Not to worry, I'll have more thoughts to share as I continue to respond to other points that were raised in other posts. This thread is really good for me as well as it is covering a lot of ground I've been considering for a long time but haven't really put out there in a formal thread like this. Having the liberty to explore such topics like this freely over here at RF is a major plus for me where I don't have to constantly tried to censor myself worried about the angry mobs with pitch forks going on a holy crusade against any discussions that opens any doors this close to home for them. You know of what I am referring to, of course...Not much I can add to your post.
Yes, I think there is something we seem to take for granted, and that is knowing what it is to be in various "flow states". One thing to add to this, is that people who know what it is to be in subtle state experiences, such as a musical or artistic state (not just playing music, but inhabiting music with your soul), being able to enter into these in other areas, such as meditation, becomes much easier, more natural for them. You get a lot of what I'm saying because you have exposure to these states. You know I'm not trying to define something 'out there' which is what most people get stuck on, but that the whole thing for me is trying to describe something from an experience point of view, a state, a flow, a sense, etc.I think finally there's an answer to some things that been a conundrum to me for a while. After these years of knowing each other, the contemplations, and discussions we've had, I've come to understand many of the things that you talk about, but I haven't spent much or any time in serious meditation. But your answers here explain why. The answer is, I have been meditating in the past. Quite a lot actually. There were many times we prayed for hours. We prayed so many different kinds and styles as well. Besides that, I did some tai chi for a while in more recent years.
You can "hear" what I'm saying because you can relate from that place yourself. Others who have no such exposure, anywhere in any area of their lives have a harder time relating to it. What I think is taken for granted often times is that everyone has had such states of being. But that's not the case. For many their experiences don't just go there. We could talk about that in itself, which is why a lot of times for people "awakening" experiences are often the result of something traumatic, in that is come in by force. Thereafter, there is a more sensitive awareness. I think that's a good word to describe this, "sensitivity" to the subtle. Wouldn't you agree?
I think so, yes. I can say that if you did put yourself in front of it full-faced now, with all this behind you, look out! Of course, it's something you have to feel a desire to go into. But I can say this, it would blow you away. No doubt. It would really put things into a very new and unique perspective on all of this now.But the thing that's been curious is that the past couple of years, I haven't done anything that resembles meditation, but still I have been able to change and realize many of these things we talk about. And perhaps it's because there's a groundwork done (in practice of meditation), and it was more a matter of letting go?
Oh, sure. Most definitely. This happens to me all the time. In fact everything starts to become touching that "divine". It becomes a much more present awareness of this in everything. The simple smile of a child's face is the whole of the universe. A bird chirping sings the divine. The sky, the air, the breeze, the clouds, everything is alive and present. I describe it like being five years old again, when everything was wonder. Except it's with the depth of the adult mind and awareness of so much more. The way I think is a good way to talk about this is that meditation practice moves us into this awareness in ourselves, beyond being caught up in all the internal dialog we find ourselves inhabiting 99% of the time. We learn to understand this subtle side of ourselves, the we were aware of as a child without all the domination of our busy adult minds wrapped up in the cares of the world. Then as we start to inhabit that more and more as adult, all the texts that we run become more "functional tools", rather than the seat of our self-identities.I have to ask. Is it possible to be in meditative states even during mundane tasks in regular life? Is there anything about how that works? I have some experiences that I might share if you know anything about it.
So we then become masters of ourselves in that we can use our egoic self identity to function in the world, in social interactions, but vastly more effectively because we are not consumed by the cares of protecting and defining ourselves by that! We learn to breathe in life again, as a child in wonder before the world, and we relax our cares surrounding these other things and learn to "let it be". We take what comes in life, pain, without suffering, without the complete loss of light. Even pain becomes a part of Beauty. Displeasure is part of the flow of life, but we remain connected to Ground, to ourselves, even in the midst of happiness and sadness. Yes, everything is affected. And I believe that to practice meditation regularly is the key to this. It requires basically, "getting to know yourself", and exposure is key. The more you do it, the more you become what you've exposed yourself. It's not long a hope, but your self-identify.
It just such a strange doctrine. From a Christian point of view, how can someone be saved and not have the Spirit in them? In reality, how I view things is like this. Saved or 'lost' are terms that make sense as metaphorical descriptions of one's sense of their spiritual state of awareness. Being "saved" is really spiritual liberation. Being "lost" is when we are isolated into ourselves, cut off from ourselves, others, and the world. There is no joy in such a condition, we live in conflict with ourselves and life itself. So liberation is Freedom. We are free to forgive and accept ourselves, free to see others as they are without judgment and comparisons, free to love and to live. It is freedom from self-judgement, self-condemnation. Experiencing this is to see "God", to be that child before the world in wonder. "Except you become as a child you shall not see the Kingdom of God". It's the same world before us, but we either "see" it, or is hidden to us by the darkness of our own self-contraction from it. It's really that simple, and all the rest is language to point to this actual spiritual reality, the reality that is before us in every moment that we cannot see with our eyes closed off from it through all that we do to hide from it.On a side note, you said, "they had this strange doctrine that someone does not have the Holy Ghost unless it is evidenced by speaking in tongues." My parents church was the same. You were saved, but you did not have the Holy Spirit within you, to help and guide you properly, unless you spoke in tongues. I got it when I was 11-12 y.o. or so. Before that, we always had a lot of prayer meetings and sessions anyway, so the path was already made.
So.... to say someone is "saved" but be aware of or "have" spirit in their lives, is an utter contradiction. If you are saved, you have in fact opened to Spirit in your life. It nothing someone "gets" it something we all already are and either know or are 'lost' to in ourselves. Make sense?