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Integrating the Personal and the
Transpersonal
Although people desire the non-dualistic and limitless (awareness,
they make a) limit out of that which is not limited and thereby
constrict the essential mind itself. Even though people desire
(the realization of) both (the transcendent and relative) realities
they fall into an extreme understanding of these. Although
they desire the union of the two realities this is not the
way things naturally are. No matter in what way you think about
this you are trapped in the cage of (conflicting) desires.
Longchenpa
Throughout the ages spiritual masters and sage philosophers have
pointed to a limitless, transcendent mystical reality by contrasting
this with the limited, deceptive, and impermanent reality that
we experience through our senses. Amongst other names, this mystical
reality has been called the Godhead, Brahman, Tao, Source and Emptiness.
However, according to the Dzogchen or Complete Fulfillment tradition,
these realities are limited to the very same extent that they are
distinguished from that which is limited. In other words, as soon
as limitlessness displaces that which is limited it assumes its
own limits and restrictions.
In the above lines, the famous fourteenth century Tibetan master, Longchenpa,
cautions people against limiting themselves by becoming fixated on the limitlessness
of the mind itself. By distinguishing the nature of the mind itself as being
fundamentally different from mental phenomena, such as thoughts and feelings,
people can become intellectually and philosophically captivated by the "idea" that
the mind is limitless. But in so doing they fall into a fixed and extreme understanding
of the Complete Fulfillment perspective. The Chinese Zen master Foyan makes
the same point about Zen when he writes that, "You shouldn't set up limits
in boundless openness, but if you set up limitlessness as boundless openness,
you've trapped yourself."
This type of fixation is based on making a distinction between appearance and
Reality. In orthodox Buddhism and mystical philosophies such as Hindu Advaita
Vedanta, this distinction has been formalized in a theory of two levels of
reality, the social or relative and the transcendent level. The relative reality
corresponds to the world that is known through our body and mind. The transcendent
reality corresponds to an open, unmarked and insubstantial reality that underlies
the existence of everything.
In terms of our spiritual development, knowledge of the relative reality primarily
refers to understanding the consequences of being embodied. As a practice this
involves understanding the inner dynamics, wherein our physical, verbal and
mental behavior conditions what we experience in the future. In Indian spiritual
systems this is called "understanding the workings of karma". Through
this practice we can gain skill in modifying our actions so that we consistently
create opportunities for on-going spiritual practice. The implementation of
these behavioral changes occurs mainly in the interpersonal arena. As such,
an appreciation of the relative reality is mainly cultivated outside of formal
sitting meditation.
In contrast, an understanding of the transcendent reality is gained mainly
through formal meditation practice during which one generates an unalloyed
experience of an insubstantial voidness. While these contemplations begin with
an empirical content, as soon as meditators see the inherent voidness of their
object of contemplation, they let any imagery recede from their awareness,
so that they can focus single-pointedly on the emerging experience of a formless,
transcendent reality. In Buddhist traditions this is called generating a "space-like
equipoise". The rationale behind structuring their practice in this way
is that one can produce deeper and more pure realization of the ultimate reality
by focusing on a vacuous experience that is uncontaminated by any thoughts,
feelings or sensory images. This type of meditation practice requires tremendous
concentration and control in order to break through the seeming solidity and
reality of our thoughts, feelings and perceptions.
The downside in pursuing the realization of the transcendent and relative realities
independently of each other is that they then need to be integrated into a
way of being that seemlessly blends the freedom of unconditioned awareness
with the complexities of living in a conditioned world. Traditionally this
is done in two different ways. Firstly, when meditators arise from their formal
sitting practice they cultivate seeing things as though they are an illusion.
In this way they attempt to directly suffuse their appreciation of phenomena
with the experience of insubstantiality. Then within their space-like meditations
on the transcendent level they will begin to allow objects such as thoughts
and feelings to remain in their awareness alongside the emerging experience
of the transcendent realm. In time the experience of the empirical and the
transcendent become inseparable-one cannot be had without the other.
A further consequence of this way of practicing is that people can over-emphasize
one or other of the two realities, and thus be led into a distorted spiritual
path. For example, if someone cultivates an experience of transcendence but
fails to appreciate how their thoughts, speech and physical behavior influences
what they will experience in the future, they can easily lose touch with empirical
world. They might become completely spaced out and lose their ability to operate
safely and effectively in the physical world. This is called erring to the
nihilist extreme and it can have extremely damaging consequences for people's
spiritual development. Philosophically this is falling to the extreme of misinterpreting
the ultimate reality to mean non-existence. This error can make people foolhardy,
careless, and a danger to themselves and others.
Conversely, if someone cultivates the relative reality while ignoring the transcendent
reality they err to the realist extreme. So while they might take meticulous
care with their behavior and gain real control over their capacity to filter
out negative experiences they fail to gain the unconditional freedom that comes
from realizing that nothing is solid and fixed including any connection between
our behavior and what we experience. By believing that karmic conditioning
is a real and invariant phenomenon they are trapped by the need to constantly
monitor and control their behavior. Philosophically this is falling to the
extreme of believing that reality has a real or intrinsic existence. A consequence
of this error is that spiritual practice becomes a terribly serious and unforgiving
endeavor.
Thus, whilst the theory of two distinct levels of reality is designed to assist
practitioners' spiritual evolution, from a practical angle it can be misused
so that it gives license and support to the innate human impulses to: (1) seek
happiness and freedom by manipulating the empirical world, or (2) disconnect
from the physical world in an effort to be free of suffering.
The brilliance of the Complete Fulfillment tradition, is that it doesn't split
reality into two different types or aspects that then need to be assimilated.
Right from the very outset, the notion of two realities is seen as a purely
intellectual construction. As the great bodhisattva Subhuti says: "Absolute
openness and relative functioning are not divided. They are not two alternative
dimensions, but utter simplicity."
The personal and transpersonal dimensions of the spiritual life are integrated
right from the very beginning. Consequently, there is no need to subsequently
recover an artificial split in our experience that is conditioned by segmenting
our practice into separate meditational and post-meditational phases. This
integrated approach also removes the possibility of producing extreme and potentially
dangerous spiritual experiences, since it automatically corrects any personal
bias that might lead someone to disconnect from the physical reality, or believe
that they are nothing more than an embodied mind. In other words, it is difficult
for someone to skew the Complete Fulfillment perspective towards either the
relative or transcendent extremes, since the perspective to be cultivated is
one in which we begin to connect with a disclosive space that allows all things
to be just as they are.
In our usual way of living we relate to the flux of our experience by rejecting
our pain and becoming addicted to pleasure. The alternative is to shift our
attention so that we begin to experience the disclosive space within which
we and the universe appear as processes that come into existence, endure and
decay. This disclosive space isn't the same as the space that allows physical
phenomena to subsist. Rather, it is the space that allows physical space to
be where and as it is, and precludes it from being where it is not. It is also
the space that allows thoughts and emotions to emerge and subside as they do.
As Longchenpa says:
The state of spaciousness, the true nature of being, is without boundaries
and is non-dual. It does not come into being and cannot be destroyed. It neither
endures nor decays, and neither comes nor goes. Within this space the entire
variety of phenomena appear distinctly yet when they manifest they are naturally
devoid of complexity.
When we begin to relate to our experience as a disclosive space, we see that
it is the very nature of what we are experiencing. That which is disclosed
by the forms of our experience is the disclosive space itself. In fact, outside
of what is disclosed there is no disclosive space. Similarly, the very structure
of our personality reveals the transpersonal nature of being itself. When we
begin to experience the world as this disclosive space, the modulations of
our thoughts and emotions, and changes in our physical environment become balanced
and harmonized. Our experience becomes simple and uncomplicated yet without
compromising the full richness of its texture and distinctiveness.
The Complete Fulfillment tradition invites us to appreciate that we are a totally
unconditioned locus of experience, without making this in any way special.
There is absolutely no effort, struggle, or need to escape who we are, since
this is our unique expression of transcendence. We open out so that we can
experience the subtle and dramatic modulations of our thoughts, moods, feelings
and perceptions, all the while realizing that they are just a free play of
appearances. Instead of arming ourselves with a battery of techniques for running
away from unpleasant experiences and enhancing those that we approve of, we
come to see that every aspect and dimension of our experience is an exquisite
expression of freedom and transcendence. In this way, the Complete Fulfillment
closes the traditional rift between physical embodiment and spiritual transcendence.
Adapted from a commentary Peter is preparing to a text titled
The Natural Freedom of Being by the great Dzogchen master, Longchenpa.
If you are interested in the Radiant Mind
Course a Free
Video Interview is available of Peter Fenner being
asked about the Course, what the unconditioned mind is and how people
can tell if they are experiencing nondual awareness.
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