The Experience of No Self A Contemplative Journey

Highlights

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This is not a journey for those who expect love and bliss, rather, it  is for the hardy who have been tried in fire and have come to rest in a tough, immovable trust in “that” which lies  beyond the known, beyond the self, beyond union, and even beyond love and trust itself.

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they have confused these two movements  by failing to adequately distinguish between them: that is, to distinguish between a radical change of consciousness  and the cessation of consciousness; between going beyond first, the lower (ego) self, and later, the higher True Self;  between union with God, and God beyond union. Since viewed as a whole, the contemplative life is on a single  continuum, it is often difficult to draw a line and see clear distinctions until one has personally encountered these  landmarks, at which time the difference between these movements becomes obvious and unmistakable. My purpose then, in writing this account, is to help clarify the second movement, to make it more recognizable and  to bring to light, if possible, the ultimate, final realization of the Christian notion of loss-of-self. 

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It seems that the nature of this passage is a total state of unknowing which, while it lent a certain beauty  and air of mystery to its unfoldment, also lent a sense of bewilderment which was responsible, I believe, for certain  hardships that might have been avoided if some explanation had been forthcoming. It was only when the journey was  over and I could view it in retrospect that I came to a better understanding, and was able, therefore, to offer the  explanations given in the final chapters.

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I knew that if I did not record this transition as soon as possible it  would soon be forgotten, because one of the first lessons learned on this journey is that the passing of each  experience leaves nothing in its wake, hardly a footprint, and certainly not a vivid memory. In a word, one learns to  live without a past.

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Here now, begins the journey beyond union,  beyond self and God, a journey into the silent and still regions of the Unknown.

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Through past experience I had become familiar with many different types and levels of silence. There is a silence  within, a silence that descends from without; a silence that stills existence and a silence that engulfs the entire  universe. There is a silence of the self and its faculties of will, thought, memory, and emotions. There is a silence in  which there is nothing, a silence in which there is something; and finally, there is the silence of no-self and the  silence of God. If there was any path on which I could chart my contemplative experiences, it would be this ever-  expanding and deepening path of silence.

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On one occasion, however, this path seemed to come to an end when I entered a silence from which I would never  totally emerge

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on previous occasions, I had come upon a pervasive  silence of the faculties so total as to give rise to subtle apprehensions of fear. It was a fear of being engulfed forever,  of being lost, annihilated, or blacking out and possibly never returning. In such moments, to ward off the fear, I  would make some movement of abandoning my fate to Goda gesture of the will, a thought, some type of projection. And every time

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I did this the silence would be broken and I would gradually return to my usual selfand security. Then, one day, this  was not to be the case.

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there was a pervasive silence and once again I waited for the onset of fear to break it up. But this time the fear  never came. Whether by habit of expectation or the reality of a fear held in abeyance, I felt some moments of  suspense or tensionas if waiting for fear to touch me. During these moments of waiting I felt as if I were poised on a  precipice or balanced on a thin tightrope, with the known (myself) on one side and the unknown (God) on the other. A movement of fear would have been a movement toward the self and the known.

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Would I pass over this time, or  would I fall back into my selfas usual? Since there was no power of my own to move or choose I knew the decision  was not mine; within, all was still, silent and motionless. In this stillness I was not aware of the moment when the  fear and tension of waiting had left. Still, I continued to wait for a movement not of myself and when no movement  came, I simply remained in a great stillness.

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in the past, having to abruptly pull out of a deep silence was difficult, for my energies were then at  a low ebb, and the effort of moving was like lifting a dead weight. This time, however, it suddenly occurred to me  not to think about getting up, but to just do it. I think I learned a valuable lesson

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I left the chapel as a feather floats in the wind. Once outside, I fully expected to return to my ordinary  energies and thinking mind, but this day I had a difficult time because I was continually falling back into the great  silence. The drive home was a constant battle against complete unconsciousness, and trying to get dinner was like  trying to move a mountain. For three exhausting days it was a battle to stay awake and ward off the silence that every second threatened to  overpower me. The only way I could accomplish the minimum of chores was by persistently reminding myself of  what I was doing: now I’m peeling the carrots, now I’m cutting them, now I’m getting out a pan, now I’m putting  water in the pan and on and on until, finally, I was so exhausted I would have to run for the couch. The moment I lay  down I immediately blacked out. Sometimes it seemed I was out for hours, when it was only five minutes; at other  times, it seemed like five minutes when it was hours. In this blackout there were no dreams, no awareness of my  surroundings, no thoughts, no experiencesabsolutely nothing.

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as the days went by and I was once more able to function as usual I noticed something was missing, but I  couldn’t put my finger on it. Something, or some part of me had not returned. Some part of me was still in silence. It  was as if some part of my mind had closed down. I blamed it on the memory because it was the last to return, and  when it finally did, I noticed how flat and lifeless it waslike colorless slides on an antique film. It was dead. Not only  was the distant past empty, but also the past of the previous minutes. Now when something is dead you soon lose the habit of trying to resurrect it; thus when the memory is lifeless you  learn to live as one who has no pastyou learn to live in the present moment.

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even when I  regained my practical memory, the effortless living in the present never left. But with the return of a practical  memory I discounted my earlier notion of what was missing and decided that the silent aspect of my mind was  actually a kind of “absorption,” an absorption in the unknown, which for me, of course, was God

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I turned my gaze inward, and what I saw, stopped me in my tracks. Instead  of the usual unlocalized center of myself, there was nothing there, it was empty; and at the moment of seeing this  there was a flood of quiet joy and I knew, finally I knew what was missingit was my “self.”

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I thought of St. Paul’s experience, “Now, not I, but Christ lives in me,” and realized that  despite my emptiness no one else had moved in to take my place. So I decided that Christ WAS the joy, the  emptiness itself; He was all that was left of this human experience. For days I walked with this joy that, at times, was  so great, I marveled at the flood gates and wondered how long they would hold.

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This experience was the height of my contemplative vocation. It was the ending of a question that had plagued me  for years: where do “I” leave off and God begin? Over the years the line that separated us had grown so thin and  faded that most of the time I couldn’t see it at all, but always my mind had wanted desperately to know: what was His  and what was mine? Now my quandary was over. There was no “mine” anymore, there was only His. I could have  lived in this joyous state the rest of my life, but such was not in the Great Plan.

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It was just a matter of days, a week  perhaps, when my entire spiritual lifethe work, the suffering, the experiences and the goals of a lifetimesuddenly  exploded into a million irretrievable pieces and there was nothing, absolutely nothing left.

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When the joy of my own emptiness began to wane I decided to rejuvenate it by spending some solitary time gazing  into my empty self. Though the center of self was gone, I was sure the remaining emptiness, the silence and joy, was God Himself. Thus on one occasion, with full hedonistic deliberation, I settled myself down and turned my gaze  inward. Almost immediately the empty space began to expand, and expanded so rapidly it seemed to explode; then,  in the pit of my stomach I had the feeling of falling a hundred floors in a nonstop elevator, and in this fall every sense  of life was drained from me. The moment of landing I knew: When there is no personal self, there is also no  personal God

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For a while I sat there mentally and emotionally stunned. I couldn’t think about what had happened, nor was there  any response in me at all. Around me there was only stillness, and in this complete stillness I waited and waited for  some kind of reaction to set in or something to happen next, but nothing ever did

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no sense of life, no movement and no feeling; finally I realized I no longer had a “within” at all

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The moment of falling had been such a complete wipe-out that never again would I have any sense of possessing a  life I could call my ownor any other type of life. My interior or spiritual life was finished. There was no more gazing  within; from now on my eyes could only look outward. At the time, I had no way of knowing the tremendous  repercussions that would follow this sudden event.

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I had to learn bit by bit on a totally experiential level. My mind  could not comprehend what had happened; this event and everything that followed fell outside any frame of  reference known to me. From here on, I literally had to grope my way along an unknown path. My first thought was: oh, no, not another Dark Night! I was accustomed to those experiential disappearances of God  and was rather disappointed to think there were any of them left.

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I simply had to cope with the  reality of the here and now, a reality in which there was no sense of life in me. So I sat there fully awake, healthy, faculties unimpaired, obviously alive; in a word, all systems were functioning as  usualbut I felt no life. What do you do now? I decided I might as well get an early start preparing dinner, but as I did  so, all the usual movements now seemed so mechanical I felt I had suddenly become a robot, for I could no longer  endow my work with any personal energies. 

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I lay down on the grass, palms  downward, looking up through the branches of the pine tree and felt the moving air flow over me. It was good to be  there; everything was okay. Somewhere there was life all around me, even if there was no life in me.

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Just  to be there was all that mattered. The next weeks were spent mainly out-of-doors. Life indoors had become almost intolerable because it was now so  routine, lifeless, and devoid of personal energies that it was all I could do to accomplish the minimum of chores. But  out-of-doors somewhere life was flowingpeaceful, forgetful, unknowableand this was where I had to be. So I roamed  the hills, the river-banks and the seashore just looking, watching, and being there. Though I had looked and watched all my life, this time was different because I could, no more find life in the trees,  the wild flowers or the waters than I could find it in myself

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It was here that nature finally yielded its secret to me in a simple, still moment in which I saw how it all worked. God  or life was not in anything, it was just the reverse: everything was in God. And we were not in God like drops of  water that could be separated from the sea, but more like … well, the only thing I could think of was the notion of  trying to pinch out a spot on an inflated balloon; if you pinch out a spot and try to cut it off the whole thing will pop  because it can’t be done. You cannot separate anything from God, for as soon as you let go of the notion of  separateness, everything falls back into the wholeness of God and life.

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to see how this works and to explain it are two different matters. One thing is for sure: as long as we are caught  up in words, definitions, and all that the mind wants to cling to, we can never see how it works. And until we can go  beyond our notions regarding the true nature of life we will never realize how totally secure we really are, and how  all the fighting for individual survival and self-security is a waste of energy.

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 I began to see things differently and, above all, I quit wandering around looking for  lifeobviously it’s everywhere, we’re in it; it’s all there is. Solely in retrospect I would like to mention a certain lesson learned on this journey. I learned that a single insight is  not sufficient to bring about any real change. In time, every insight has a way of filtering down to our usual frame of  reference, and once we make it fit, it gets lost in the milieu of the mind

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the mind, which has a tendency to pollute  every insight. The secret of allowing an insight to become a permanent way of knowing and seeing is not to touch it,  cling to it, dogmatize it, or even think about it. Insights come and go, but to have them stay we have to flow with  them, otherwise no change is possibl

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when an insight fell outside my frame of reference I felt more lost than was really necessary. Thus I could have saved myself a lot of trouble looking and searching for my own unanswerable questions.

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under the cypress tree on the day already mentioned, I consumed the host  and saw all things were in God, that he was closer and more personal than I ever dared to expect. To suddenly realize  you live and walk in God is a unique discovery that forever dispels the sense of loss that ensues when the feeling of a  personal life falls away.

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this incident (and many that remain untold) attests to my continual effort to cling to the usual frame  of reference, a clinging that revealed nothing until the hold was released.

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It was not I, who had abandoned the self to God,  rather it was God who had abandoned the self completely; and once beyond the self, everything goes, even ”that”  which I had expected would remain.

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I was standing on their windy hillside looking down over the ocean when a  seagull came into view, gliding, dipping, playing with the wind. I watched it as I had never watched anything before  in my life. I almost seemed to be mesmerized; it was as if I was watching myself flying, for there was not the usual  division between us. Yet something more was there than just a lack of separateness, “something” truly beautiful and  unknowable. Finally I turned my eyes to the pine-covered hills behind the monastery and still, there was no division,  only something “there” that was flowing with and through every vista and particular object of vision. To see the Oneness of everything is like having special 3D glasses put before your eyes; I thought to myself: for sure, this is  what they mean when they say “God IS Everywhere.”

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after a while I thought it was all too good to be true; it  was some hoax of the mind and when the bell rang, it would all disappear. Well, the bell finally rang, and it rang the  next day and for the rest of the week, but the 3D glasses were still intact. What I had taken as a trick of the mind was  to become a permanent way of seeing and knowing which I will do my best to describe as my whole world turned  slowly inside-out

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the obliteration of separateness is meaningless in itself. What is important about this way of seeing  is THAT into which all separateness dissolves.

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It seems I had first to move through the personal and then the impersonal before I realized God  was closer than either and beyond them both. The notions and the experiences of God as being personally within or impersonally without are purely relative  experiences, pertaining to the self and its particular type of consciousness. God, however, is beyond the relativity of  our minds and experiences; indeed, he is so close he can never be localized

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to realize this closenessto see itis to  discover that the very definition of God is “Everywhere.” Thus God IS Everywhere and all that truly exists, because  wherever we look there is nothing else to see. In truth then, God is neither personal nor impersonal, neither within  nor without, but everywhere in general and nowhere in particular. Simply put: God is all that truly existsall, of  course, but the self.

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Having been robbed of the energies necessary to dominate, control, and stay on top of the frequent chaotic conditions  in the home, my effectiveness as a mother to four teenagers dropped sharply to zero. 

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Until the rug (my “self”) had been pulled out from under me, I never realized how utterly dependent I was upon  getting around under my own steam

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steam of the mind and emotions

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It seems we possess  an endless array of subtle energies we don’t know we have until they are gone

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later I was to see clearly how  these energies are, in fact, the  

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self’s defenses against its own annihilation

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For right now, however, it was taking a long time to learn how to survive  without the experience of any energy. Learning to live this way was like learning to live all over again, and though I  now understand it in retrospect, at the time I was as bewildered and groping as a man who has suddenly lost the  power of his limbs.

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What I seemed to need were great blocks of time for uninterrupted silence and contact with nature, because it was  only in such a milieu that I felt at home and at one with the flow of life. 

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I went to the mountains to learn how to live a new type of existence, an existence without time, without thought,  without the emotions, feelings, and energies of self. I hadn’t the slightest idea how things would go; all I knew was  that I had to go and find out. While the discoveries were numerous and I have much to say about this adventure, I  think I can sum it up in one phrase by saying: until I went to the mountains I had never truly lived. Not for a single  day in my life had I ever lived before. Without a doubt I was in the Great Flow, so totally at one with it that every  notion of ecstasy, bliss, love and joy, pale by comparison to the extraordinary simplicity, clarity, and oneness of such  an existence.

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There is nothing haphazard, idle, or easy-going about forest life. On the contrary, everything there is vital, fully  awake, dynamic, and intelligent. It is not a free life. The Great Flow takes its own direction, sweeping everything  along, and whether it would go or not, is of no consequence. There is no time to step out of the flow

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what is it that  sees this Oneness everywhere?

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when I visually focused in on a flower, an animal, another person, or any particular object, slowly the particularity  would recede into a nebulous Oneness, so that the object’s distinctness was lost to my mind. Visually of course,  nothing changed, the change was merely in the type of perception itself. Until this happened, it never occurred to me  how I had always taken for granted the individuality of all objects of visual perception. But now, with the imposition  of the 3D glasses, it became impossible for the mind to perceive or retain any individuality when all visual objects  either faded from the mind, gave way to something else, or were “seen through”I do not know which is the best  description to use. I might also add, I do not understand the mechanism of this change in perception, yet I regard this  change as one of the most significant events in the entire journey

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It not only remained as a permanent irreversible  fixture of perception, but it seemed to be the necessary vehicle by which I eventually came to the final “seeing.”

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I am always reluctant to use the word “God,” because everybody seems to carry around their own stagnant images  and definitions that totally cloud the ability to step outside a narrow, individual frame of reference. If we have any  conception of what God is, certainly it should be changing and expanding as we ourselves grow and change. This is  the very nature of our life’s movement: to expand, to open up and blossom. Like flowers that will turn completely  backward to face the light, sometimes we too must do an about-face if we would see what IS.

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Since we do not know  in which direction to turn, we must wait like the flower for the morning sun, and with no effort or resistance, be  pulled in the direction of the light.

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Whatever we care to call the ultimate reality, we cannot define or qualify it  because the brain is incapable of processing this kind of data.

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The mysterious aspect of this type of seeing was that while I could focus on the objects around me, I could never  focus on myself. To do so would have been as impossible as looking into my eyes without a mirror. For this reason I  felt like an outside observer looking upon a Oneness that included everything but myself

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For myself, the opening up of  everything upon which I gazed revealed a reality that was the same throughout, be the object animate or inanimate. For this reason I called it, Oneness

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was as if I was not a part of this Oneness, not even a part of the universe; in fact, I couldn’t see where I had any  existence at all. Besides the body, all that was left was just this seeing and yet, even this did not really belong to me  for it was not localized anywhere in my mental or physical make-up, but instead, seemed to be on top or a little  above my headtoward the front and over the forehead. 

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I was sure this seeing was actually outside the ordinary mind and  physical body as well.

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While trying to figure out the nature of this seeing, I came upon the notion of man’s original consciousness, or the  type of consciousness we all have from the beginning. As a one-time student of child development, I knew that the  infant possesses a non-relative consciousness in which there is no distinguishing between subject (himself) and  object; consequently, he has no notion of a self. 

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consciousness, nor does he have anything to remember. All of us then, were born without a  reflective, self-conscious type of mind which, to me, is an apt definition of “seeing.” Thus for the adult, seeing may  be a kind of return to this original form of consciousness, a form that surprisingly does not seem to hamper the  ordinary activities of practical living. Therefore, in the process of reverting back to our original consciousness we  have to learn how to live without any self-consciousness

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which is not an easy  adjustment to make. But it’s exciting to think we can make it at all, and even more exciting to think of what would  happen if every man could live as he was originally intended to live.

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For a while then, this idea of man’s original consciousness seemed to clarify the nature of this seeing, but one day I  discovered a hole in this conclusion. While there may be no self-consciousness in this seeing, the seeing alone  constitutes some form of subject, just as the Oneness it sees, constitutes an object, for the distinction between the  seeing and the Oneness was clear to me and never lent itself to any form of identity. In this case, then, seeing (observing) is not identical with the seen (observed), which put me right back on a purely relative plane of  existence

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What this means is that the infant’s consciousness may  actually be relative even though it is not self-reflecting

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One thing is certain: with our thinking, rational mind, we’ll never come  upon these answers because our mind, limited tool that it is, is so continually taken up in the service of self that it  cannot come upon that which lies beyond all such concerns.

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there was still the unresolved question of what  remained in the absence of self. What is this that walks and talks and is aware of the eye upon Oneness? As obvious  as it was, I had no mind for such a mystery and could not come upon any satisfying explanation

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Ultimately I discovered that the only resolution to the many questions that arose, is time. Time means change, and in  the process of change my initial questions either changed, dissolved, or were resolved in the process.

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I had learned long ago that the es-

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sence of life’s movement was not contentment or security; rather, it was growth, change, and challenge, wherein the  external circumstances of life merely reflected the needs of each moment in the thrust of life’s flow.

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I thought to myself: no man can see this and live! My body froze to the spot. The immediate reaction was to ward off the view, to make the vision go away by finding some explanation or  meaning for it; in a word, to rationalize it away. But as I reached for each defense, the knowledge that I had not a  single weapon dawned on me like a sudden blow to the head, and in the same instant I understood this thing called  self: it is man’s defense against seeing absolute nothingness, against seeing a world devoid of lifea life devoid of God. Without a self, man is defenseless against such a vision, a vision he cannot possibly live with. Realizing I could no longer project a single defense, I waited for some reaction, especially an inner movement of  fear. Somehow I knew that with the birth of fear, self would spring alive with all its weaponry, for it was now  obvious that fearthe mother of all inventionswas the core around which the self was built and upon which its life so  depended, that self and fear were here, all but indistinguishable. But when no reaction came, when there was no  movement of fear, I concluded that self had been frozen and entombed within me in full consciousness of its state of  immobility, death, and total helplessness. Unwittingly I had been lured and entrapped in this monstrous state of no-  self, an irreversible state because, once gone, the self can never return.

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I seemed doomed to remain in the unlivable condition of  having to stare out at a horrible nothingness without a single weapon of defense.

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right now, the silence within was not seen as freedom from self, rather,  it was seen as an imprisoned self, a frozen, immovable self that was all part of the scene, part of the insidious  nothingness choking the life out of everything. Even now it had frozen my body to the spot. How could I survive  another moment? It seems the one remaining resource was my two legs, two legs that could still run even though they felt frozen and  immobile. I had learned before how to move without any need for personal volition

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which is to act instantly, without  thinking, without any need for self-consciousness or will-power. Once again it worked, and I found myself running  down the beach, but as I did so, it was as if something else was running with me, urging, forcing me beyond all  physical endurance to “Run! Run as you’ve never run before! You are running for your life!” And I believed it. Now I wasn’t even a jogger, and there was two miles to go, some of it up a steep cliff; but when I reached my car I  seemed mindless of any exhaustion

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I decided that having no-self was  as bad, if not worse, than having a self; because once beyond the self, man was just as likely to come across an  unlivable nothingness as he was a marvelous, unnameable “something”as I first seemed to do. To put aside the self is  a premature laying down of our weapons before we know for sure what lies ahead. It’s all an insane risk. Without a  self, man is totally vulnerable to the winds of chancebode they good or ill.

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I  was glad they had a self; in fact, the greatest blessing I could wish upon all the peoples of the earth was to have a  self. That way, they would never be able to see what I had just seen and what no man could see and live with. For myself, of course, it was too late. I had survived this time, but who knows what tomorrow may bring? Fortunately I could not think a moment ahead or imagine how anything more could go wrong; instead, I tried to  figure out where, in the past, I had somehow made a wrong turn that had brought me to such an impasse and landed  me in this terrible predicament. All I could think of was that I had trusted God too much … but is that really possible? I used to wonder if we could ever abandon too much of our self to God, or if there was a limit beyond

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which a man should not go. Should we abandon our mind, our memory, our whole existenceforfeit all we know in  order to come upon Him, the Unknown?

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there was only one way to account for this predicament: in thinking I had abandoned myself to God, I had, in reality, abandoned myself to nothing. So, yes indeed, it is possible to trust God too much, but only if  there is no God, only if there is nothing beyond the self.

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 That was the real question: if  there is no self and no God, what then? I had just seen “what then” and couldn’t live with that either. There’s nothing  blissful about sheer nothingnesseven Sartre declared it nauseous

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We blame greed on the self, but it may not work that  way at all; materialism may not stem from the self but from the nothingness that lies beyond the self

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I  stayed away from the beaches because there was no life there anymore. What I had to deal with now, was this frozen  self, the very idea of which could be personified as “icy fingers” of an unknown terror and dread that had a way of  appearing when my mind was unoccupied. Though seemingly held in abeyance and never approaching too close, I  knew they were lurking in the background of my mind and were liable to appear at any time. Right here, I realized  how totally my life depended upon the toughness of the immovable stillness within; I knew that the slightest feeling  of fear or panic and these icy fingerswhich were like sudden flashes of light in my headwould invade my entire  being, resulting in madness. But I had no control over this silence, it wasn’t even me, rather, it was all that remained  of a self-that-was. Thus my fate now lay in the precarious balance between the stillness within and an unknowable  terror that could suddenly appear in my mind.

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I could not keep running from this thing all my life, I had to get it out in the open, face it head-on and deal with it,  because I could no longer stand its continual lurking around every corner of my day. I decided to go outside, sit on  the hillside, and stare it in the face until one of us gave wayor went away. Now I cannot convey what it is like to stare at some invisible horror when you don’t know what it is.

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I never doubted for a moment that only a miracle could save me; yet, I never  expected one, didn’t even hope for one, nor could my mind have formulated the simplest prayer. All I wanted to do  was get it over withto die if necessary.

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fish  swimming around looking for the Sea he is already in;

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how could I ever see when I no longer had eyes to see? Constantly before me there was only emptiness and  nothingness. Because of its terrible restrictiveness I called this state of affairs “The Great Passageway.” I had no idea where I was  or where I was going. If the first part of the journey was, in fact, the movement from self to no-self, this second half  was the movement from no-self to nowhere, for I do not believe self enters the Passageway because it could not  endure what must here be endured.

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At times it was tempting to regard this great stillness as God, but I think I was mistaken and later shall explain why.

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despite its relentless, merciless, non-  compensatory commands to “see” and “KEEP GOING,” I instinctively felt it knew where it was going and what it  was doing. There were moments when I thought of going in search of some type of medication to relieve my burning  brain

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I learned that the passing away and becoming of anything is not the way life  really works; for despite the coming and going of what we call life and energy, something remains that never moves  nor participates in these passages. Something that is just there, just watching, and “that” is true life, while all the  energies that come and go are not true life. But what is “that” that remains and observes? And what is it that endures  this passage? What is this form that keeps melting away? And what is it that remains when there is no self? Certainly  it was not me. Could it be God then? Well, if it was, I did not know for I could not see a single thing.

Page61

it was a time of learning how to  survive without having the slightest sense of personal energy. To begin with, I found it necessary to keep constantly occupied with resources outside my own mind, for in this Passageway I could not truly think, reflect, or formulate a single idea or thought. Yet I suddenly discovered I could  listen to the thoughts and ideas of others while maintaining a perfectly silent and unthinking mind, for my  understanding of practical affairs was unimpaired. As long as I listened, my mind was silent and there was no  pressure on it to ”be silent.” From here, I next discovered I could also read books that demanded no thinking and that  left my mind without pressure. Though I couldn’t handle philosophy, I found it helpful as well as interesting to read  every book on mountain climbing the library had to offer. Finally, the day came when I discovered I could also talk and converse with this same silent, unthinking mind, but  only as long as it came right “off the top”that is, spontaneously, without thinking or reflecting. At first, such  conversations were necessarily brief

Page61

but in time, the knack of talking off the top of the head became a permanent function. Later I called it my “non-reflective mind” and gradually recognized it as far superior to the ordinary thinking mind  because it allows a great clarity

Page61

I eventually came upon a new type of activity, the activity of an unthinking,  unknowing mind in which there are no self-invested energies, no goal but survival, and not an ounce of satisfaction  anywhere.

Page61

my own condition of being completely cut off (dissociated) from the  known, the self, without any compensating factor to take the place of the void so encountered. It meant a state of no  feelings, no energies, no movements, no insights, no seeing, no relationships with anything, nothing but absolute  emptiness everywhere you turn. The utter sterility of this state is all but humanly unendurable, especially for any  length of time; to bear the burden of complete unknowing is a weight that moment by moment threatened to crush  me, but crush me without bringing death. 

Page61

This state cannot be compared to a Dark Night, it is more (and far worse) than the purification of the mind and will in  its ignorance of the Unknown; rather, it is a radical state wherein the mind cannot dwell on anything known or  unknown

Page61

the preconditioned habits of a  balanced, integrated, adult mind were absolutely essential for making the passage. Hence, the years prior to taking  the journeyyears of trying and testing the psychic balancewere of the utmost importance; so much so that everything  now depended upon this stability of conditioned behavior.

Page61

On the few occasions I came upon divine relief, there was no mistaking its origin. These events occurred toward the  end of the Passagewaya fact I can only see in retrospectand were always preceded by a piling up of all the intolerable  aspects of this state: its duration, its apparent endlessness, the fatigue, the pressure behind the eyes, the precarious  state of sanity, the total lack of understanding; in a word, the terrible burden of unknowing and unseeing. All this and  more, suddenly became overwhelming, and under its monstrous weight, something collapsed. 

Page61

Whatever remains  without a self, disintegrated, melted away

Page66

It was the obliteration of all but the joyous, humorous smile of the divine, a smile that  somehow was completely subjective. Its most poignant, immediate word of description was “melting”a veritable  melting in which God was all that remained.

Page66

as if my own hardness had melted and it was saying, “I told  you, you could see! You are seeing all the timeand you know this! You cannot possibly doubt it.” Indeed, there was  no doubt, the nature of the passage does not permit of intellectual doubt; but then, neither does it permit of certitude. In truth, it permits of nothing.

Page66

the mind was immersed in a dire void wherein it had nowhere to look since it  could focus on nothing

Page66

Here I was reminded of Christ’s saying he had nowhere to lay his head

Page66

there was  nothing in this world on which he could truly focus his attention, nothing to which his mind could be either  perceptually or conceptually attached.

Page66

Eventually it became clear that this Passageway was beyond despair, and even beyond insanity; for “who” is left to  go insane or “what” remains to experience despair? If self had been alive it would have gone mad on the spot; and if  nothing else, it would have jumped at any chance to throw in the towel and back out. But our psychological notions  of despair and anxiety are mere toys of self-defense compared to the burden-of-unknowing

Page66

Probably the mechanism of  getting through is built into the Passageway itself, if for no other reason than that it’s the only way to go. There are no  options and no outs, no death and no insanity; it’s there and you’re part of it, and that’s what isjust a Passageway.

Page66

I eventually became acclimated to the void when I discovered that time alone took care of it,  for after a while it was hardly noticed anymore.

Page66

when the emptiness of existence is no longer important, “doing” becomes everything

Page66

felt bad about the fact that man lives his whole life in the false expectation that some ultimate reality lies hidden  somewhere behind, beneath, or beyond what is. And I remembered my own life of searching and looking and now  saw what a complete waste it had been.

Page66

All the experiences of my life had been nothing more than a head-trip, a great psychological hoax, a pointless  circular affair whereby I was now back where I started

Page66

think of all the wasted energy: studying, speculating, practicing, looking, striving, suffering, experiencing,  and all of it? A perfect waste! In truth, everything man knows is one hundred percent speculation and wishful  thinking, egged blindly on, no doubt, by a self persistently demanding its own survival. What a trick of the mind! What total deception!

Page66

Initially I had been willing to give up this thing called self because I was somehow assured that God lay beyond it. So I had trusted and I had loved, and until the Great Passageway had not been deceived. But now  that trust had finally been broken to pieces for I could find it nowhere. In its place was a gentle disappointment and  the final acceptance of what iswhich means: what you see is all you get.

Page66

I had finally come upon the great truth: that all was void; that self had merely filled in  the void; and that all man’s words were empty labels foraged by a mind that doesn’t know a thing about its world and  cannot tolerate a state of unknowing

Page66

Although coming upon these great truths had  almost cost me my life, finally I was discovering how to live with them; after all, this is what the journey was all  about: to find the truth and nothing less. I might continue to be sorry for all those still wasting their lives in the  unwitting search for emptiness, yet I felt no zeal to inform them of the truth ahead of time, for knowing the truth  doesn’t necessarily make for a better life, a life that must go on whether there’s any truth in it or not. 

Page66

I walked down and sat on the river’s edge, watching the dead wood in its speedy descent to  the sea. With neither reason nor provocation, a smile emerged on my face, and in the split second of recognition I “saw”finally I saw and knew I had seen. I knew: the smile itself, that which smiled, and that at which it smiled, were One

Page66

In my journal I called this “the grin-of-recognition.”

Page71

It was so utterly simple and so completely obvious it was impossible to understand why I had not seen it before;  and yet, there is no way I could come to this seeing of my own accord

Page71

it had to be revealed

Page71

What I learned was that the unknown object (of the smile) was identical with the subject, and not only that, but the  smile itself was identical with these

Page71

what is the smile? It is “that” which remains  when there is no self. The smile is neither the unknown subject or object, yet it is identical with it. It is that aspect of  the Unknown which is obviously manifest.

Page71

the pressure behind the eyes  never returned, and my mind knew an effortless silence 

Page71

the usual void was replaced by something else, something that was not localized as a presence, but  something more pervasive and intense than even the Oneness I had seen with the 3D glasses. Immediately I took this  for an absolute sham, a trap, a trick of the mind; besides, it came too late, I was now beyond all such enticements that  had landed me nothing but trouble in the past. So I ignored it, refused to give it space or look at it; and if I’d had a  self, I probably would have felt toward it a feeling of disdain

Page71

You cannot look at what Is, for it cannot become an object to the mind, nor for that matter, can it be a subject, for  what Is is “that” which can never be a subject or an object

Page71

the moment you look with your relative (subject-  object oriented) mind, what Is is gone because you have tried to make it an object, and it won’t workwhy? Because  there is no subject. The relative mind cannot apprehend this reality; only a non-relative mind sees because what Is is  equally non-reflective or non-self-conscious. Since what Is is all that Is, it has nothing to see outside itself nor within  itself, and thus it has no such thing as a relative, reflective, self-conscious mind. Nor is it a mind at all, nor  consciousness

Page71

Therefore, once we have been rid of a reflective, relative, self-conscious mind, then  and only then can we come upon what Is, which is neither subject nor object, but “seeing” Itself

Page71

all references to “object” in this book refer to the object of consciousness, not to an  object of the senses. The immediate object of consciousness is always and only itself; whereas the object of  the senses is anything we can see, hear or touch. Failure to distinguish the object of consciousness (self or  subject) from sensory objectstrees, mountains, and you name ithas been the cause of some confusion in  contemplative literature.

Page71

Thus when the contemplative refers to God as “object” he is referring to God as  the primary object of consciousness, not to God as an object of the senses. Beyond consciousness,  however, there is neither subject nor objectno self and no God. Beyond this, Truth is its own revelation and  manifestation, there being no one (no consciousness) to which it is revealed. The mind, however, cannot  comprehend or grasp this non-subjective, non-objective Truth.

Page71

the final and complete close-down of the relative mind, which then heralded a new way of seeing,  knowing, and acting

Page71

Now I could understand, and because of this, now I could rejoice. It  seems that as long as the mind is viable it needs to enter into some form of understanding, otherwise the greatest  revelation, while it would not go unnoticed, could not enter into the fullness of its human manifestation.

Page71

Part of what I understood is how what Is never comes and goes; instead, what comes and goes is the relative mind  that is intimately entwined with the self, revolves around the self, and of its own accord can never get out of itself

Page71

once the self has disappeared, this reflective, self-conscious mind goes with it, and what remains is what Is. You  can no longer look out and see relationships, nor do you see emptiness anymore, all you see is what Is, which can be  intense at times

Page71

it is not something ecstatic, ineffable, or transcendent. On the contrary, it is obvious,  natural, and somewhat ordinary, for it is what we see everywhere we lookand yet, how difficult it is to see how this is  so! Though what Is is everything that truly exists, there is one thing it is not, and that is self, which blocks the view  that otherwise allows us to see that which remains when self is gonenamely, what Is.

Page71

This discovery then, was the end of the Passageway, and once I began to see, another new way of life opened up.

Page71

The term “effortless” here refers to the fact that no self-energies are  involved even though, physically, we may still work up a sweat.

Page71

with activity in which there is no self-investment or self-awareness, something is there; this activity is  not empty and is what I call “doing.” 

Note

This is flow state

Page71

The reason for using this term is because the doer, as well as that which the  doer acts upon, falls into the realm of the unknown; only the act of doing falls into the realm of the known

Note

Clearly flow state, nothing of self remains in this moment

Page71

We do  not know “that” which smiled or at ”what” it smiled, all we know is the smile itself

Note

No separation between things. Only what Is. Only the present

Page71

what Is can only  be known because it is identical with its acts (or doing).

Page76

once on this journey the emphasis had been on a selfless existence, this existence was gradually seen  to be empty and void and no longer of any use. But when this selfless existence disappears completely, what remains  is doing, which is like a beam, a guide, and is the something that is what Is.

Page76

Who is there to be free? Who is there to choose  and experience, to set the goals and chart the path? The free one is now gone, and that which remains now walks the  beam like an unthinking tree must grow and function in a direction already set by its nature, a nature so intelligent  that it is forever completely unknowable to the human mind. Thus knowing what to do or where to put your foot is  fairly black and white: what is to be known is simply there, and what is not known is not there. In other words, what  to do is built into the beam itself so that doing is identical with its content or what it does

Page76

What once created the division between doing and its content was the self with all its choices, values, judgments,  ideas, and all the rest

Page76

it is blocked by all its so-called  freedoms.

Page76

what Is moves in one sure, irrevocable, and unknowable direction, so that knowing and  doing are the same. Nevertheless, this knowing is most unusual because it is not derived from a thinking, speculating,  reflecting mind

Page76

How this works is  unknown to me, but that it works at all is a source of amazement and all part of the clarity of mind now possible  when on the beamwhich means being totally at one with what Is.

Page76

the silent mind is a mind that is void of reflexive activity or consciousness,  and though all other functions of the mind seem to remain as usual, there is no experience of a mind at all. The  reason self cannot come upon this silence is because this silence is what remains when there is no self

Page76

Apparently, with the falling away of self-consciousness there is also a certain loss of body-awareness. This may  account for the continual melting away of physical form I experienced during the latter half of the journey. 

Page76

Though physical pain remains, there is no longer the  feeling of being tired, rested, satisfied, contented, and so much more; somehow these familiar feelings must have  subtle connections with self-consciousness. But because of this, caring for the body becomes little different than  caring for a plant: when you know it needs water, food, or sunshine, you give it what it needs. You cannot “feel” for  the plant, but if you are observant and know something of its mechanism, there is no problem maintaining a bodily  form that is in a constant process of change and subject to the limits of time. Though I regard the body as absolutely  real, I find all forms that compose the universe extremely fragile or tenuous at best, because they can so easily  dissolve into the one Existent, apart from which, no form has any individual existence of its own.

Page76

I had first to recognize this same stillness and  emptiness as pervading everything, not just myself

Page81

Thus only when I saw how it could never be localized anywhere in particular or in  any subjective form, I finally saw how this great silence was indeed Everything and Everywhere, and is truly what Is.

Page81

The mind, will, emotions and feelings, in a word, all our  experiences in the interior life are merely our own reactions to “that” which we cannot otherwise know, see, or  experience

Page81

we sometimes refer to God as the great emptiness and nothingness, though God is not that, not at all. What we  call emptiness and nothingness is self’s relative notion and experience, which moves from the positive to the negative  before both eventually fall away and all that remains is what Is.

Page81

I could no longer find any relative difference between having a self and having no-self

Page81

life is not in anything; rather, all things are  in life. The many are immersed in the One, even that which remains when there is no self is absorbed in the One. No  longer a distance between self and other, all is now known in the immediacy of this identity.

Page81

To  see this new dimension of life is the gift of amazing glasses through which God is not only seen everywhere, but AS Everywhere. Truly, God is all that exists

Page81

all, of course, but the self.

Page86

Here it could be clearly seen that all the searching, speculating, and experiencing of a  lifetime had been a gigantic waste, a head-trip of such proportions that only an infant mentality can bare such a truth:  the end is like the beginning, and everything in between is pure deception.

Page86

The state of unknowing is permanent;  since the mind can hold on to no content

Page86

The smile itself,  the one that smiled and the one at which it smiled were as identical as the trinity

Page86

The smile is neither subject nor  object, but the act and manifestation of the otherwise unknown and unmanifest; it is the form of the formless

Page86

Godcan never be the object (or subject) of vision because it is the Act of vision itself. Here the gap between the  subject and object of the Eye seeing itself was irrevocably closed; God is neither seer nor seen, but “seeing.” 

Page86

After a  long passage, the mind had finally come to rest and rejoice in its own understanding. Now it was ready and prepared  to take its rightful place in the immediacy and practicality of the now-moment. There will be no more looking, no  need for the mind to know what it now knows is forever beyond itself. In this unknowing the mind is content to dwell  forever.

Page91

when there is no self there is also no other.

Page91

the mind has never had the ability to see itself as subjectwhich would be as impossible as the eye  seeing itself.

Page91

I believed that the basic awareness of thoughts and feelings went right on and were present whether I  reflected on them or not. Now, however, I see how both of these are true. It seems that on an unconscious level the  reflexive mechanism of the mind goes on so continuously, it makes no difference if we are aware of our self on a  conscious level or not. In other words, the mind is always bending on itselfand knowing itself as object to itselfeven  when we are not aware of it or are unconscious of this fact

Page91

the known arises in the  now-moment, which is solely concerned with the immediate present, thus making it invariably practical. This is  undoubtedly a restrictive state of mind, but it is a blessed restrictiveness. Since the continual movement inward and  outward, backward and forward, in time and in the service of feelings, personal projections and so on, is an  exhausting state, it consumes an untold amount of energy that is otherwise left free when the mind is restricted to the  now-moment.

Page91

there is no such thing as a totally silent mindunless, of course, the mind or brain (which I view as synonymous) is  physically dead

Page91

One way to look at this journey is to see it as a process of acclimating to an unselfconscious mind, or as a transition  from a relative to a non-relative way of know-

Page91

the initial, most noteworthy effect of the falling away (or  cessation) of the reflexive mechanism, is a silent mind. This means that the silent aspect of the mind is actually the  absence of self, or as I prefer to call itthe silence of no-self.

Page91

there is a step beyond no-self which is the objectless, subjectless seeing of what Is

Page91

To start with, it may be helpful to draw a comparison between man’s basic mental structure and that of a dry sponge,  which is light and airy and can easily be carried by the breezes that come its way. Now, if we take

Page91

the sponge and saturate it in the waters of selfhood, it becomes heavy, ponderous and bloated; and because it cannot  respond to the breezes, it virtually goes nowhere. If, however, the sponge can stay away from these waters and no  longer allow itself to be used, it will eventually, by sitting alone and aloof for a long time, dry out and return to its  original structure. But there’s another way this can happen. This is for an outside agent to pick up the sponge and  squeeze it dry

Page91

If we could fully realize how every cell of the mind is saturated with the waters of self continually oozing outward (projecting) and seeping inward (absorbing), we might have some idea of what it would be like if all such  movements came to an end. Once the mind can no longer reflect on itself, all energy or movement of self is gone; the  feelings and emotions are in silence; the memory has been so denuded that the past is lifeless, with no continuum at  all.

Page96

Introspection becomes  impossible; and projection is also out of the question since we can no longer endow any object with its usual values,  meanings, and purposes; nor can we touch upon objects when there is no water forthcoming to go outward. Our ordinary frames of reference have disappeared leaving an empty mind, and since the mind can hang onto  nothing, it must remain in the darkness of its own un-understanding. Initially it is not only the thinking powers of the  mind that are silent, but it is every cell of the sponge that has been wrung out and must wait in emptiness for the  breezes that will carry it along. Here we have encountered a mysterious, unique type of silence; and since it is not of  the self, it is as nothing ever experienced before. In truth, it is the permanent silence of no-self.

Page96

non-thinking produces mere nothingness, whereas a silent mind is not a  blank mind. Rather, it is a mind in which the reflex arcor whatever it is that allows the mind to become an object to  itselfhas been broken in two or ceased to function, so that thinking goes right on, but now bypasses the synaptic self  that continually colors incoming data before sending it out again. When this break occurs, it naturally eliminates a  great deal of thought and thinking, but only that which was constricting and irrelevant in the first place

Page96

the thoughts that now come to mind do not arise from within, but from the outside or ”off the top,” so to speak, and  then, only when dealing with the obvious data at hand at any given moment.

Page96

Initially, it seems that “doing” replaces thought because when we listen, talk, read, or work, we are (at first, at least)  accompanied by a mysterious silence, which is nothing more than the relative absence of a functioning self-conscious  mechanism.

Page96

at some time or other, everyone has undoubtedly touched upon no-self.

Page96

In retrospect, I also understand why, at that time, those  foretastes could not have become a permanent state. The ground must first be prepared so there will be no rude  awakenings or contrasts between what appears and what Is; and we come to this gradually by continually readjusting  our lives in order to see deeper into what exists. Indeed, it takes a lot of living before no-self can become a  permanent state.

Page101

I  entered the Passive Night of the Spirit, a night of terrible psychological pain, a burning out of the faculties of mind  and will, which lasted nine months without let-up. I was fortunate, however, in having the only spiritual help I was to  find in my life, a Discalced Carmelite priest that I had known for several years. His joy over this darkness seemed  proportionate to my misery, for he had this theory that the lower you go, the higher you rise”like a ball,” he said.

Page101

the still-point is a place of peace and  imperturbability lying below the surface of life’s events and surroundings.

Page101

while all foretastes of an advanced state (such as we experience in ecstasy, for example)  appear glorious and impermanent, by the time we have actually grown into this state or reached it, it will  have become our ordinary, everyday statea fact we often forget.

Page101

This is why I mistrust those who claim to experience  constant bliss and ecstasy, for if this were their true state they wouldn’t know it, it would be so ordinary and  everyday.

Page101

 It seems that from the day we are born, or from the day  self begins to develop, we are getting ready for a life without a self. It is as if the mechanisms of self-preservation  and self-extinction are living in balance and guiding us to our true destiny. And if the former predominates in the first  half of life, it is the latter that comes to fore in the second half 

Page101

What this means is that all our experiences of silence are nothing more, yet nothing less, than the silence of no-self

Page101

It means that the waters of self are gradually being wrung from the structure  of being; that the mechanism of consciousness is coming to an end in a way we may never understand.

Page101

. No-self is not God; rather, it is the gap between self and God and the gateway to what is not only beyond the  self, but beyond no-self as well.

Page101

The first contemplative movement then, is the transition from self to no-self, while the second movement is the  transition from no-self to nowhere

Page101

nowhere in particular, yet everywhere in general. It is a transition from  the relative silence of self to the non-relative silence of what Is

Page101

no words can be used for Its description. It can be known, however, known as it knows Itself, for what Is  knows not words

Page101

Once the journey was ended I discovered the increasing ability to sustain more fully the great intensity without the  light going outthat is, without going unconscious, blacking out, or dropping into an unknowable nothingness.

Page101

The step beyond no-self is like the dissolution of that which remains when It draws back into Itself as if overcome by Its own intensity.

Page101

what we ordinarily know of It, is only that which falls into the realm of the known

Page101

there seems  to exist a fullness of act that does not fall into the known or created, and to be overcome by this fullness means that at  any moment, all we know to exist may easily, instantly and painlessly, be dissolved into what Is

Page101

I do not understand  this mechanism, but I do know this dissolution, this enduring intensity, is the ending and the last of all silences.

Page106

in the end, God will be seen without  the medium of either the senses or the relative mindour subject-object type of knowingwhich is self or consciousness.

Page106

 on a strictly  non-relative plane, what Is is the Eye seeing itself and wherever it looks it sees only Itself and nothing else.

Page106

My  own notion of illusion is that it is merely an error in perception which, I now see in retrospect, goes on as long as self  colors the world as something it is not. Compared to a non-relative reality, all our thoughts about the real are  illusions of a sort, but until we ”see,” we have no way of knowing this, and therefore have no way of recognizing an  illusion

Page106

Once beyond self we see our illusions or errors in retrospect and realize they were only what we thought  about reality, thoughts that had nothing to do with the real world

Page106

 of objects and forms as they are in themselves. 

Page106

At the same  time, I recognize that all form is fragile, subject to change, and that it may easily and quickly dissolve into the Oneness from which it came; but none of this is an illusion.

Page106

I figure the day I can no longer see anything through the veil, or see anything else  but Onenesswhen there is no form left to seeI too will be gone, dissolved, as all form will, into Eternal Form or what Is. In the meantime, I cannot regard the continual coming and going of my children as the interruptions of mere  illusionthough I admit it would be helpful, at times, if this were true.

Page106

When it comes to maintaining psychic balance on a journey of this nature, time is yet another important factor. It  would be impossible to acclimate in a single day to the falling away of self. Beyond self lies a whole new dimension  of existence, a change so radical that it requires a revamping of every aspect of our lifemind, feelings, senses, on  down to physical sensations

Page111

how many can honestly appreciate the  triumph of being common and ordinary? Who can understand what it means to learn that the ultimate reality is not a  passing moment of bliss, not a fleeting vision or transfiguration, not some ineffable, extraordinary experience or  phenomenon, but instead, is as close as our eyes, as simple as a smile, and as clear as the identity of “that” which  remains when there is no self? 

Page111

It may only be deceiving to think the ultimate reality is love and bliss since such experiences may  have nothing to do with God at all. As said before, I am convinced we continually see this Reality all our lives but do  not recognize it because it is so usual, common, and ordinary that we go off in search of more tantalizing  experiencesexperiences more gratifying to the self.

Page111

The notion of doing is difficult to convey because we usually think of it in terms of a doer, of doing “something,” or  of “what” we do; but all this is the content of doing and is a divisive factor we are not ordinarily aware of until there  is no self. But when there is no longer any separation between act and being, then and only then, is there “doing.” It  is not easy to get used to doing without a doer; indeed, the very thought of it is unthinkable. Yet the body functions  this way all the time. No one is telling the heart to beat or how their liver must

Page111

function. So who is doing this, who is in charge here? We call this the “wisdom of the body,” which is a good  example of doing without a doer.

Page111

There is a great difference between the union of God and self, and the immanent unity of God beyond all  creation and self. Also, there is a great difference between the union of Uncreated and created energy (self), and Uncreated energy as it exists solely in itself. What self experiences is created energy, whereas Uncreated energy is non-experiential.

Page116

. It is said that St. Thomas Aquinas, after writing his masterful tomes on Christian  theology, suddenly had an experience of God that so silenced his mind that ever after, he never wrote a single word. In fact, he said that everything he had written was “straw.”

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