I personally believe
it to be one of the big lies historically/culturally taught by
Christianity. There is this idea that if
somehow one becomes "perfect" one will suffer no more. It is an idea that implies if one is good
enough somehow one will not have to suffer ever again. They call it heaven. The concept of heaven is a lie in this
context. When one is in
'heaven' one is not disturbed by the physical world any longer, it does not
mean one has gone to some other place physically. In other words, heaven is a state of mind. It is a level of consciousness. One can go to heaven, be there for a minute,
and come back to physical reality, and never go again their whole life. Heaven is a state where suffering is no longer seen as suffering, although one will still be suffering.
The current Dalai Lama has said,
"Hardship, in forcing us to exercise greater patience and forbearance in
daily life, actually makes us stronger and more robust. From the daily
experience of hardship comes a greater capacity to accept difficulties without
losing our sense of inner calm. Of course, I do not advocate seeking out
hardship as a way of life, but merely wish to suggest that, if you relate to it
constructively, it can bring greater inner strength and fortitude." Using this as a point of reference, suffering causes us to grow up, and eventually we grow up enough that even though we may still suffer, we embrace it, enjoy it even, and this is heaven. It is a play on words. Heaven cannot be conveyed, only experienced.
Suffering is to the
soul what lifting weights are to the body, what reading a book is to the
mind. Avoiding suffering is to avoid
growing up. All of these people making
decisions so that they will be safe are living a lie, they are keeping
themselves from growing spiritually.
Safety in those terms is death spiritually speaking. They are still alive, breathing, but they are
not living. As I have said before,
perception is everything.
Remember that these terms are metaphors for psyche experience. Remember that God, Self, the unconscious, Christ, Truth, are all synonymous. They are the same thing being looked at from a different angle.
"To pay attention to the unconscious does mean to deliberately make oneself miserable in order that the autonomous psyche will be able to function more freely" and according to Edinger, who is about as studied on Carl Jung as one can be, who wrote that what you just read, says the most important sentence Jung ever wrote was, "the experience of the Self is always a defeat for the ego." It can't be put any simpler than that, any experience of God, Self, the unconscious, Christ, Truth will be a defeat to the ego. What is defeat? Suffering.
Remember that these terms are metaphors for psyche experience. Remember that God, Self, the unconscious, Christ, Truth, are all synonymous. They are the same thing being looked at from a different angle.
"To pay attention to the unconscious does mean to deliberately make oneself miserable in order that the autonomous psyche will be able to function more freely" and according to Edinger, who is about as studied on Carl Jung as one can be, who wrote that what you just read, says the most important sentence Jung ever wrote was, "the experience of the Self is always a defeat for the ego." It can't be put any simpler than that, any experience of God, Self, the unconscious, Christ, Truth will be a defeat to the ego. What is defeat? Suffering.
Using the story of
Christ here seems somewhat appropriate.
Looking at it from this perspective, Christ's ability to affect others
went hand in hand with his willingness to suffer. The same could be said of Buddha; he was
willing to pay the price in order to understand the meaning of life. I've not personally met anyone in life willing to do what the Buddha did to acquire this knowledge. Imagine what it takes to want to do something
so much so that you will pray half your life to make sure it happens. That makes for loneliness for sure. The Dalai Lama supposedly prays over six hours a
day. According to any human I've ever met, that would amount to suffering, according to their ego.
Choosing to become sensitive to the environment creates a great deal of spiritual suffering, but what is really going on is that one is learning how to suffer and it not be suffering. Every human being ever born on this planet can do what any great mystic has done, and more, but one must be willing to pay the price. That is the only difference between you and Christ or Buddha; they were willing to suffer first in order to know the truth.
Choosing to become sensitive to the environment creates a great deal of spiritual suffering, but what is really going on is that one is learning how to suffer and it not be suffering. Every human being ever born on this planet can do what any great mystic has done, and more, but one must be willing to pay the price. That is the only difference between you and Christ or Buddha; they were willing to suffer first in order to know the truth.
Back to reality
shall we. What does this mean in our lives? Obviously many of us are a long way from being able to heal others just
by thinking it, or at least we think we are, so how do we bridge the gap? Perspective is how. One must change the way in which they
perceive.
Living a lie is one
of the more painful forms of suffering because the person trapped in the lie typically
must go through something serious in order to see the truth. As Carl Jung once said, "There is no coming into consciousness without pain." I am sure we have all seen this phenomenon. A great many people avoid an issue until it piles up so high it falls on top of them. I have suffered a great deal in life because
of lies.
Being stuck in this state is very painful and it is also a sure way of
knowing that an individual has not recognized and understood their own
ego. The majority of the people on earth
are locked into this state.
Please recognize the
difference between suffering because of ones perception and actually
suffering just from being alive. There is a difference between
actually being abused and being the source of ones own abuse. A child has no choice, an adult does. To be clear, a child's suffering is the
absolute worst kind. Unfortunately, or so it seems, those who suffered the most as children tend to become the most aware adults. Society however is against such individuals. Which causes even more suffering.
Suffering, in this
context though, is actually a 'healing' process. Please understand, that the spiritual people,
those few aware individuals, do not consider terms such as good or bad. The person of a higher consciousness sees all
existence as one thing, the person confused by their own ego sees things as
good or bad, mine or yours, here or there, etc. The ego has preferences, likes and dislikes. The Universe does not.
For instance, the death of a loved one is something all humans face at
some point in life. Christ had loved
ones and they died too, but he, did not see it as suffering. Learning to be lonely and not suffer is a
terribly difficult thing to do.
Suffering is suffering, in the experience of it, it heals and teaches ones soul to grow, and once the lesson is
learned it is suffering no more. So many lessons to learn.
Suffering is the lesson to be learned, just like a complex math problem, one must wrap their
mind all the way around it for it to be known and truly understood. It is an experience to be had that causes one
to become a better person. If we walked
around all day in a state of contentment and happiness there would be no
spiritual growth. Think about it,
whenever you have been content in life, did you really change and grow any at
all? Now compare that time of
contentment with a time of great turmoil.
A lot of people resist change, because change is always hand in hand with suffering. Again this is a play on words. It could be said that this culture has tricked people into experiencing change as suffering. These people are willfully choosing to remain ignorant.
To live on the edge seems dangerous indeed to one who resides safely in
habit.
Eventually one learns that safety is a lie. There is no such thing. It's just a word monkeys made up. It does not exist in the Universe.
Eventually one learns that safety is a lie. There is no such thing. It's just a word monkeys made up. It does not exist in the Universe.
The truth though, is
that there are things in life which must be learned which cannot be learned in
any other way than through sheer suffering. For this reason if one lives a lie suffering is inevitable.
I was in a
relationship once for all the wrong reasons.
Most people I talk to agree with me, our twenties are a nightmare
compared to our thirties, and most agree that they too have had one of 'those'
relationships. As I like to say, growing
up is a bitch. It wouldn't matter who
looked at the relationship I had back then, they would know it was a complete
mess. It was even obvious to me and I
was living it. I was trapped in a
relationship with a woman because I was trapped
by fear. I did not know who I was; she
did not know who she was. I was scared
to be alone. I was scared no one would
ever want to be with me. I knew my life
was a wreck, I knew I wasn't "me" and I knew if I didn't do something
soon my life was going to be over; I was no longer going to be me if I didn't
do something immediately.
I had been living a
lie, more than a few actually, for so long that the consequences had built up
to such a state that I was in complete despair.
I would literally lie in bed and pray that somehow I would not wake up. I was too much of a coward to take my own life, so I was asking God to do it for me. At any time in the journey of my life I could
have realized the truth, but because I refused, massive suffering ensued. I was locked in a toxic relationship with a
woman, who had no respect for me, and I had none for her, but because of our
fears we refused to do the right thing.
It was a living nightmare. I had
lost everything. I was just lying in bed
praying for it to all go away.
We fought every
day. Love hate, as they say. The truth is, the opposite of love is fake love, that is, love that pretends to be love but is not. I believed then, the same lie I
had always believed. It was a
fundamental lie. I believed I was not
worthy of love, and so was acting it out in my relationships. I believed that all I
would ever know were screwed up women who would always cheat. I believed I was flawed in some way and could
not be fixed. I believed I was
broken. I just wanted it to go away.
It did go away. Really quickly too. We were separated within a couple of weeks
after spending five years together in misery.
You see, up to that point in my life I had never really prayed with my
whole being, to make it right. Up until
then my ego was always engaged with some personal desire, always afraid. Prior to that point, I didn't even know what
to pray for. Up to that point, I had not
ever really been ready to do absolutely whatever it took regardless of whatever
price that might be asked of me. That was the secret ingredient. I had
never been truly ready to take responsibility for my Self. I did die in that room praying to God. The voice in my head said clear as day, "God will do nothing for you that you can do for yourself." It took losing it all, living a waking
nightmare, some of the worst suffering of my life, reducing me to a pile of weeping helplessness, to realize that I am
all that I need. I grew up; instantly.
Because of the lie,
because I believed that I deserved to be treated like crap by a woman, that
is exactly what I got. My belief was
based on a lie and at the time it was literally killing me.
If you had asked me
a couple weeks before that experience if I was a grown-up I would have said that
of course I was. Everyone and their dog
was giving me relationship advice, life advice, telling me this or that, and
none of it mattered, it was something I had to experience. I lost all my friends because of this
relationship. Yet, I ‘thought’ I was a
grown up. The ego is such a terrible
thing to taste.
Looking back on it
now, all that suffering saved my life. I am not suggesting that I could not have
avoided this traumatic event in my life; I am saying that living a lie creates
the worst suffering. Which incidentally creates the most growing up. Because I chose to
live a lie, because I listened to my ego instead of the truth, I suffered
tremendously. The minute I admitted the
truth the suffering ceased immediately.
After that I spent five years single. Five years to myself. I decided to get my thinking in order before tackling my feelings. Once I felt secure in myself I decided to get back into the thick of things.
I realized because of bad choices I didn't get the full range of
experience out of my twenties, so I had to make up for it in my thirties. Going to college was a very similar
experience. I didn't go to college to
learn crap out of a text book, but for the social experience of growing up in
America that I did not get when I was younger. I wanted to fit in, and in order to do that I had to have similar experiences. I trained up so to speak before going back to
riding the edge. I got my head
right. The edge is that place where
every step you take could be off the edge of a cliff. The edge is where one lives when pursuing
true Self. No time to think, just be!
I let myself fall in
love again. Or maybe it is better to
say, that I allowed myself to be in proximity to someone who is a great deal
like me. The difference between 'love'
and 'in love' is quite radical, and it is also quite dangerous to one who is
idealistic. Allowing oneself to be in
love is very dangerous because of the consequences of it not being returned. The energy is overwhelming. An idealist can hardly bear to not be
loved. But can you see in order to become spiritually strong enough to be in love and not
care about the consequences requires one to actually do it. No amount of dreaming enables one to run a marathon, or climb a mountain. I can fantasize all I want about writing a
book, but if I never write, the book will never happen. One does not sit down to write, and the first
40,000 words be a bestselling book either.
So many people think the next person they meet is going to be the one,
not realizing they still have a great deal of training to do. One can fantasize about love all one wants,
but if you never go through the experiences of love, you will never know love.
If one is not
willing to sacrifice greatly for love, one will never know love. I finally learned that in order to
truly learn what love is, I must allow it to happen, fearlessly. This is growing up. Doesn't matter that I was in my thirties,
wouldn't matter if I was in my sixties.
Ever since I was a child I just wanted to know what real love is, not
what my parents say, or church says, or what my wife says, but what is love
really? In my life, because I had
already suffered so much as a child it seems quite easy for me to make
decisions that others balk at because of the suffering involved. If one has already suffered tremendously, what is a little more? Most people call you crazy or stupid if you
do something that you know is going to cause suffering. These people miss the main point of life,
they are living a lie; safety is an illusion.
So many people will tell you to avoid the thing that will set you free
because they are too afraid to face it themselves.
The main point is
that it takes suffering to learn life lessons and that it is only our
perception that this suffering is negative, and that is what makes it suffering. Like I said, it's a play on words. When I fell in love again in my thirties,
after years of not having felt that feeling; I cried more that year
than any year of my life. I let it all
go. Everyone around me was labeling me
this or that, telling me I was making a mistake, etc. The truth was, I was growing up, and doing it
quite rapidly. I was willing to do what
I knew I needed to do, despite what others said, and despite whatever seeming suffering may
ensue. I had already suffered so much
because of my relationship with my ex-wife and I was tired of living with
it. I suffered horribly for so many years of my
life, afraid of the hurt, afraid to let myself feel that love again.
If you really love someone you do not care
what they do. Being possessive of other
people is just an immature reaction, like the three year old who doesn't wish
to share a toy, since in the child's mind it really believes the toy is theirs. The lesson for me in life has been to believe
in myself despite what other people do. I'm sure this is everyone's lesson. If I love someone, then I love them.
I walked away from that person that I was 'in love' with because I
finally learned a truth about myself. They were hurting me, so I had to walk away.
We are only 'in
love' with those who are just like us without us knowing it. Being in love is the opposite of the shadow
projection. Realizing the projection
immediately ends the sensation of being in love; on to the next lesson. If you ever meet someone and are instantly in
love, that person has qualities exactly like you do, but you just don't see it
yet in your self. Once you do, you won't be in love
with that person anymore, you will simply love them. The person I fell in love with had the same
spirit as me, the same type of soul so to speak. This is why you should always allow yourself
to fall in love, even though you will suffer for it; you will learn more about
yourself than in any other way I know of.
Eventually though,
we stop falling in love with people, or maybe it is better to say, we are in
love with everyone. This sounds alarming
to the romantic, but in reality, once one knows themselves, they know only true
love. Being in love is for growing up,
real love is for grown-ups. To be honest
it felt really good to go through all that drama even though I was in my
thirties. I do not see how I could have
learned those lessons any other way.
Because I am so wild I am not sure I would have survived that experience
in my twenties. Maybe in my life, that
is why it went down in my thirties.
Without those experiences though I cannot be growing up, I would just be
stuck for the rest of my life at an immature stage.
The woman who I
lived a nightmare with she would tell you too, how that time in our life was a great
purging. Even though her experiences of
it are quite different, it purged her of some of her lies, purged her of some of her pain, the
same as it did me. There is a great deal
of pain involved with coming to terms with the worst of what one believes; the worst of one's self. That suffering cleaned us a bit, it saved our
lives, and it was some of the darkest times of our lives. Everyone says it was horrible, it certainly
seemed so, but how can what saved us be horrible? It is only our ego that gives things such
labels as good or bad, horrible or wonderful.
This has much to do with the people I know who had childhoods similar to mine. They like me, are quite bitter, and upset. They like me rail at the culture. We want to know why this happened to us. I tell them, look how those others are asleep at the wheel. That suffering you went through is the precise reason you are aware of these things. If that suffering had not happened to you more than likely you'd be sitting around watching TV, eating bullshit, wasting your life with stupid opinions. You'd be telling yourself lies to that you could avoid it. That suffering gave the experiences required for knowing. We know the darkness of this culture, while the rest are blind. It is a terrible burden for sure, but nothing in life is worth having that does not require suffering. One of my favorite analogies goes like this; if it is good for you, you will have to work first, and then get your reward. If it is bad for you, your reward will come first; and then you have to pay. Childhood suffering is doing work first, while having an easy childhood is getting the reward first. It is incredibly difficult to see this though; a painful pill to swallow.
This has much to do with the people I know who had childhoods similar to mine. They like me, are quite bitter, and upset. They like me rail at the culture. We want to know why this happened to us. I tell them, look how those others are asleep at the wheel. That suffering you went through is the precise reason you are aware of these things. If that suffering had not happened to you more than likely you'd be sitting around watching TV, eating bullshit, wasting your life with stupid opinions. You'd be telling yourself lies to that you could avoid it. That suffering gave the experiences required for knowing. We know the darkness of this culture, while the rest are blind. It is a terrible burden for sure, but nothing in life is worth having that does not require suffering. One of my favorite analogies goes like this; if it is good for you, you will have to work first, and then get your reward. If it is bad for you, your reward will come first; and then you have to pay. Childhood suffering is doing work first, while having an easy childhood is getting the reward first. It is incredibly difficult to see this though; a painful pill to swallow.
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