DrShephard
Community Member
- MBTI
- INTJ
- Enneagram
- 1w9
I had an enlightenment experience today and I thought I'd share an analogy, for better or worse as far as response goes. Delving into zen... and I suppose I'll add to it later, answering the ending question. So enjoy - or don't. I care not!
We all exist in a world where we do not know where we came from, we do not know essentially where we are except in regard to what we see around us, and where we do not know where we are going. We are first and foremost without context in life.
The morals and ethics to which so many of us subscribe are completely subjective. They do not have a relation to the universe, only to other humans. Morals would not exist if life did not exist. That is to say that the universe would not care whether a star exploded or lasted for an eternity. It would simply be an occurrence. However, morals cannot be determined from life either. Many animals eat their young naturally or live in harems or are strictly monogamous or brutally kill each other or use sex to resolve any dispute. These natural behaviors do not define universal morality, but the subjective general morality of that animal. Humans, too, are animals. If anything could be said to define what our behavior should be, it would be our nature and not an obscure and unfounded universal law.
Given the subjectivity and oddness of life and existence, if our being could be compared to anything in order to draw a conclusion, I suppose it might be a very long and somewhat consistent dream. In dreams, too, we begin by not even questioning where we arrived from, where we will ultimately end up, or where we are aside from what is immediately in front of us... or has been in front of us before.
In dreams, what appears in front of us appears completely normal no matter how abstract it is. The reality of the dream and its oddness, while not as concentrated, appears very much in our normal waking lives. Ask yourself whether you have been shocked by the oddness of seeing, in a dream, a half-elephant-half-chair creature juggling oranges with television screens in them or other such oddities. One might suggest that those are silly, and yet our reality demands us to things that do not physically exist, such as governments, and to act in accordance with others despite what strange things are believed such as obeying authority, and to take things such as gravity and electrical fields and mass and life and consciousness as normal when we have no clue why these things exist. We may be aware that they are in front of us, but we have no idea why they are there or where they came from. In a dream a river may flow upward, and in reality it may flow downward. In neither do we know why gravity does what it does, which is to say why matter tends to attract other matter toward it. The reality in a dream only seems odd afterward, when we've once again become part of the world we're familiar with. The illusion is seen once we awaken.
In a dream, all creatures and beings and matter is an expression of you. Would it be absurd to assume that this universe and all of its inhabitants are expressions of one essence - of the cosmos itself? A resounding "NO!! That's absurd! This is REALITY. You're INSANE." might be the response, but wouldn't that be the same reply from the opposition inside of a dream? Why wouldn't everything be an expression of one thing? Reality as an expression of a consciousness or subconsciousness, or of a spirit. All things appearing to be different and separate, but all expressions of the same consciousness. Despite our inability to control the things outside of us as we sometimes can in a dream, all of them being extension of who we are underneath it all? Even the dragon chasing us in our dreams is us, as is the member of the opposite sex who we kiss, as is the jerk who we get into a fight with, as are the walls and trees and floor and air.
Would it be too much to go farther and to say that we are, unknowingly, everyone around us? That we are the central being and all that we see around us are simply our creations? Just as the safari guide or superhero or insect we may find ourselves playing in the dream state is not who we really are, the person who we are in our day to day existence is not a mirror of the cosmos. Instead, we are characters brought into being and are inhabited by that ultimate consciousness. This being, (insert your name here), is a character created by the cosmos and is a residence for the cosmos' consciousness. As is everyone and, perhaps or perhaps not for the previously stated latter, the world's inanimate objects... and the world itself.
What, then, might this say about the way we live?
We all exist in a world where we do not know where we came from, we do not know essentially where we are except in regard to what we see around us, and where we do not know where we are going. We are first and foremost without context in life.
The morals and ethics to which so many of us subscribe are completely subjective. They do not have a relation to the universe, only to other humans. Morals would not exist if life did not exist. That is to say that the universe would not care whether a star exploded or lasted for an eternity. It would simply be an occurrence. However, morals cannot be determined from life either. Many animals eat their young naturally or live in harems or are strictly monogamous or brutally kill each other or use sex to resolve any dispute. These natural behaviors do not define universal morality, but the subjective general morality of that animal. Humans, too, are animals. If anything could be said to define what our behavior should be, it would be our nature and not an obscure and unfounded universal law.
Given the subjectivity and oddness of life and existence, if our being could be compared to anything in order to draw a conclusion, I suppose it might be a very long and somewhat consistent dream. In dreams, too, we begin by not even questioning where we arrived from, where we will ultimately end up, or where we are aside from what is immediately in front of us... or has been in front of us before.
In dreams, what appears in front of us appears completely normal no matter how abstract it is. The reality of the dream and its oddness, while not as concentrated, appears very much in our normal waking lives. Ask yourself whether you have been shocked by the oddness of seeing, in a dream, a half-elephant-half-chair creature juggling oranges with television screens in them or other such oddities. One might suggest that those are silly, and yet our reality demands us to things that do not physically exist, such as governments, and to act in accordance with others despite what strange things are believed such as obeying authority, and to take things such as gravity and electrical fields and mass and life and consciousness as normal when we have no clue why these things exist. We may be aware that they are in front of us, but we have no idea why they are there or where they came from. In a dream a river may flow upward, and in reality it may flow downward. In neither do we know why gravity does what it does, which is to say why matter tends to attract other matter toward it. The reality in a dream only seems odd afterward, when we've once again become part of the world we're familiar with. The illusion is seen once we awaken.
In a dream, all creatures and beings and matter is an expression of you. Would it be absurd to assume that this universe and all of its inhabitants are expressions of one essence - of the cosmos itself? A resounding "NO!! That's absurd! This is REALITY. You're INSANE." might be the response, but wouldn't that be the same reply from the opposition inside of a dream? Why wouldn't everything be an expression of one thing? Reality as an expression of a consciousness or subconsciousness, or of a spirit. All things appearing to be different and separate, but all expressions of the same consciousness. Despite our inability to control the things outside of us as we sometimes can in a dream, all of them being extension of who we are underneath it all? Even the dragon chasing us in our dreams is us, as is the member of the opposite sex who we kiss, as is the jerk who we get into a fight with, as are the walls and trees and floor and air.
Would it be too much to go farther and to say that we are, unknowingly, everyone around us? That we are the central being and all that we see around us are simply our creations? Just as the safari guide or superhero or insect we may find ourselves playing in the dream state is not who we really are, the person who we are in our day to day existence is not a mirror of the cosmos. Instead, we are characters brought into being and are inhabited by that ultimate consciousness. This being, (insert your name here), is a character created by the cosmos and is a residence for the cosmos' consciousness. As is everyone and, perhaps or perhaps not for the previously stated latter, the world's inanimate objects... and the world itself.
What, then, might this say about the way we live?
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