Guest guest Posted February 19, 2005 Report Share Posted February 19, 2005 Greg, all, You write, G:Edinger once said that one who is comfortably contain within a worldview cannot be helped by depth psychology, because " there is no problem " at least from that person's perspective. Yes. This is why I suggested previously that the refinement of one's belief systems, no matter which one, to the point of satisfaction, is the devilish problem of spiritual materialism. And, it matters not whether one designs rationales for this not being the case if the end result is still being contained within beliefs and rationales, and being satisfied. Jung put it in certain terms: for most the reconciliation of the personality would cause trouble enough. (Little understood?) This includes being comfortably contained within (for example) a Jungian world view, as Jung noted in his statement about the 'Jungian'. *** Yet the pressured paradox is that it is most often the case that persons criticize another person's " containment " from the perspective of their own. (This reminds me of Melville's " ice palaces of frozen space " ; in this case one palace agin the other.) So you'll have to pardon me if I cannot endorse: " The project seems to me to be to help those who are not able to think symbolically to begin to do so, creatively and lovingly. " There are a raft of assumptions in this short sentence. It's not that one cannot be in a position to judge, but that from one perspective it is presumed the other perspective is apparent. However, one of the hallmarks of uncontainable criticalness is knowing fully what one's own assumptions are and to what they are oriented by and to. What I hear is hegemonic language: power. Not love. If one way of speaking of the problem of a certain kind of faulted self psychology, ( " not able to think symbolically, " ) is to point out the concretization and objectification of archetypes, it does one no good to objectify the psyche of individuals by making them into 'fundy' collectives and concretizing our ideas into this object one makes. This is, literally, to make the same mistake via an accusation that the accusation itself reveals. Also, it is important to keep in mind too that a purely psychological view of the Divine is a turn away from the Divine if the Divine is *in fact* " objectifiable " . All of the great monotheistic religions, most of the occult systems, and, Traditionalism, much more, are not primarily psychological. This means believers are very refined in their symbolic thinking even if this thinking is very alien to our psychological mindedness. But the giveaway is the council of love following from the harsh critique. Melt thy own ice palace first. regards, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 19, 2005 Report Share Posted February 19, 2005 Hello greg in the heartland, I love it. Please send the Moyers again. I'm not getting attachments. >>The project seems to me to be to help those who are not able to think >>symbolically to begin to do so, creatively and lovingly.>> We have some masters here at doing that. Parable. Jesus spoke in parable, and was also a parable himself. A parable is a handy little palpable, imbibe-able leap of the heart. A glimpse. A way to share what can only really be experienced. Thus it's alive, and to take it apart is to lose it. mike sent something this morning that is so imbibe-able. He blogged it here: http://cloudhand.blogspot.com/ And here's a spontaneous version below, so lovely and alive and hence imbibe-able... the formal encapsulation is imbibe-able too, but I guess it's like fiction. The way one holds her tea cup says so much... x's deborah ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > << par.692 A religious truth is essentially an experience; it is not an > opinion. >> *The *problem* with 'religious truths' is that they are not truths in the same sens that, if you step off the pavement without looking you may very well not enjoy the outcome. *Religious* truths are, experience; but experience is (a) NEVER shared but always individual, that ( it is inevitably mitigated by previous experience, that experience itself is (to quote A. N. Whitehead) simply " experientially initiated potentiality for further experience " , which is to say that - rather than 'seeing is believing - what actually happens is that you see only what you already believe or can already understand based on an accretion of previous instants of experiences you deem similar or dissimilar. Thirdly, there is the distinction between intellectual understanding (which, according to the Tibetans, is like aptch: it tends to fall off when you most need it), experience (which fades like clouds, leaving little but opinion in its wake) and genuine realisation (which is as vast and all-encompassing as space). Myyardstick for judging truths is precisely this idea of vastness and all-encompassingness. *Any* ideological " truth " , religious or other, which excludes more than it contains is of a lesser nature... Not necessarily UNtrue, but merely a step toward that greater truth that includes it. At the age of 12, the great teacher Sachen Kunga Nyingpo had a vision of the bodhisattva of penetrating insight, who said to him: If you're attached to the concerns of just this life, you are not a practitioner; If you're attached to cyclic existence and its confusions, you are no renunciate; If you're attached to your own goals and personal well-being, this is not the enlightened attitude of compassion; If you cling to anything at all, that is not the ultimate view. These four lines are considered to contain the entire path. The concerns of just this life are the domain of those who have not yet entered any spiritual path. Their concerns are - at base - survival of the individual in terms of food, warmth, companionship and safety, and survival of the species in terms of procreation and the safety and stability of the group. As we all know, these 'truths' are a 24/7 job. As long as the fluctuations of fortune affect you profoundly, and you are blown hither and yon by the eight worldly winds of praise and blame, good fortune and bad fortune, renown and lack of recognition, happiness and sorrow, you will actually continue to be pushed around by them. And as long as you are being pushed around by hopes and fears concerning what's outside of you, there is no time for learning the actual nature of the mind. This is not to say that the actual nature of the mind does not HAVE these concerns, but rather, that the mind itself is so vast and profound, that these become no more than the tiniest ripples on the least wavelet on one infinitessimal section of its surface - as the famous Niguma quote says: If you don't understand that whatever appears is meditation, What can you achieve by applying an antidote? Perceptions are not abandoned by discarding them But are spontaneously freed when recognized as illusory. Until you reach a point in your development where the well-being of others becomes more important than your own, your attitude is still pretty cramped - goldfish bowl - everything relates to you... MY happiness, MY progress, MY discomfort, MY likes and dislikes, etc., etc., ad infinitum nauseamque. Compassion - karuna in Sanskrit, nying-re or t'ug-je ('lordly heart' or 'lordly enlightened mind') in Tibetan - is simply the attitude that others are obviously suffering quite as much as you are and that therefore you should find out the correct way to help in such a way that first their immediate needs are met, and then their profounder doubts and insecurities are calmed... As HH Dalai Lama says, all this really needs to get going is ordinary human intelligence and ordinary huma kindness. A mere step in this direction of itself opens up the pathway to further refinement of your own attitude, futher purification of your obscurations of conflicting emotion and primitive beliefs about reality. Finally you reach a point where you may walk with both hands free, where your kindliness and concern know no bounds, where you genuinely rejoice in the good fortune of those around you and are immediate in responding to their suffering, and where you have no attachment to what you consider near and dear or distant and alien, no point of view to thump, no truths to drive home... you just help... In the knowledge that " truths " are useful as markers, direction-pointers and goads along a path, but that the path itself - the REAL path - is ultimately ineffable, inconceivable and beyond all 'effort' or 'truth' or 'realisation'... If this is what Jung means by a 'religious truth', then yes, I agree. Sorry! I'm going on a bit here! 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Guest guest Posted February 20, 2005 Report Share Posted February 20, 2005 Dear Deborah, I am about to commit the ultimate sin ...question what you said the Dalai Lama said, purely from the way I read it. you said: " As HH Dalai Lama says, all this really needs to get going is ordinary human intelligence and ordinary human kindness. A mere step in this direction of itself opens up the pathway to further refinement of your own attitude, further purification of your obscurations of conflicting emotion and primitive beliefs about reality. " The Dalai Lama himself did not get where he is by a step , to ordinary human intelligence, and ordinary human kindness.From the age of birth on, he was treated specially, taught specially, trained specially...especially spiritually. In my opinion the reason so few of us human beings end up like H.H. is that we are ordinary, and he obviously was not.Our training is haphazard at best It is my opinion that " something " within has to urge the way forward out of the ordinary for anyone who is committed to the spiritual life.Circumstances held also. My problem with those parts of the Christian religion which preach that we can " be perfect as the father is perfect " { (yes, yes, I realize it means " whole " ) nevertheless leads to a standard of life that can never be reached with one's own power alone.( One of the reasons so many religious people carry so much guilt) Christians are so hung up on " good works " they forget that something must come first, if they are not to burn out, even with perfect motivation. Buddhist, also, it seems to me, do not spread light and joy in the world without a pretty grim and rough discipline and teaching and meditating for years. Not believing in an Absolute, the Buddhist still must get the needed energy and power somewhere, not from his insides alone. That is what meditation is all about, is it not? To reach a higher, more enlightened level? The loving energy? Westerners, separating themselves from the treadmill of good works alone, realize they simply can not keep up what their highest intentions were. Christianity says it has to do with a faith that accepts what it is told.. And that that faith, not experience,is enough.Not that experience will give the knowledge which can lead to the " needed " grace to have the love of humanity and forgetfulness of self that the Dalai Lama certainly seems to be graced with. I imagine there are many lesser Buddhist who struggle mightily for the enlightenment to be able to be like him. It takes more than ordinary human intelligence and ordinary humans kindness. If the " before " training, prayer and discipline is not practice there will be no further development and love for humankind. In any religion, if it does not teach the preparatory work involved, millions will attempt on their own steam and fail, become disillusioned and revert to where they began. Bitterness towards G-d and man usually follows. The higher help is always available, we call it grace, I have no idea what besides enlightenment or some other rather unfamiliar words to me Buddhist use . This is a personal reaction, from someone who spent most of her life trying to do the right and kept falling behind or treading water where she thought she should be, and ended up carrying more guilt than love. I was brought up " to love " everybody.To " do good to those who hate me " OK? Now kindly explain how a young person sets out to love everybody when she hardly knows how to love those she has in here own family....nevermind the bully down the street.Nobody tells her it is not by her effort alone, indeed I found it was very little of my own effort that changed my life. He that stands as the head of Christianity didn't expect that. He knew where the start was, and what needed to be learned and experienced first.I imagine he expected those he left behind to follow all his footsteps. The Buddha also, if I remember spent a lot of time being miserable and pouting before he figured it out himself...and then worked on it. Anyway, I am extra sensitive to remarks which expect extra-ordinary behavior from ordinary people, but do not explain the gifts are available.That those results are impossible for long, without the gifts.nobody admits.. The Dalai Lama, I am sure, suffers from no illusions about human nature. Nowadays we sing " Amazing Grace " but no one really takes it very seriously in public, unless they actually have experienced it. The rest mouth the words and haven't a clue how easily it is given to anyone who really wants it.Nobody actually explains what human nature can do with a little help and lots of joy and peace. Talk about putting the cart before the horse....and why...in western culture is it so? because we want everyone to know he is personally responsible for everything. He doesn't need any help, and ought not to expect it. And if it is offered at all it is with more rules to be obeyed than anyone person could even remember. So we send everyone out to do great things, love everyone and do good, and say nary a word about why they alone cannot succeed. As for his H.H, I am sure he tells his monks more...he is the human embodiment of the results of grace...and I have never even met him. Sorry to be so long winded, but one of my " hot " spots was hit...well, not hit but sideswiped. :-) Toni Re: sorry about the oscar...+ to hell with Boyle's Law Hello greg in the heartland, I love it. Please send the Moyers again. I'm not getting attachments. >>The project seems to me to be to help those who are not able to think >>symbolically to begin to do so, creatively and lovingly.>> We have some masters here at doing that. Parable. Jesus spoke in parable, and was also a parable himself. A parable is a handy little palpable, imbibe-able leap of the heart. A glimpse. A way to share what can only really be experienced. Thus it's alive, and to take it apart is to lose it. mike sent something this morning that is so imbibe-able. He blogged it here: http://cloudhand.blogspot.com/ And here's a spontaneous version below, so lovely and alive and hence imbibe-able... the formal encapsulation is imbibe-able too, but I guess it's like fiction. The way one holds her tea cup says so much... x's deborah ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > << par.692 A religious truth is essentially an experience; it is not an > opinion. >> *The *problem* with 'religious truths' is that they are not truths in the same sens that, if you step off the pavement without looking you may very well not enjoy the outcome. *Religious* truths are, experience; but experience is (a) NEVER shared but always individual, that ( it is inevitably mitigated by previous experience, that experience itself is (to quote A. N. Whitehead) simply " experientially initiated potentiality for further experience " , which is to say that - rather than 'seeing is believing - what actually happens is that you see only what you already believe or can already understand based on an accretion of previous instants of experiences you deem similar or dissimilar. Thirdly, there is the distinction between intellectual understanding (which, according to the Tibetans, is like aptch: it tends to fall off when you most need it), experience (which fades like clouds, leaving little but opinion in its wake) and genuine realisation (which is as vast and all-encompassing as space). Myyardstick for judging truths is precisely this idea of vastness and all-encompassingness. *Any* ideological " truth " , religious or other, which excludes more than it contains is of a lesser nature... Not necessarily UNtrue, but merely a step toward that greater truth that includes it. At the age of 12, the great teacher Sachen Kunga Nyingpo had a vision of the bodhisattva of penetrating insight, who said to him: If you're attached to the concerns of just this life, you are not a practitioner; If you're attached to cyclic existence and its confusions, you are no renunciate; If you're attached to your own goals and personal well-being, this is not the enlightened attitude of compassion; If you cling to anything at all, that is not the ultimate view. These four lines are considered to contain the entire path. The concerns of just this life are the domain of those who have not yet entered any spiritual path. Their concerns are - at base - survival of the individual in terms of food, warmth, companionship and safety, and survival of the species in terms of procreation and the safety and stability of the group. As we all know, these 'truths' are a 24/7 job. As long as the fluctuations of fortune affect you profoundly, and you are blown hither and yon by the eight worldly winds of praise and blame, good fortune and bad fortune, renown and lack of recognition, happiness and sorrow, you will actually continue to be pushed around by them. And as long as you are being pushed around by hopes and fears concerning what's outside of you, there is no time for learning the actual nature of the mind. This is not to say that the actual nature of the mind does not HAVE these concerns, but rather, that the mind itself is so vast and profound, that these become no more than the tiniest ripples on the least wavelet on one infinitessimal section of its surface - as the famous Niguma quote says: If you don't understand that whatever appears is meditation, What can you achieve by applying an antidote? Perceptions are not abandoned by discarding them But are spontaneously freed when recognized as illusory. Until you reach a point in your development where the well-being of others becomes more important than your own, your attitude is still pretty cramped - goldfish bowl - everything relates to you... MY happiness, MY progress, MY discomfort, MY likes and dislikes, etc., etc., ad infinitum nauseamque. Compassion - karuna in Sanskrit, nying-re or t'ug-je ('lordly heart' or 'lordly enlightened mind') in Tibetan - is simply the attitude that others are obviously suffering quite as much as you are and that therefore you should find out the correct way to help in such a way that first their immediate needs are met, and then their profounder doubts and insecurities are calmed... As HH Dalai Lama says, all this really needs to get going is ordinary human intelligence and ordinary huma kindness. A mere step in this direction of itself opens up the pathway to further refinement of your own attitude, futher purification of your obscurations of conflicting emotion and primitive beliefs about reality. Finally you reach a point where you may walk with both hands free, where your kindliness and concern know no bounds, where you genuinely rejoice in the good fortune of those around you and are immediate in responding to their suffering, and where you have no attachment to what you consider near and dear or distant and alien, no point of view to thump, no truths to drive home... you just help... In the knowledge that " truths " are useful as markers, direction-pointers and goads along a path, but that the path itself - the REAL path - is ultimately ineffable, inconceivable and beyond all 'effort' or 'truth' or 'realisation'... If this is what Jung means by a 'religious truth', then yes, I agree. Sorry! I'm going on a bit here! 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Guest guest Posted February 21, 2005 Report Share Posted February 21, 2005 In a message dated 2/21/2005 12:11:33 PM Eastern Standard Time, marshkan1@... writes: Just curious, do most people you know understand what you are trying to say when you use this kind of language? I have found that when I use highly complex thought structures that many people just tune me out altogether. The simpler (not to be confused with simple minded) is often the more effective communication. Thanks for this Greg,,I thought he would get the hint from my suggestion that he read a bit of Mark Twain's critic of " Fenimore " , but obviously not, ! Ye Mutt Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 21, 2005 Report Share Posted February 21, 2005 --- SC wrote: > the devilish problem of spiritual materialism. And, > it matters not whether one designs rationales for > this not being the case if the end > result is still being contained within beliefs and > rationales, and being satisfied. , Yes, and the distinction between " spiritual materialism " and some other ism, say, " material spiritualism " is perhaps yet another form of intellectual masturbation that ends up where? > Jung put it in certain terms: for most the > reconciliation of the > personality would cause trouble enough. (Little > understood?) This > includes being comfortably contained within (for > example) a Jungian > world view, as Jung noted in his statement about the > 'Jungian'. Thus I would imagine that Jung would agree with your point that at some point we must reckon with the reality (at least this point in our collective evolution) that life remains both a parodox and a mystery. This factoid, to this pilgrim anyway, also contains the most awesome fact of the reality in which we find ourselves incarnated. That our little minds have still not comprehended it. But we seem to be making progress. I merely reject those ways of thinking that take us back in our evolution, rather than help us remain stuck in a thicker quagmire of ignorance. I don't claim to have all the final answers. Neither does my dear dog, although we both enjoy the same kinds of food and breath the same air. > Yet the pressured paradox is that it is most often > the case that > persons criticize another person's " containment " > from the perspective > of their own. (This reminds me of Melville's " ice > palaces of frozen > space " ; in this case one palace agin the other.) I accept the reality that we each must needs remain trapped in some kind of containment, as a consequence of our being " trapped " within the particular material " reality " in which our particular ensoulment finds itself in Life. That seems to be the nature of our humanness. I only criticize the containment of those who seem to wish the masses to be contained within the reality, as they see it, as the only one or the one that fits them the best, as that which must be adapted for all. That, to me, is the great challenge of evangelism - that it seeks to persuade those who need to see the light - as they see it - often a vastly inadequate explanation (spiritually, historically, politically, morally, etc) of both the material and the spiritual world which they seek to influence and, nowadays, control. > So you'll have to pardon me if I cannot endorse: > " The project seems to me to be to help those who are > not able to > think symbolically to begin to do so, creatively and > lovingly. " Endorse it or not, that is entirely your affair. Only stating my opinion, certainly not seeking to " sign you up " . Perhaps that is merely my hope/challenge, for what its worth - which is quite obviously of small value to you. > There are a raft of assumptions in this short > sentence. I suspect there are far less intended than you have drawn from it. > It's not that one cannot be in a position > to judge, but that from one perspective > it is presumed the other perspective is apparent. > However, one of the hallmarks of uncontainable > criticalness is knowing fully what one's > own assumptions are and to what they are oriented by > and to. Just curious, do most people you know understand what you are trying to say when you use this kind of language? I have found that when I use highly complex thought structures that many people just tune me out altogether. The simpler (not to be confused with simple minded) is often the more effective communication. But having said that, perhaps you and I have both identified an aspect of " uncontrollable criticalness " in the other that point to something that could best be addressed within. That curious term, BTW, could be easily applied to many of your recent and historical comments here around the fire. As a wiser one than me has often said, " it takes one to know one " . > What I hear is hegemonic language: power. Not love. Really? We all hear in a particular way. Perhaps you could examine the way you are hearing with the same intensity that you are " uncontrollably critical " of what is being said. We can hear with love, as we also seek to speak with love...right? I try, yet far too often fail. It is, indeed power, or its abuse, that I more often rail against - perhaps because I tend to project it. Maybe some bad cheese or karma...or a badly lived past life. Don't know. But thanks for pointing it out. > If one way of speaking of the problem of a certain > kind of faulted self psychology, ( " not able to think > symbolically, " ) Perhaps you could put it into more acceptable terminology. That one still seems to capture the idea for me though. But I'm open to suggestions. Is it the idea to which you object, or to its merely being uttered? > is to point out the concretization > and objectification of archetypes, it does one no > good to objectify the psyche of individuals by making > them into 'fundy' collectives and concretizing our > ideas into this object one makes. Well the " fundy " (when taken to the extreme of its type), of whatever religion or creed, seems to exhibit (to me) what is becoming a typical archetypal pattern or tendency - what is now becoming not only recognizable and manifestly dangerous to the unfolding of our species. And the concertization of which you speak is one of its most characteristic manifestations IMO. And perhaps we may always allow for the inherently mysterious elements within the psychic center of the circle to avoid the tendency to become fixed at the circumference. Again this way of understanding is meaningful to a symbolic thinker as it is anathema to those of the opposite end of the spectrum. The absence of " sense " become nonsense. That is both the essence and the beauty of our human experience (in my way of thinking). Perhaps you'll object to this idea in terms of " faulty " ontology, cosmology, epitimology, etc. But the ologies only take us into yet another rabbit hole - intellectual deification. > This is, literally, to make the same mistake via an > accusation that the accusation itself reveals. Learn from what you assert above. > Also, it is important to keep in mind too that a > purely psychological view of the Divine is a turn > away from the Divine if the Divine is > *in fact* " objectifiable " . I agree with you here. Psychology is the study (understanding) of the psyche, the soul. It is not the soul; and it is certainly not the center thereof - as I have come to understand it. However having said that is not meant to negate the profound insights into the way human beings operate, universally, as have those who have attempted to understand it. The psychiatrist, as was Jung, was one who " cured " the soul, having been able to understand and aid in bringing it to wholeness. Such is certainly not the domain of either the philosopher or the intellectual. They are of different domains of endeavor. I certainly do not advocate the " purely psychological " view of the divine, something that - in the end - defies human description, due to its mysterious and paradoxical nature. But that doesn't stop us from making the attempt as we come closer to it. >All of the great monotheistic religions, > most of the occult systems, and, Traditionalism, > much more, are not > primarily psychological. This means believers are > very refined in > their symbolic thinking even if this thinking is > very alien to our psychological mindedness. If that is true, perhaps it is because they lacked the " knowledge " we now take for granted that has occured after their life among us. That is why, to me, it is absurd to try to use the Bible as a science text book. The Bible is a complex and deeply allegorical sacred text that has been used and misused by those in spiritual power positions for millenia. And, undoubtedly, the Einstein of our century has not yet been born. The latter was a scientist - but one who never lost his awe for the indescribable ( " Oneness " or " First Cause " ) that he ever sought to understand and explain. He was both a mystic and a physicist. > But the giveaway is the council of love following > from the harsh critique. Melt thy own ice palace > first. Well , I suggest you take your own advice. Every synthesis has both its thesis and its antithesis. Both have to be identified. And it is the synthesis that provides a more complete understanding. But the project starts, it seems to me, by naming the problem. I'm sorry it that offends you, as it seems to do. It seems, from your prefered analogy (and the base from which you launch your own harsh critique), that you prefer the warm water to the creation of ice palaces. You seem not to appeciate or enjoy anyone else's " ice palace, " yet you offer none of your own. It seems a bit cold from where I sit. Perhaps that is intentional, I don't know. But I do appreciate and understand the juxtoposition of power and love. Their is a third in the triumvirate - wisdom. We each have our own dragons to slay. Thanks for being ever " onguard " to keep the rest of us humble. We obviously need to be reminded of the necessity of keeping ego in check from time to time. And you are just the man for it. Greg __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 21, 2005 Report Share Posted February 21, 2005 Dear Greg, I admire your rebuttal. It is quiet and important. I am trying to understand why suddenly we have a few people whose opinions and views may not be questioned. In fact, I find that totally out of step with this list. Have we suddenly attributed to ourselves the authority and dignity of the gods? Gee, how did I get where these god's post? I, a mere mortal who all to well knows her limitations and handicaps.indeed, I must admit to problems understanding the language as it is presented...as truth. Seriously, could we all get back honest opinions and experiences we can vouch having? Can we admit that we all see reality slightly differently, yet that does not make us " right " or " wrong " . That way we wouldn't have to be on the defensive so often when told how wrong, unlearned or demented we are. More open hearts and mind, perhaps, to the actual person behind the post.( I naturally include myself, and realize I have not ever been a paragon of virtue) I cling to the old saying " If you meet the Buddha on the Road, kill him " No one on earth is always right, nor do I owe unquestioning complete obedience to anyone or any tradition. I accept no guru here either. But I do learn a lot from those who give of their own wisdom. Toni Re: sorry about the oscar...+ to hell with Boyle's Law --- SC wrote: > the devilish problem of spiritual materialism. And, > it matters not whether one designs rationales for > this not being the case if the end > result is still being contained within beliefs and > rationales, and being satisfied. , Yes, and the distinction between " spiritual materialism " and some other ism, say, " material spiritualism " is perhaps yet another form of intellectual masturbation that ends up where? > Jung put it in certain terms: for most the > reconciliation of the > personality would cause trouble enough. (Little > understood?) This > includes being comfortably contained within (for > example) a Jungian > world view, as Jung noted in his statement about the > 'Jungian'. Thus I would imagine that Jung would agree with your point that at some point we must reckon with the reality (at least this point in our collective evolution) that life remains both a parodox and a mystery. This factoid, to this pilgrim anyway, also contains the most awesome fact of the reality in which we find ourselves incarnated. That our little minds have still not comprehended it. But we seem to be making progress. I merely reject those ways of thinking that take us back in our evolution, rather than help us remain stuck in a thicker quagmire of ignorance. I don't claim to have all the final answers. Neither does my dear dog, although we both enjoy the same kinds of food and breath the same air. > Yet the pressured paradox is that it is most often > the case that > persons criticize another person's " containment " > from the perspective > of their own. (This reminds me of Melville's " ice > palaces of frozen > space " ; in this case one palace agin the other.) I accept the reality that we each must needs remain trapped in some kind of containment, as a consequence of our being " trapped " within the particular material " reality " in which our particular ensoulment finds itself in Life. That seems to be the nature of our humanness. I only criticize the containment of those who seem to wish the masses to be contained within the reality, as they see it, as the only one or the one that fits them the best, as that which must be adapted for all. That, to me, is the great challenge of evangelism - that it seeks to persuade those who need to see the light - as they see it - often a vastly inadequate explanation (spiritually, historically, politically, morally, etc) of both the material and the spiritual world which they seek to influence and, nowadays, control. > So you'll have to pardon me if I cannot endorse: > " The project seems to me to be to help those who are > not able to > think symbolically to begin to do so, creatively and > lovingly. " Endorse it or not, that is entirely your affair. Only stating my opinion, certainly not seeking to " sign you up " . Perhaps that is merely my hope/challenge, for what its worth - which is quite obviously of small value to you. > There are a raft of assumptions in this short > sentence. I suspect there are far less intended than you have drawn from it. > It's not that one cannot be in a position > to judge, but that from one perspective > it is presumed the other perspective is apparent. > However, one of the hallmarks of uncontainable > criticalness is knowing fully what one's > own assumptions are and to what they are oriented by > and to. Just curious, do most people you know understand what you are trying to say when you use this kind of language? I have found that when I use highly complex thought structures that many people just tune me out altogether. The simpler (not to be confused with simple minded) is often the more effective communication. But having said that, perhaps you and I have both identified an aspect of " uncontrollable criticalness " in the other that point to something that could best be addressed within. That curious term, BTW, could be easily applied to many of your recent and historical comments here around the fire. As a wiser one than me has often said, " it takes one to know one " . > What I hear is hegemonic language: power. Not love. Really? We all hear in a particular way. Perhaps you could examine the way you are hearing with the same intensity that you are " uncontrollably critical " of what is being said. We can hear with love, as we also seek to speak with love...right? I try, yet far too often fail. It is, indeed power, or its abuse, that I more often rail against - perhaps because I tend to project it. Maybe some bad cheese or karma...or a badly lived past life. Don't know. But thanks for pointing it out. > If one way of speaking of the problem of a certain > kind of faulted self psychology, ( " not able to think > symbolically, " ) Perhaps you could put it into more acceptable terminology. That one still seems to capture the idea for me though. But I'm open to suggestions. Is it the idea to which you object, or to its merely being uttered? > is to point out the concretization > and objectification of archetypes, it does one no > good to objectify the psyche of individuals by making > them into 'fundy' collectives and concretizing our > ideas into this object one makes. Well the " fundy " (when taken to the extreme of its type), of whatever religion or creed, seems to exhibit (to me) what is becoming a typical archetypal pattern or tendency - what is now becoming not only recognizable and manifestly dangerous to the unfolding of our species. And the concertization of which you speak is one of its most characteristic manifestations IMO. And perhaps we may always allow for the inherently mysterious elements within the psychic center of the circle to avoid the tendency to become fixed at the circumference. Again this way of understanding is meaningful to a symbolic thinker as it is anathema to those of the opposite end of the spectrum. The absence of " sense " become nonsense. That is both the essence and the beauty of our human experience (in my way of thinking). Perhaps you'll object to this idea in terms of " faulty " ontology, cosmology, epitimology, etc. But the ologies only take us into yet another rabbit hole - intellectual deification. > This is, literally, to make the same mistake via an > accusation that the accusation itself reveals. Learn from what you assert above. > Also, it is important to keep in mind too that a > purely psychological view of the Divine is a turn > away from the Divine if the Divine is > *in fact* " objectifiable " . I agree with you here. Psychology is the study (understanding) of the psyche, the soul. It is not the soul; and it is certainly not the center thereof - as I have come to understand it. However having said that is not meant to negate the profound insights into the way human beings operate, universally, as have those who have attempted to understand it. The psychiatrist, as was Jung, was one who " cured " the soul, having been able to understand and aid in bringing it to wholeness. Such is certainly not the domain of either the philosopher or the intellectual. They are of different domains of endeavor. I certainly do not advocate the " purely psychological " view of the divine, something that - in the end - defies human description, due to its mysterious and paradoxical nature. But that doesn't stop us from making the attempt as we come closer to it. >All of the great monotheistic religions, > most of the occult systems, and, Traditionalism, > much more, are not > primarily psychological. This means believers are > very refined in > their symbolic thinking even if this thinking is > very alien to our psychological mindedness. If that is true, perhaps it is because they lacked the " knowledge " we now take for granted that has occured after their life among us. That is why, to me, it is absurd to try to use the Bible as a science text book. The Bible is a complex and deeply allegorical sacred text that has been used and misused by those in spiritual power positions for millenia. And, undoubtedly, the Einstein of our century has not yet been born. The latter was a scientist - but one who never lost his awe for the indescribable ( " Oneness " or " First Cause " ) that he ever sought to understand and explain. He was both a mystic and a physicist. > But the giveaway is the council of love following > from the harsh critique. Melt thy own ice palace > first. Well , I suggest you take your own advice. Every synthesis has both its thesis and its antithesis. Both have to be identified. And it is the synthesis that provides a more complete understanding. But the project starts, it seems to me, by naming the problem. I'm sorry it that offends you, as it seems to do. It seems, from your prefered analogy (and the base from which you launch your own harsh critique), that you prefer the warm water to the creation of ice palaces. You seem not to appeciate or enjoy anyone else's " ice palace, " yet you offer none of your own. It seems a bit cold from where I sit. Perhaps that is intentional, I don't know. But I do appreciate and understand the juxtoposition of power and love. Their is a third in the triumvirate - wisdom. We each have our own dragons to slay. Thanks for being ever " onguard " to keep the rest of us humble. We obviously need to be reminded of the necessity of keeping ego in check from time to time. And you are just the man for it. Greg __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 21, 2005 Report Share Posted February 21, 2005 Dear Toni, That ordinary compassion. That Divine Guest in all of us. In each heart. That which beats our heart also moves our arms. The distance to the heart is that journey to our center. The work of our life. One foot before the other. Like little children. if i love You (thickness means worlds inhabited by roamingly stern bright faeries if you love me) distance is mind carefully luminous with innumerable gnomes Of complete dream if we love each (shyly) other, what clouds do or Silently Flowers resembles beauty less than our breathing ~eecummings Again: it's the heart that gets us places. It got us here. It's the only thing that ever HAS gotten us here. Somewhere, someone in terrible pain and sorrow didn't throw in the towel. We're obligated to do the same, if only in their memory. Take back your hands. Deborah Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 21, 2005 Report Share Posted February 21, 2005 OOch, greg. I didn't read that way at all. He was speaking as much to me. (After all, I'm the one always going on about thinking symbolically. Always pontificating, wearing the large hat. Getting swept away in the idea... It wasn't ill-intended. Funny, because was just thinking about feelings... that they're a mirror really, a way to keep from getting tripped up by mercurius and his tricks. Part of the old 'work with caution.' Because what you're doing is difficult work. A rose always has thorns. Feelings get hurt, and it's helped me tons to stop and look at them as clues: like dreams, they help us see what's lurking in our closets, yes? Not good or bad; no right or wrong, our feelings. Just the uc talking to us. Was very interesting to see this reaction. Thoughts? Amazing souls here. That's all I see. x's deborah Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 22, 2005 Report Share Posted February 22, 2005 Dear Deborah, Yep, absolutely. because that encompasses the whole human being. It is rare though,compassion and love, I am afraid, and takes a whole lot of living and suffering to come to. I don't know about " taking back my hands " ? What was that about.??? I never lost them, nor I think, misplaced them. Can't hug babies, nor swish thick lovely red oozing paint on a canvas with out them. Can't dig in the dirt without them, not stroke a husband's brow....no, I haven't lost my hands, thank G-d. Its not my feet either. They have been in some amazing places, and not ever used wrongly.My heart is the residence of that part of the Divine in me, and it has usually over-reacted.Its not the problem either. Even my " heart attack " was not my heart, it was the arteries that caused that problem. ( that used to bother me, something wrong with the only part of me that seldom ever let me down. I do not take credit for my ability to love and be compassionate. left to myself, I have no idea how I would end up.I think I, and all of us, have been given and have accepted the impetus from the Divine. The problem stems from the head, and always has. Good, bad or indifferent...it's thoughts which are then spoken which need to be disciplined in me. I expect you weren't just speaking to me, but I accept any occasion to look within. My whole point, however was, that for me, and I daresay most human beings, compassion, love are not automatic. They come, if they come with the help of " grace " . I don't usually think the " ordinary " person has the desire or the power to be compassionate with an " ordinary heart " I believe it has to have a little help to be big enough. It starts at the very beginning, doesn't it?. If we are not loved as soon as we enter the world, it will be almost impossible to have an idea of mature love or compassion. We need first to say thank you, before we become proud of our hearts. That, of course, was my whole point from the beginning. Something, someone must first have loved us....many 'ordinary people " are not so fortunate as to realize that blessing. You mention the children but not like all children, sadly...there are the unloved and unwanted there also, and where will they learn compassion? No need to preach to the converted, those of us fortunate enough to feel the gratitude for being taught and exposed to love and knowing it. We are thankful to our very bones.No wonder we can then reach out in compassion...to what you call the center of our lives. In my world view it is not enough to be aware. It only really matters if we acknowledge our gratefulness first. Ability to give love and compassion were given us to spend on others.That demands, cries out for thankfulness, as I see it. Toni Re: sorry about the oscar...+ to hell with Boyle's Law Dear Toni, That ordinary compassion. That Divine Guest in all of us. In each heart. That which beats our heart also moves our arms. The distance to the heart is that journey to our center. The work of our life. One foot before the other. Like little children. if i love You (thickness means worlds inhabited by roamingly stern bright faeries if you love me) distance is mind carefully luminous with innumerable gnomes Of complete dream if we love each (shyly) other, what clouds do or Silently Flowers resembles beauty less than our breathing ~eecummings Again: it's the heart that gets us places. It got us here. It's the only thing that ever HAS gotten us here. Somewhere, someone in terrible pain and sorrow didn't throw in the towel. We're obligated to do the same, if only in their memory. Take back your hands. Deborah Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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