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Archive for October 6, 2020

An Unknown World: Notes on the Meaning of the Earth

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October 6, 2020

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An Unknown World: Notes on the Meaning of the Earth

Light is a powerful substance. We have a primal connection to it. But, for something so powerful, situations for its felt presence are fragile.

– James Turrell –

An Unknown World: Notes on the Meaning of the Earth

In 1926 Vladimir Vernadsky’s pioneering book The Biosphere showed for the first time that the biosphere of the earth was an integral dynamic system controlled by life itself. The biosphere “receives from every part of celestial space an infinite number of other radiations… We have hardly begun to realize their fundamental importance in surrounding processes, an importance scarcely perceptible to our minds so accustomed to other pictures of the universe. These rays are being incessantly propagated around us, within us, everywhere…” As Jacob Needleman writes, “Why did these words of Vernadsky now, as before, send a chill down my spine?”He further pondered, “What was the sensibility of this pioneering Russian scientist that enabled him to offer straightforward information in a way that opened the heart even as it informed the mind? The text was touching something entirely different in me–and not only in me, but also in each one of the men and women working on the translation.” Decades later these questions ripened into one of Needleman’s own books, excerpted here. { read more }

Be The Change

Read more from Jacob Needleman in this passage: “I am not I.” { more }

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Awakin Weekly: Substituting One Cruelty For Another

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Substituting One Cruelty For Another
by Anthony de Mello

[Listen to Audio!]

2445.jpgMany people swing into action only to make things worse. They’re not coming from love, they’re coming from negative feelings. They’re coming from guilt, anger, hate; from a sense of injustice or whatever. You’ve got to make sure of your "being" before you swing into action. You have to make sure of who you are before you act.

Unfortunately, when sleeping people swing into action, they simply substitute one cruelty for another, one injustice for another. And so it goes. Meister Eckhart says, "It is not by your actions that you will be [awakened] but by your being. It is not by what you do, but by what you are that you will be judged". What good is it to you to feed the hungry, give the thirsty to drink, or visit prisoners in jail? Remember that sentence from Paul: "If I give my body to be burned and all my goods to feed the poor and have not love …" It’s not your actions, it’s your being that counts. Then you might swing into action. You might or might not. You can’t decide that until you’re awake.

Unfortunately, all the emphasis is concentrated on changing the world and very little emphasis is given to waking up. When you wake up, you will know what to do or what not to do. Some mystics are very strange, you know. Like Jesus, who said something like "I wasn’t sent to those people; I limit myself to what I am supposed to do right now. Later, maybe". Some mystics go silent. Mysteriously, some of them sing songs. Some of them are into service. We’re never sure. They’re a law unto themselves; they know exactly what is to be done. "Plunge into the heat of battle and keep your heart at the lotus feet of the Lord", as I said to you earlier.

Imagine that you’re unwell and in a foul mood, and they’re taking you through some lovely countryside. The landscape is beautiful but you’re not in the mood to see anything. A few days later you pass the same place and you say, "Good heavens, where was I that I didn’t notice all of this"? Everything becomes beautiful when you change. Or you look at the trees and the mountains through windows that are wet with rain from a storm, and everything looks blurred and shapeless. You want to go right out there and change those trees, change those mountains. Wait a minute, let’s examine your window. When the storm ceases and the rain stops, and you look out the window, you say, "Well, how different everything looks". We see people and things not as they are, but as we are. That is why when two people look at something or someone, you get two different reactions. We see things and people not as they are, but as we are.

Put this program into action, a thousand times: (a) identify the negative feelings in you; (b) understand that they are in you, not in the world, not in external reality; (c) do not see them as an essential part of "I"; these things come and go; (d) understand that when you change, everything changes.

About the Author: Anthony de Mello was a Catholic priest.

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Substituting One Cruelty For Another
How do you relate to the notion that the being in the doing shapes our experience? Can you share a personal story of a time you became aware of your being in the doing? What helps you avoid the trap of substituting one cruelty for another?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: When my vision is clouded what I look out will be clouded and if swing into actionwith the clouded vision, I will make things worse. All wisdom traditions ask us to awake from the sleep of ignorance, …
David Doane wrote: Anthony de Mello is too absolute for me. No one has got to do anything. It does usually help to know who you are, such as to know what your purpose in taking action is. The hungry may benefit more fro…
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