Author: John

  • The Diamond Approach by Phrasr

    Diamond_approach

    These images represent the following sentence taken from the home page of www.ahalmaas.com

    The Diamond Approach is a path of wisdom, an approach to the investigation of Reality and a method of working on oneself that leads to human maturity and liberation.

    …and interpreted in images by phrasr. See the show here

    What do you think? I like it. I’m going to open The Soul’s Compass to a random page and do one from it – next post.

  • Resonant Enigma Tag

    It’s been quite a while since i was memed, but today Resonant Engima tagged me.

    Here is the meme guide:

    1. Pick up the nearest book.
    2. Open to page 123.
    3. Find the fifth sentence.
    4. Post the next three sentences.
    5. Tag five people, and acknowledge who tagged you.

    Since I am still reading – Your Soul’s Compass – I grabbed it.

    5th Sentence:

    It’s a statement of faith.

    Next 3 sentences:

    When you say, ‘What’s the most important prayer in Judaism?’ it’s Ana Adonai hoshiya na -‘Please God help us.’ It’s like Kyrie Eleison – ‘Lord have mercy.’ Reb Zalman’s explanation struck a very personal chord for me (Joan Borysenko).

    Compare that to this (the other book close at hand – ProBlogger):

    5th sentence:

    One of my favorite monetization strategies is that anything that alows you to charge a subscription rather than a one-time payment.

    Next 3 sentences:

    Make a sale but get paid over and over. It’s the gym membership model. Some blogs do this with private forums, others with online training courses.

    In reading A. Decker’s profile, we see the list of favorite movies is: King Kong(both), O Brother Where Art Thou?, Brick, Crouching Tiger…(Ang Lee-Chinese-not dubbed English).

    May we suggest – Vitus, Baghdad Cafe, and Being There?

    Who to Tag????

    1. Dean Guadagni
    2. Daren Rowse
    3. Chris Garett
    4. Guy Kawasaki
    5. Candelaria Silva

    And now back to working on my Tuesday presentation for Experience Unlimited8 Simple Tools to Market YOU.

  • Fakeness – Being a Fake

    FakenessHow do you respond to fakeness?

    What does it mean to be fake?

    When I think of fakeness and being fake, the first thing that pops to mind is insincerity followed closely by inauthentic and not real.

    In the normal world, fakeness is often used to describe someone who seems too caught up in image and superficial living, someone who is not being straight with others – not necessarily a liar, but more of a “spin person.”

    Fake people feel empty or hollow and fakeness seems to impact our hearts with a sense of disappoinment or loss.

    The greater issue with fakeness is that the ego itself is fake – 100%. The ego identity is a fake self, so it can’t be anything other than fake regardless of all the striving to be real.

    Most of our lives are lived from a place of fakeness – what we take to be real in ourselves is mostly based on the fake – ignorance, misundertanding, false ideas and beliefs, wishes, hopes and dreams. There is a drive deep within us that longs for the real, for authenticity, but that drive is being co-opted by something fake trying to improve itself for others’ approval.

    It’s a real conundrum – how can a person, identified with their fake self, become real and authentic? What kind of alchemy can transform fakeness into the real?

  • Ipseity

    Ipseity according to the dictionary is: selfhood; individual identity, individuality. [from L. ipse, self, himself]

    The absolute is both my nature and my identity. Is the nature of the soul and her very identity. It constitutes her manifestations but it is also her depth and deepest essence. Alternatively, we can say the absolute is our true self, our objectively actual self. But it is also the nature of the soul. That is why we like to refer to the absolute as ipseity, for the word ipseity means both nature and self. To recognize the absolute as ipseity is a profound experience, for it is the self-realization of this dimension of true nature. A. H. Almaas

    Breathe into Being

    The Sufis say that existence came about because the Divine ‘Himselfness’ (Arabic: Huwiyyah, often translated as ‘Ipseity’ in scholarly works) breathed the Breath of Compassion, Nafs ar-Rahman, on the possibilities (Arabic: ayan-i-thabitah) that were latent in Himself.

    Be that as it may, the human soul is referred to in the Qur’an and elsewhere as a breath, nafs. (Interestingly, the word for spirit – ruh – also means ‘wind’). God moulds Adam with his two ‘hands’ and breathes into him His Spirit. And that part of us that is not moulded ‘clay’ (our materiality) is the nafs, the breath, our soul.

    According to some Sufi sources, there are seven gradations of the human nafs, ranging from the habitual, unreconstructed self of people who have done no ‘work’ on themeselves (the so-called ‘commanding self’, ‘Nafs al-ammarah’, which is really nothing but fragments of conditioning) through to the ‘completed self’, Nafs al-kamilan. – from James

    What would the Buddha say about ipseity? Is there self-identity in the absolute nature of the everything/anything

    Image by Amy TheissIpseity 28

  • Timelessness – All Time – No Time

    Timelessness is NOW. Timelessness includes no time and all time. It is the moment that is always now.

    TimelessnessThe ordinary meaning of being in the now usually means pay attention to what is happening in this moment of time and space. It is usually directed at the content of one’s experience.

    Most of us probably had parents who harangued us at times to pay attention, to be here now. But those moments probably did not contain the sense of timelessnes – being beyond time. In fact, they most likely bound us more to the sense of time.

    Mystics and saints talk of timelessness, of how being in the now or the present moment transcends time. What’s interesting is that being in the now, in the timeless state, does not stop the dynamic movement of the universe or the phenomena of time. Things continue to happen in time and space, but one’s experience is more fundamental than time.

    Timelessness includes time. Time is of timelessness. Time and events are happening within timelessness, from timelessness.

    Many people, in fact, probably most of us, have experiences of timelessness, but we rarely stop to explore the experience in the moment – to really get curious about what is happening. If we do, our conditioning will automatically engage the linear mind in the exploration which brings us back into the realm of time.

    To explore timelessness, we need to be able to observe and perceive with awareness and presence without thinking, without engaging the content in a conceptual manner. This means engaging in a direct phenomenological exploration – what is happening right now without interpretation from the past.

    Timebandits

  • Sense of Identity

    Identity-selfWhat gives us our sense of identity? Some of the components of our sense of identity include:

    • Personal History
    • Body Image
    • Familiar Sensations
    • Thought Patterns
    • Patterns of Reactivity
    • Name

    Beyond the basic need for a sense of control, we are deeply driven by our sense of identity, of who we are. ‘I’ is a capital letter, denoting the importance we place on our sense of individual self. As Descartes said, ‘I think, therefore I am.’ Many social theories are to do with creating or preserving our sense of identity. – Changing Minds

    Of coures there is always the number of cards, accounts, bills, mail, and the like that are connected to our identity.

    But is all of this, in part or total, who we really are? What is our fundamental identity and how does that sense of identity differ from our day-to-day sense of identity?

    One of the most significant characteristics of the soul is that it can identify with the content of experience. It can take any impression, for example self-image, and make itself believe that that impression is itself. It can also take a part of the psychological structure and believe it to be the whole of itself. Identifying with an impression or the content of experience makes the self believe that it has an identity, and through this identity it then recognizes itself. Our personal history, constituted by our memories, comprises the basic content of our usual identity. This identification with the personal history provides a feeling of self-recognition, a sense of identity, or a sense of self. So in experiencing itself through the veil of memories, the soul not only loses sight of its primordial purity – its Essence – but also identifies itself through and with this veil of personal history. – A.H. Almaas

    Questioning the self or identitiy is a basic practice or koan in Buddhism – Who Am I?

    Don’t know? Here’s help

Open-Secrets