Looncall
Well-Known Member
This is something I hear people say a lot, and it always puzzles me. I for one have never claimed any mystical experience of my own proves it comes from "outside of me", that it proves there is some God "up there", in some realm of ghosts and angels and whatnot. Yet I seem to get the impression people think this is what is being claimed. Why is that?
The only claim I would say is the experience is something transcendent in nature. That is not the same thing as saying it "comes from" something transcendent, as if it were outside of us. The statement that it transcendent in nature simply is in reference to the ordinary or mundane experience of the world. What we experience in every day life also comes from within us. It doesn't come from outside of us. It is an internal response to the world. So a transcendent experience is one that likewise is a response to the world, just of a transcendent nature as opposed to a typical average daily sort of response. It honestly all boils down to a change in perception of what is right there before us the whole time. And the response in accord with the type of awareness. It no more "comes from" outside than any other experience does.
Make sense?
If you understand it as I just framed it, it really is nothing more than the type of experience that is being described. It is in fact a personal experience of the world. And that is true in any understanding of the world. The nature of reality itself is understood through everyone's personal experiences. The mystical experience allows the mystic to experience the world in a, well, "transcendent" light. It's not transcendent world "up there". It's basically exposing the world in from of you through heightened awareness.
This is very clear. Many thanks.
However, I don't see how one then progresses to statements about gods(s), "ultimate reality" and such like. That is, anything not strictly personal.