Quote:
Originally Posted by Aditi
JASG I really like your analogy of lucid dreaming. I have never experienced anything like that myself, but it reminded me of Joseph Campbell talking about Schopenhauer's 'On an Apparent Intention in the Fate of the Individual' (which I have not read)
"...Schopenhauer concludes that it is as though our lives were the
features of the one great dream of a single dreamer in which
all the dream characters dream, too; so that everything links to everything
else, moved by the one will to life which is the universal will in nature."
I wonder if this sort of thing is what is being alluded to in the image of Vishnu in yogic sleep on the coils of Shesha, his dreaming infinite worlds.
It is so interesting hearing other people's experiences of this sort of awakening. It seems meditation usually plays a significant role in the process, but there are also those stories of people who have sudden revelations. It's hard to imagine what is going on, in those cases.
Your last sentence reminded me of that Zen story that goes something like...
Two monks come across fish in a pond, and one says to the other, "Look at those fish, having fun in the water."
The other says, "You don't know they're having fun, you are not them."
To which the first replies, "You don't know if I know, you are not me."
I hope you are right about all paths leading to the ultimate reality.
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Apparently Schopenhauer was of the opinion The Upanishads are the single greatest repository of knowledge recorded by man. He would read several lines every night before going to sleep.
At various times in his life Sri Ramakrishna exclusively practiced different paths including Islam and Christianity and had mystical experiences according to both doctrines as he also did of Kali. While the experiences might have somewhat differed and according to tradition he was convinced they all touched the same substrata of existence and I have to agree.
The interesting thing about meditation...
My initial practice was Vipassana Calm Abiding (bascally mindfulness of breath sensation). Then I heard Jon Kabat-Zinn refer to resting in awareness where one drops any object of attention and just rests in awareness itself and I added that to my repertoire. As I advanced in that technique I was more often "touching" that silence, resting in awareness, however its significance never dawned on me until I listened to a Sadhguru video where he spoke of opening up a small space between mind and consciousness. That led me to Advaita and Swami Sarvapriyananda's lectures and the floodgates opened.
Advaita posits that ultimately the only thing that erases ignorance is knowledge. Meditation can plow the field, so to speak, preparing it for the planting of the seeds of knowledge. The clarity of mind facilitated by meditation is of enormous benefit to any spiritual path.