conscious


 

Societal choices, more often than not, are the result of expediency, statistical fallacy, sentiment, political or media pressure, or personal prejudice and vested interest.”

David R. Hawkins, M.D., Ph.D.

Power vs. Force

 

I received a comment after posting a blog titled ‘Acceptance, Compassion & Tolerance Out of Anger & Resentment”, which was the catalyst for this entry.

 

“I (Also) Noticed On The Front Page Of Your Website That You Are Selling SHEEP SKIN Mats! That Is Not AHIMSA And It Certainly Is Not Peaceful And Serene For The Sweet Innocent Slaughtered SHEEP! :/ ~::~”

 

Why use meditation mats that are made from sweet innocent loving slaughtered sheep??? That is bloody bad karma and just mean. It is ahimsa for me to point this out to you. Why seek to make money from industries of horrid cruelty?You are a spiritually intelligent being. You seek to embody goodness and loving-kindness towards all beings…I believe. To do so we must wake up from participating in cruelty towards other beings… right? We must have an empathetic loving awakened conscience of loving-kindness towards ALL Life as Divine Spirit.

Why participate in blood money of cruelty? I know you are basically a sweet and loving spiritual person ~ I am just hoping that you will try to embody the higher Pure Consciousness and Loving-Kindness towards ALL LIFE. Precious Animals are not less than or lower than humans.”

 

 

In order to fully discuss this position, let’s look at a definition of ahimsa. Wikipedia describes ahimsa as follows: “the principle of non-violence can or should be applied to different life forms…”

 

This resource (Wikipedia) continues, “Jains go out of their way so as not to hurt even small insects and other minuscule animals and make considerable efforts not to injure plants in everyday life as far as possible. In accordance to this policy, eating of some foods, whose cultivation harms small insects and worms, as well as agriculture itself, is to be abstained from.”

 

Research and information gathered from texts such as ‘The Gospel According to Rama Krishna’, books by Swami Vivekananda, and other volumes of spiritual writings state that ahimsa—a yama of Yoga— is the practice of non-violence or harmlessness in action, word, thought, deed or emotion. All we do creates a karmic affect, no matter its desired intention.

 

It is evident that this ‘practice’ has different meanings and applications depending on the environmental/cultural experience and religious belief of the individual. There are levels of adherence to this practice. This is true for all ideologies; it is the depth of conviction to the belief, whether individual or group, that plays a fundamental role in their actions and reactions. We need look no further than organized religion to see how extremes in the attachment to dogma have created tension and segregation, leading to struggle, suppression and war.


Traditionally, meditation was performed on natural animal skin such as tiger or deer, as I have seen in pictures of gurus and swamis. This provided a softer cushion for a more comfortable way to maintain a meditative posture; it also created a synergy with the meditative process by providing a deeper, natural connection to earth energies, thereby intensifying the benefits of meditation. I have not read that these pelts materialized out of cosmic energy; the animals’ lives did end in some manner.

 

Historically speaking and according to evolutionary theory, man was a hunter-gatherer. Being of aboriginal heritage—Native Canadian M’ic M’aq—my family’s heritage and culture dictated that whenever an animal is taken for food, all parts of that animal are used in order to honour a manifestation of gratitude for that which the earth provides. As a child, I remember that after the moose hunt (which my extended family continues) the meat was canned or frozen, the antlers were used for the handles of eating utensils, and the hide for leather garments, snowshoes and various ties and bindings. All was treated as a gift from Mother Earth and what She provided for our sustenance.

 

The sheep in question are from my brother’s farm. He has a small flock, and his intention is to use the entire animal, in keeping with his cultural heritage, in order to provide for his family. The sheep run free in the pastures on 108 acres, eating grass and natural feed. They are tended with love and kindness. They are protected from coyotes by dogs, donkeys and a llama provided by my brother and his family. His wife is the ‘at home’ veterinarian who provides the occasional antibiotic to ensure the sheep’s health, and is doula or mid-wife during lambing season. In the winter, lambs that are born too small or too many at a time for a single ewe to care for are taken into the house, dried with towels, and bottle-fed—one of the great experiences I have had the pleasure to participate in.

 

Indeed, I take issue with commercial farming and the poor treatment of livestock for the gathering of wealth for the few. The treatment of animals on commercial farms is in truth a manifested aspect of profit and greed. I also take issue with the reckless harvest of animals of the sea for a singular use, such as longline net capture of sharks for the sole purpose of obtaining their fins, which some claim are an aphrodisiac. This materialistic approach has caused many problems. Commercial farms have created the need to regulate society’s food channels. Yet, with a single bacterial outbreak in an industrial processing plant, an entire food network delivers health hazards. Recently, an outbreak of listeriosis in a packaging plant in Canada played havoc on the food channel, resulting in a recall of processed, packaged meat. This past summer tomatoes had to be removed from the shelves due to problems at a processing plant in the United States. Both of these incidents also affected fast food outlets, including the corporate giant MacDonald’s.


I often think that we have formulated a hierarchy based on what we perceive as sentient beings. It is only our current perception that dictates these ideas; they continue to change and develop based on scientific research, which increases our understanding. There are many ‘seekers’ who have taken leave of society to live in renunciation in the wilderness. There, they develop the ability to listen to the wisdom of the tree and the messages upon the wind. There is even mention of those who can live on air alone; they receive sustenance from the energy inherent in everything that is, so highly developed is their connection to the divine source.

 

A tree is alive—it has a series of capillaries that carry nutrients throughout its body, similar in function and design to the human lymph and digestive systems. Firstly, in terms of the lymph system, it has circulatory vessels without a central pump which regulate defense mechanisms. Secondly, like the digestive system, fluid is moved by a process of contraction called peristalsis. A tree has life, it exists, it is energy. The same can be said of all plants. They react to external stimuli: lower vibrations limit growth, whereas higher energies accelerate it. If you sing to a plant it will respond positively with growth; if you yell at it, so too will it wilt.


Man, in being a form of compressed energy, is in essence the same as a potato, a carrot, an apple or bacteria, only differing in the form of the expression of that energy. Anything we ingest is an aspect of energy, which is necessary for cellular metabolism and the continuance of a physical form. All life forms must absorb energy in order to sustain their life cycle. The process is consistent and paramount for all life—energy, in some form, is assimilated and then expunged to return into the fold of a universal balance.

 

Our current perspective deems an animal closer to our own existence. It is our own ego-centricity and the rationalization of projecting human characteristics onto other life forms that creates an imposed judgment. Pulling a carrot out of the ground ends the life cycle of that plant, the same as ending the life cycle of any other organism, whether or not we currently consider it to be sentient. If one is sacred, then all is sacred.

 

On a Path to Light, only when we accept all forms of energy as equal will we truly realize that all life is sacrosanct, and to be accepted as a blessing.

 

 

 

© T.S. (Tim) White, 2008

All rights reserved

www.TheSereneWay.com

 

 

 

To be continued…

 

With a further discussion of commercial farming and Ahimsa

I.L.C (Integrative Life Coaching) session conversation

 

PART II

 

Identify patterns from your life and how they can be used to your best advantage

Achieve balance between work, home and play

Create personal tools to maintain and enhance a healthy lifestyle

 

 

Tim W.:  that is a step in creating the witness

Tim W.:  when we look at things from this ‘detached’ witness we are no longer part of the reaction.

Tim W.:  we can look at is as separate, yet part of who we are

Tim W.:  the patterns are so ingrained and sub or un conscious that we are not able to recognize them in a conscious manner

Tim W.:  all programmed before we are 6 years old

 


P.:  yet does the reaction change…go away? doesn’t there always have to be a reaction to every action so to speak?

 


Tim W.:  it may not go away…it will be our first line of defence…but in awareness we have the ability to deal with it inside rather than projecting it onto a person or object

 


P.:  before 6? I’ve heard that children before the age of six can sometimes remember a past life

 


Tim W.:  we all have that ability…

Tim W.:  we get to a point around 2 where we don’t remember prior to that

Tim W.:  we can however train the mind to find those chemical and biological patterns to go back further…

Tim W.:  then we can remember invitro and then into past lives…at least according to what I have read and it seems to make some sense to me…anything is possible

 


P.:  would that bring us to a better awarenes?

 


Tim W.:  that is life’s search

Tim W.:  always within

 


P.:  I mean an awareness to the truth of all

 


Tim W.:  I find meditation has been a great tool for this

 


P.:  I have just started meditation after my accident…it has done so much for me

 


Tim W.:  that in itself is merely acceptance…we struggle to find reason and we struggle to learn acceptance…that stuggle is struggle not acceptance

 


P.:  I am a beginner

 


Tim W.:  we all are…we learn to roll on our tummies before we sit, then crawl, walk then run

 


P.:  so there does not have to be a reason? we just are, yes?

 


Tim W.:  start from where we are and move from there…the issue arises that we want the goal immediately…and them mind then says it is impossible

Tim W.:  there does not have to be a reason…all just is

Tim W.:  or neti, neti…not this, not this

Tim W.:  our mind tries to say there are reasons, because that is its function…finding black and white…yet there are many colours and shades

 


P.:  I have so much to discover…I am only just discovering…I often feel so human in my thinking…smiles

 


Tim W.:  we have to allow … in that desire we put energy into it and it gets further away…I call it the shopping cart syndrome…we puch the cart and it stays in front of us..only when we let go do we walk

Tim W.:  into it

Tim W.:  we are HUMAN

Tim W.:  so feeling so is a truth

Tim W.:  accept it an be so…we have animal instincts and divine…we are both

Tim W.:  we are all

Tim W.:  all is us

 


P.:  yes, I think that desire can become a double edged sword in this

 


Tim W.:  desire again like fear is within the mind

 


P.:  desire is and fear is…

 


Tim W.:  we may achieve that desire, but where does that leave us…creating a new desire and the cycle continues

 


P.:  no?

P.:  sigh…a pattern begins…

 


Tim W.:  they are manifestations of the mind…they exist there but no where else

Tim W.:  so so they exist…if we make it so yes…if we do not then we only have now, the present, love, bliss and being

 


P.:  we are all…different parts of a whole

 


Tim W.:  and the whole is different parts of us

Tim W.:  they are one in the same

 


P.:  yes i see that now

P.:  the power of now

 


Tim W.:  refractions of the light…a crystal will refract the colours of the spectrum yet it is from a single light

 


P.:  a great example Tim

 


Tim W.:  Eckhart Tolle…power of now…yes

Tim W.:  simple yet the mind keeps us from it.

Tim W.:  depression from thinking about the past

Tim W.:  worry from thinking about the future

 


P.:  how does one stay on track…

P.:  arrgh

 


Tim W.:  neither exist except within the mind

 


P.:  worry destroys

P.:  sounds so peaceful

 


Tim W.:  on track…we are continually on track

 


P.:  what will be, will be

 


Tim W.:  only our judgements on it create the illusion of something different

Tim W.:  yes worry destroys, but it keeps things in check as well…and we come back to good and bad…both and neither

 


P.:  this may sound strange…but….what does one do with the mind??

 


Tim W.:  we can try to control it…through awareness…the reactions may still be for a time…but in time with that new patterns are established and then it simply is

Tim W.:  that is what meditation brings us to

 


P.:  ahhh

 


Tim W.:  first focus…to keep the mind on track

Tim W.:  then concentration…to keep the mind steady

Tim W.:  then meditation when the mind is stilled

 


P.:  peace comes with this stillness

 


Tim W.:  the samadhi…when the soul is now in full awareness

Tim W.:  stillness comes with stillness….peace again is a definition within the mind

 


P.:  but i have noticed that I am becoming unconsciously aware of things

P.:  after I meditate I mean

 


Tim W.:  hmmm…unconsciously aware of things…if you are aware then it is in the conscious

 


P.:  would it be that stillness and peace are one and the same minus the label?

 


Tim W.:  in meditation then you are bringing things from the unconscious to the conscious mind so they can be addressed

Tim W.:  absolutely…labels and definitions…peace exists because of its opposite…stillness exists because of its opposite…when in total we are just being

 


P.:  so, the things that I label important are coming to the surface and I am becoming aware of them

 


Tim W.:  or things that you are not aware of that are important are coming to the surface…

Tim W.:  six in one half a dozen in the other

 


P.:  thanks Tim

 


Tim W.:  if they did not exist in your mind prior…they were not conscious thoughts..they lie beneath…in bringing them to the surface then the waves can be seen and they too become only the ocean

 


P.:  I’m gathering a better understanding

 


Tim W.:  it all comes P.

Tim W.:  just like the turtle

Tim W.:  he does in the end win the race…though in reality there is no race only being

 


P.:  ah…the infamous turtle…

 

 
Tim W.:  hahahah…there are many parables that we take for granted and pay lip service to, yet there are tremendous simplicities within them

 


P.:  are they not written for children…hmmm…


 

To be continued….

 

Stay tuned…

 

Part III will be available one week from today!

 

 

 

 

 

©T.S. (Tim) White, 2008

All Rights reserved. 

www.TheSereneWay.com

 

 

Only human beings can change their evil ways, their ups and downs, pitfalls, shortcomings, anger, pride—all their bad qualities. Then they can experience their own divine nature.”

Paramahamsa Hariharananda

 

 

In Tibetan Book of the Living and Dying, Sogyal Rinpoche states, “Hatred and anger, when truly recognized, arise with diamond like clarity, free from grasping; this is the ‘mirror like wisdom.” Here is the wonderful imagery of the mirror, a reflection upon the surface. When we are not in front of the mirror there is only the reflective surface; it is only when we stand in front of it that we see a reflection of our physical self. There are many surfaces upon which there are reflections, whether a mirror, a conversation, or words upon a blank piece of paper. Each of these allows us the opportunity for realization and an unfolding of awareness of the self. To that end, when we fight or argue, we are arguing against and with ourselves; the mirror absent of the divine self.

 

Anger and resentment can manifest with righteous indignation. A recent posting, titled “The Secret & Law of Attraction as Fabrications of Greed”, elicited the following response:

 

“I read the article you posted and thoroughly agree with its central precepts. These are concepts that I have felt inwardly to be true for a long time.

 

However, the downfall of the materialism which you mentioned, that the Gnostics and Cathars considered to ruin the souls of men and lead them away from the path of light, can only be achieved by the demise of world Jewry and the final destruction of ‘man-centred’ Judaeo-Christian thinking everywhere.

 

The Jew is the archetype of capitalist man and only stands to gain from a sterile economic worldview. That is why you find them as the the spiritus rectus behind globalisation and the New World Order—the ferment of decomposition of peoples and nations.”

 

In this response we see a concept that singles out a cultural/religious group in order to place blame. To be true to the facts, this group was given, by another religious group, the fiduciary responsibility that these ‘Christians’ were unwilling to shoulder based on the dogma of their belief system. Even then, there was an occlusion from society for those that were given this usury provision. Historically speaking, there has always been a division based on class, economic background and heritage, whether the kings and queens of ancient Egypt, the caste system of India, or the hierarchy of any other society, old or new. The only concern involves the society that creates this segregation and separation and continues to maintain the illusion of elitism.

 

 

A ‘man-centred’ ideology is not limited to Judeo-Christian belief—it is a fact of the world around us, no matter the cultural or religious background. It is this ‘man-centred-ness’ that prohibits forward movement and progress. It matters little what we say ‘against’ current belief systems; it matters little that we ‘point fingers’ or argue and feel resentment towards any group. It is what we can do individually to change our self, our immediate circle of influence in terms of acceptance and tolerance offered with compassion, that is important.

 

The manifestation of anger can result from something as trivial as squeezing a tube of toothpaste from the top. Again, the egocentric person feels resentment when their preferences are seemingly disregarded. This resentment unleashes anger. The tube of toothpaste has no feeling whether it is squeezed from the top or bottom. It is within the self that these emotions are created with various ego-centred rationalizations. These too are illusions of the mind, the distorted reflections of the mind upon the mirror.

 

Anger and resentment are currently observed every day as ‘road rage’. There seems to be a sense of entitlement to space and an inability to have patience (i.e., tolerance, consideration and empathy). The space is not ours, as space itself is an illusion and we are merely here to ‘tend’ to this world and each other. We are integrally connected to all that is around us; cause and effect is a ‘two-way street’—that which is given out is returned.

 

I have seen cars weave in and out of traffic to get to the ‘head of the line’, speeding as if in a race. There is little difference in the minute or two gained, or reaching the next street light before someone else. If we are moving we will get to our destination. In the meantime, if we appreciate all that is around us, we realize acceptance and tolerance.

 

Many times I have been cut off while riding my bicycle in traffic. Luckily, on a bike you can stop pretty quickly, and being out in ‘space’ you are able to breathe. It is within this breathing that we are able to manifest tolerance and compassion, and experience the wonder of the world around us.

 

We can only change our self. We can alter how we react to the mirror in front of us. It is with awareness that we can transmute anger and resentment—whether they stem from economic or cultural factors, religious elitism, or simple daily stressors—into a realization of compassion, tolerance and acceptance on a Path to Light.

 

 

 

 

©T.S. (Tim) White, 2008

All rights reserved.

www.TheSereneWay.com

I.L.C (Integrative Life Coaching) session conversation

 

PART I

 

Identify patterns from your life and how they can be used to your best advantage

Achieve balance between work, home and play

Create personal tools to maintain and enhance a healthy lifestyle

 

 

 

P.:  hi Tim…

P.:  how is life?

P.:  sloooow connection….

P.:  or perhaps you type slowly with much awareness…:)

P.:  mindful moments or have we lost connection?? hmmm

      (edit)

P.:  energy is good…

       (edit)     


Tim W.:  yep..

      (edit)


P.:  positive thinking is very powerful

P.:  more so than I once realized


Tim W.:  it is very much…that process keeps all things positive…though without negative positive does not exist

Tim W.:  life is about duality


P.:  balance


Tim W.:  we can either accept that duality and all that belongs to life or repress and supress aspects of our divine nature

Tim W.:  yes balance…though in true balance the energy is potential, only with a tip in the balance can we move forward


P.:  acceptance and moderation


Tim W.:  hahahah….yes, acceptance, understanding & moderation… AUM or OM


P.:  perhaps that is where I am at…finding how to tip the scale a bit in the positive direction


Tim W.:  all things can be positive it just depends on the way we look at it.


P.:  ones perception does play an important part


Tim W.:  I remember a friend saying you never acknowledge your faults…for me they were not faults only weaker character traits, that can be used in that form to create a positive


P.:  ooh…I like that


Tim W.:  for sure…all we are and do and act or react to is our perception based on who whe are as individuals


P.:  no faults, just traits to help us grow?


Tim W.:  our past, our environmental experience

Tim W.:  you got it!!!


P.:  its all in how you look at


Tim W.:  everything we connect to whether it creates a positive or negative reaction is an opportunity to grow to the light


P.:  it has taken me a long time to realize these truths


Tim W.:  yep, and it is our mind that creates that perspective, we have the ability to change that in anything we do


P.:  so we are able to see all that is within us as “good”…yes?


Tim W.:  that’s right…it is good…only when we judge do we put other spins on it

Tim W.:  niether is good nor bad…it is only from where we sit that it becomes either


P.:  so often we judge …others and ourselves

P.:  why?


Tim W.:  energy is energy…it cannot be negative or positive

Tim W.:  insecurity is why

Tim W.:  fear

Tim W.:  death

Tim W.:  life


P.:  but really, there is no death

P.:  so why the fear?


Tim W.:  fear of living of death

Tim W.:  fear of the self

Tim W.:  the simple truth


P.:  and how does one “fit in” when these things are realized?


Tim W.:  when we go into the fear it does not exist…it is the mind that creates this aspect of the self.

Tim W.:  if we try to find it within…it cannot be found…


P.:  we were chatting about the fear inside


Tim W.:  yes fear in the mind…that is where it is created…the mind creates many things that are in essence ‘un’real….they are only machinations of chemical and electrical impulses based

Tim W.:  behaviour patterns and impressions of our external interactions

 

P.:  patterns…sigh…those are tough to diminish

P.:  external interactions can obtain there own power at time…

P.:  impulses…like the fight or flight response?


Tim W.:  when we exert a force they get further away…when we accept they are no longer

Tim W.:  fight or flight is a biological mechanism…survival instinct that has been replaced by emotional turmoil.


P.:  often, the way we lead our life is a pattern, yes? so by recognizing this, are we able to diminish it


Tim W.:  we no longer have to fight tigers or run for our lives though at times we feel the need to do so in reaction to a particular circumstancce

Tim W.:  exactly…even in just the awareness of that patter at least we are conscious of it and have the opportunity to deal with it in a manner that better suits us as individuals…

Tim W.:  all different and beautiful.


P.:  is that reaction a pattern as well though?


Tim W.:  I would say that with most of my research that all reactions are of a pattern..


P.:  hmmm


Tim W.:  often we may change a particular object of reaction yet the reaction is the same

Tim W.:  replacement


P.:  my greatest challenge has been to recognize my patterns and also to look upon them and myself seperately


Tim W.:  that is a step in creating the witness

Tim W.:  when we look at things from this ‘detached’ witness we are no longer part of the reaction.

Tim W.:  we can look at is as separate, yet part of who we are

Tim W.:  the patterns are so ingrained and sub or un conscious that we are not able to recognize them in a conscious manner

Tim W.:  all programmed before we are 6 years old


P.:  yet does the reaction change…go away? doesn’t there always have to be a reaction to every action so to speak?

 

 

 

To be continued….

 

 

Stay tuned for Part II

 

Available in one week from today!