This was not necessarily a failing on my part. "Most yogis who went  
up to this level came down and rested in the heart center," Kaushik  
told his students. "Only in that center can you stay in a state of  
relationship to the rest of the world, as other human beings -- not  
high, distant, withdrawn from the rest of humanity. Though you have  
gone to the highest, yet you come down and rest in the heart center."  
(from The Ultimate Transformation)
 I now regard my early enlightenment as a gift of a different order  
than what it is generally touted to be. It spared me years of  
searching for the Secret of the Universe. I wasn't driven, as my lust  
to understand everything would have otherwise compelled me, to follow  
the yellow brick road in a desperate desire to meet the Wizard (or to  
torment myself with doubts over the Wizard's existence). For me, that  
was all gotten out of the way from the start, so I could spend the  
remainder of my life learning to "rest in the heart center".
 "The spiritual world is one single spirit who stands like unto a  
light behind the bodily world and who, when any single creature comes  
into being, shines through it as through a window," said Aziz  
Nasafi. "According to the kind and size of the window, less or more  
light enters the world." This single "spirit" is the Self/Source  
addressed by the Katha Upanishad: "Smaller than the smallest, greater  
than the greatest, this Self forever dwells within the hearts of  
all." The same spirit/Self/God is, as Joan Borysenko writes (in The  
Fire in the Soul), "present in all things, all experiences."
 Spiritual awakening seems to be a process whereby we each in our own  
way become aware of our Source/Self while, by evolving through each  
one of us, God also becomes aware of Itself and learns through its  
own creations: every one of us. In Borysenko's words, "The Universe  
knows itself and expands itself through me."
 
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