Hi blink,
members,
Good topic.
What is more urgent than the single most important thing necessary for the transformation and divinisation of individuals and the world?
Meditation is unquestionably a dynamic activity that requires patience, vigilance, receptivity, poise and dedication. Real meditation is direct spiritual growth in action. It is action in establishing among other things, stillness of the mind and the body. This is not easy thing to do, but there is really no other more effective way to transform the waking consciousness.
It is so much more than a chillin', relaxin', balancing 'antidote' to a confusing, tiring, frustrating outer world - like a beer at the end of a tough day - as this common contemporary notion incorrectly trivializes the real potential of meditation. That premise is based simply on lethargy, inertia, or the absense of activity, which is the natural state of the inert body when not animated by any higher principle - also like allowing the consciousness to simply be carried along like a wild child taking a ride on the perpetually busy, noisey and very important mind's roller coaster, or being swept along passively within streams of desire fulfillment, personality division and aggression, or to be lulled into sleep, the natural state of the gross physical. Being swept along (our consciousness that is) by ignorance, is in the spiritual sense (soul's pov) a type of inertial passive inactivity, even though it seems like William S. said - "much ado" - even if only "about nothing" (or was that Jerry S?). This is why spiritual traditions speak of illusion. What is needed is dynamism in tranquility - the real activity mode of the soul - to displace and replace the inactivity of the consciousness identified as a passive instrument with the ignorant physical world and its ignorant animators.
The mind must be consciously, deliberately and actively made tranquil and receptive.
In fact, there has to be a very dynamic vigilance involved in establishing and maintaining a state of both inner equanimity of mind and outer poise of gross physical and vital bodies. The lower aspects or components of the being must be subservient to the higher, not the other way around as is fairly normal in our world - and the reason the world is as we find it.
The outer world will always be a difficult dangerous place if we do not meditate in order to transcend and transform the inherent ignorance of the base reality we find ourselves in - including our own nature. Fortunately we have this potential within us. Is there any tradition which denies this? Meditation is literally a transformation of consciousness and life which means the alteration of reality itself - no matter what dimension one may find 'oneself' "in".
It is not just learning how to listen - it is the listener becoming both the sound and the ear at once.
What is being listened to? The higher and highest parts of ones own being.
Meditation is a conscious ascension into higher realms within the waking physical consciousness. What is experienced is increasingly retained just like with any practice, and becomes increasingly usable on the physical plane. That is because there is also a 'descent' into the physical of the higher consciousness by the receptivity one actively creates in meditation.
Meditation is a subjective identification with some consciousness, hopefully a higher one.
It is
receptivity in action.
It brings direct growth and transformation.
It is a 'retrieval' process by one's own soul for one's own being - that we can invoke, cooperate in, and become the recipients of. This is the most important retrieval because it determines for the individual, the possibility and quality of all other 'retrievals' of other individuated consciousness in any other dimension - including on the physical, where we currently often find ourselves in the here and now, wherever that is.
Which is better - meditation or service? Yes, anybody can meditate. And yes, anybody can also be self-giving, too. The questions then might be: What are we meditating on? What are we giving of? It is an illusion of sorts to treat these as two different questions for they are really one and the same.
For people who meditate what happens is that the meditation becomes a service, an active self-giving service to the universe, to God, in the form of self-transformation, or God-becoming - then the transforming and transformed being is used as an 'instrument' of service in the mundane world - and this service, because of the quality embodied in what is being offered, becomes like a meditation. So these are potentially quite interchangeable with no essential difference in the end - like 2 sides of a coin. It is the value/quality that matters and that quality is determined by the intent and the effectiveness of practice, both of which could be said to originate with and continue because of Grace.
Afterall, what good is 'service' if we don't embody what is needed to be given, or if we do not know when to give, how to give, what to give, who to give to? Meditation provides all of those things. It creates the very capacity to serve. Otherwise we may simply be foisting the frustrations of our untransformed ignorance, its products and byproducts - onto our fellow human beings and the world, and who benefits from that?
And what good is meditating if we can't use it to grow into our own highest divinity, to receive ourselves what is of real value, what is our real identity to therefore be of the best service to the Creator and the Creation whatever that Will is for us as individuals?
The two aspects are inseparable and need to be developed together.
It is significant that the peace, poise, dynamism, clarity, light, love, etc. - when acquired incrementally, and cumulatively in an ongoing meditation practice, can then be brought forward more easily in the general waking consciousness. These qualities become more familiar in the waking consciousness and begin to displace the more common manifestations of 'normal modes of consciousness', and therefore can be available to ourselves and others, and be increasingly utilized in 'wordly' activities of any sort - which are then suffused with the qualities received in the meditation practice.
After some time and depending on the intensity and sincerity of one's practice, one can meditate more and more within many outer situations, even while doing things like driving. This is part of what is called 'ascension' - the holding of progressively higher consciousness while engaged in earthly activity.
Either in a personal or collective sense - meditation is not an escape or avoidance of life by any means. It is an active practice in detachment from physical plane ignorance. This detachment is not indifference - quite the contrary. Meditation is extremely useful and powerfully transforming, both for oneself and the world. It is a form of self-giving and self-transformation - one component of the whole, raising the consciousness of the totality by raising one part, and also by having a transformative effect on all other parts as well in the process.
Meditation is a specific type of action, real work. It is literally discovery of , communion with, and acquisition of one's true Self. Of course, anybody can meditate - this is true because everybody has a soul. What kind of day will you have when you get up in the early morning and meditate before doing anything else? I'm sure Kathy knows. This is where the holistic rubber really meets the road. It becomes a comprehensive venture involving and integrating every life-decision and activity since priorities need to be established. Iow's - it is sometimes difficult to get up at 4 or 5 am to meditate on God if we also need to watch the Jay Leno Show the night before. Not everyone has the will to do this even though anybody can certainly talk about it. Not everybody has the devotion to acquire the will to do this. But everything is possible. And if practice means anything - it means working with the possible in order to create the inevitable.
With meditation life is and becomes quite different on all levels. But this takes time, patience, humility, sincerity, devotion, dedication, determination and perserverance. What is the point of trying to meditate if you are going to then cancel out its potentials by indulging in other things that lower the consciousness and make it more difficult to meditate, thus drawing back to the original starting place? How can one lose a few pounds by eating many pizzas every day and not exercising, etc.?
This issue of consistency of action and intent is exactly the same and parallel to what actually transpires internally on a moment-to-moment basis (only on much more subtle levels) in ordering priorities of consciousness when engaged in meditation. ie: Indulge wayward thoughts or concentrate? Pray for receptivity or think about grilled cheese sandwiches? Open heart with gratitude or think jealously about friend's new car? It is difficult to do, and yet this process needs to be reckoned with as everyone starts from some place and gradually goes forward from that place. But it is generally productive to use action that is consistent with ones goals, and the more this is done the more this can be done. In this way meditation is structurally the same as any learning process, only remarkably - - it is the easiest, cheapest, most far reaching, most reliable, safest, most accessible, simplest bar none - means to transform a life in the greatest, most profound and ultimate sense.
There is real power inside poise and that is why in a good meditation, people often feel a simultaneous and inseparable peace and dynamism . The peace is actually a latent expression of power. Eventually this displaces the 'rush' of the outer personality's modes of objective ego projection into the world (with its subsequent painful consequences because not 'real', ie: based on ignorance) - and reality is transformed subjectively as individual personality becomes the conscious instrument of the soul, which has inherent oneness with All.
- u
Links of possible interest on the subject:
http://www.srichinmoylibrary.com/search?SearchableText=meditation over 3000 references on meditation by Sri Chinmoy - poems, q&a, essays, etc. randomly returned by search
http://www.srichinmoy.org/spirituality/concentration_meditation_contemplation/me... an entire site devoted to meditation and important subtopics such as 'samadhi'.
You can also link further to videos showing advanced states of meditation