Hi Ashvin, that’s a great question.
AshvinP wrote: ↑Fri Jun 16, 2023 7:19 pm
I have a question here. It seems a common trap in thinking about the intuitive cone - the supra-sensible waves of destiny - will be to serialize these into the 'movie frames', which we inwardly voice to ourselves, when meditating. For ex. we ask those questions of why am I meditating and start thinking of all the various events and decisions which led up to our spiritual interest. Likewise, if we broaden out to 'why have I incarnated at this time?', we may think of the whole course of our current life - the time and place we were born, the family we have, the career we chose, the broader state of national and world affairs we were placed within, etc.
I know that you are fully aware of this but let’s just state it for the record – normal thinking, even though it is not the same as the real experience of the rhythmic depths, already
probes these depths. So yes, it is definitely a trap when this kind of thinking continually
masks the supersensible realities but this thinking is also a necessity because only in this way the intellectual ego can attune itself to the depths and experience their thought-translations, instead of being orthogonally cut off from them.
AshvinP wrote: ↑Fri Jun 16, 2023 7:19 pm
Have you attempted to build up a
symbol for this nested temporal depth structure in meditation? Of course, whatever thought-image we are using at the tip of our concentration is already implicitly a symbol for this structure, but is there a way to make it more
explicit so we can devote energy to the thought-image while simultaneously relating our effort to the intuitive temporal cone? Otherwise it seems we will break concentration on the thought-image when also attempting to think of those intuitive relations which inform our efforts. Generally I try to hold it as a loose
feeling which permeates the meditation, which you also mentioned above, but perhaps it would also be helpful to 'encode' this feeling into the thought-symbol itself, similar to how we do with the Rose Cross meditation.
This is something very interesting to me because I’ve always been keenly searching for ways which can naturally bridge our ordinary thinking and imagination to the higher experiences. Of course, this has its flip side because the more the thought-images become almost literal expressions of the higher life, the more tempting it becomes for the intellect to operate with the images as realities, thus falling for the trap you mention.
With this out of the way, in my personal experience the symbol that most literally resonates with higher experience is the
mandala. I imply nothing fancy in it. It’s even better to start with the simplest mandala possible – a circle with a dot ☉. This is really at the archetypal basis – the center and the periphery.
Of course, we can go more colorful than that and picture something like a lotus flower:
We can even set it in motion like in the
video we’ve seen many times.
The mandala is a symbol for the totality of our conscious experience and which in its fullness is really an unique perspective of the World state. There’s a center because no matter where we are in time and space or even outside the bodily spectrum, we are always in the center of the experience. The volume of the mandala is the totality of phenomena that we experience. The further in the periphery we go, the more archetypal the forces are and thus common for more and more beings. As we know, in reality the periphery is not a spatial periphery. It penetrates everything, yet can be called peripheral because it is elusive to our clear intuition (cognition).
Now let’s consider things more closely. We have to keep in mind at all times the difference between the
thought-image of the mandala that we build in our mind and the mysterious totality of existence of which the mandala is only a symbol. When we imagine a mandala in our mind’s eye, what we really experience is the configuration that we impress in the head organ. In very simplistic terms we can imagine that in the head region there’s free color and other types of ‘substance’ that we can shape through our spiritual activity in cymatics-like fashion. This is very simplified of course but still gives some indication.
The shape that we produce in our head-imagination is not the reality of the head organ itself of course. The latter we can’t really encompass as something that can be contemplated from the side. Thus it might be more appropriate to speak of inner perceptual
space against which our spiritual activity impresses forms. Like mathematical space, we may say that this space has its origin or center, normally felt at the spot of the floating eye in the head. Potentially, this perceptual space is infinite but at our present stage we feel capable to impress forms in it in the head region.
In our age the head space is being shaped by all the sensory organs from one side and soul fantasies from another, so in general the results are quite chaotic. By imagining the mandalic form in our mind’s eye we instill certain order in the head organ.
Now the question is how can we grasp the reality of the mandalic experience beyond the head thought-forms that we are used to manipulate? We can gain intuition of this by turning attention to our life of feeling. These can be considered further in the periphery of the
true mandala. Here it becomes critical to distinguish between the feeling experiences from their symbol which is still experienced in the perceptual head space (although, as said, this space is not limited to the head only). We have to be very clear about this: when we conceive of the feeling periphery of the mandala we have two aspects: one is the actual feeling soul experience and the other is the thought-like representation, the mental image.
When we see things in this way we should be able to sense how in thinking we continually perform an act similar to
encasement, like in jewelry, wood or other material can be inlaid with some kind of metal. Thus we produce thought-shells in head space which are originally stimulated by other kinds of more elusive experiences.
The feeling periphery can be described as weaved of refined sympathies and antipathies. They are not simple sensations of attraction and repulsion but have an infinite variety of
qualities. If we use the rotating lotus flower again, it can be said that this elusive periphery is the context of our continual temporal metamorphosis. For example, our daily life is driven by such elusive feeling impulses all the time. The things we do, the things we think are steered by such currents. Deeper still these currents go through certain rhythmic periods of our life, our moods, interests and so on. Ultimately it is all the rhythmic unfolding of destiny. Seen in this way, the mandala is simply the flattened image of the cone from the previous post.
So through the image of the mandala we have something which is still an impression in head space but in an interesting way (at least in my experience) it feels as if we can glide from the head image towards the soul periphery and somehow it still makes sense to call that a mandalic experience.
The biggest challenge is to develop the force not to immediately encase everything in head-space images. This we can achieve only gradually. Remember that head-space has a polar structure, which reflects in the symmetry of the brain and the fact that the ancients depicted the head organ with a two-petal lotus. For most people today cognition is enmeshed within these unsynchronized poles and bounces chaotically, as light trapped in between two mirrors. Concentration of thinking gradually leads us towards this balance – “If therefore thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of light.”
The harmonization and synchronization of the poles of the head organ doesn’t lie in that organ alone. Most of the reasons for the chaos there proceed from the astral body which streams into it and maintains the polarization. Nevertheless we can help ourselves even through somewhat mechanistic exercises. For example, we can imagine the rotating mandala in our mind’s eye similarly to the video where some parts rotate clockwise, others counter-clockwise. For simplicity we can take only two circles, like two dials.
It might be difficult to imagine simultaneous rotation of both flowers. We can find ourselves snapping into one or the other much like the bi-polar optical illusions. This can be alleviated with a trick. We can imagine using our hands to rotate the flowers. We can easily imagine how we rotate a knob with one hand or the other. Most people won’t have trouble to also imagine simultaneous rotation in opposite directions with both hands. We can take advantage of this fact and imagine that we rotate the concentric lotus flowers with our hands.
Gradually we can dissolve the hands and be left only with the rotation. As always, it is not the visual experience that counts but the living experience of the imaginative gesture through which we
intend the movements. If we succeed in this, we may feel how it is as if our being stands independently of both rotations. It’s like we exist in a weightless spot and we’re not dragged by either of the rotations. Another way to conceive this is if we try to feel how our attention snaps to one or the other rotation. In the transition between the two is found the focused state where we have to settle. It is precisely this neutral, weightless point that exists in balance between the two poles.
Of course, such an exercise provides only a quite rudimentary experience of the balancing of head-space, yet we can use that point as support through which we’ll go ever further.
I repeat that the images that we imagine shouldn’t be conceived as something out of which reality will come out. They are only the impressions of our spiritual activity. Reality comes through expanding intuition of the totality of our experience. For example, as we concentrate on the image (by the way, once we find the neutral point it is no longer necessary to imagine the rotation) there comes a time when a pleasant tingling feeling begins to expand from the spot in the head. It fills the whole head, then also the body and even the space around it. As we have spoken many times, this is not mere feeling but the experience of the expanded head-space. Now our whole auric volume begins to feel as if reflecting thought-like phenomena, just like normally in the head we experience the reflections of our own thoughts. It is within this thought-reflective volume that we begin to sense the higher order qualities of what previously could only be crudely compared to sympathies and antipathies. Now these feeling time-rotations assume cognitive (intuitive) essence. In the most trivial case we simply begin to gain insight of our subconscious impulses, interests and so on, which so far have been unknowingly part of the rotations of our mandalic experience.
At this stage the intellectual trap is still present. The cognitive experiences in the expanded auric volume can still be snatched and encased by the intellect. That’s why it is important to resist this as long as possible. This is somewhat similar to learning a foreign language. Initially we feel the need to translate in our mind the words to our native language. But as we get better, the words begin to directly evoke the corresponding meaning and we can practically think in the foreign language. Similarly, there’s a tipping point where we become comfortable to live in the meaning of the deeper rhythms and only encase them for the purpose of translating them to our intellect and possibly other humans. As said in the beginning, this translation is not optional. Without it our intellect can’t make sense of the experiences, they remain inexplicable. The key is to find the gentle balance where our intellect can live in the higher experiences, flowing through the concepts that delineate them, yet resisting to encase everything in deadened thought-forms.
So this is in general how at the present time I feel the most fluid way to work with the thought-images in head-space which almost literally reflect the total mandalic experience. The whole key is in the ability to sustain the concentration in the floating eye and
relax the periphery. From that point onwards there’s not much that we can do in a forceful way. We can’t simply force the Imaginative state. Instead, we need humility and patience. We’re like the virgin that has filled her lamp with oil and awaits in sacred quietness the bridegroom.
In my personal experience this is a very powerful method because we concentrate our mind on something which becomes a total mandalic experience – the center and periphery are always with us.