By Marc Gafni
“What is World Spirituality? How do we realize this vision of World Spirituality? Who does it address? And why is World Spirituality so essential and possible today, an opportunity that hasn’t existed in 2,000 years?”
Towards a World Spirituality built on Integral principles
By Marc Gafni
“What is World Spirituality? How do we realize this vision of World Spirituality? Who does it address? And why is World Spirituality so essential and possible today, an opportunity that hasn’t existed in 2,000 years?”
By Marc Gafni
From Your Unique Self:
Unique Self is the enlightened realization that you are both absolutely one with the whole, and absolutely unique. You are free from the contractions of your personality, even as you experience yourself as personally engaged in the great evolutionary unfolding of consciousness.
Realizing your Unique Self will fundamentally change the way you understand virtually every facet of your awakened life. Once we’ve engaged the core teachings of Unique Self, we will look separately at how these teachings fundamentally reconfigure and dramatically revision our understanding of love, joy, shadow, sexuality, parenting, death, relationships, loneliness, evolutionary spirituality, malice, ego psychology, and the integration of East and West.
Your Unique Self is God’s love-signature written all over you. God loved you so much, He personalized himself as you. You are the individualized heart and mind of God. This is your Unique Self.
The creative process that mysteriously moves from nothing to something is the God-impulse. To live as your Unique Self means to align yourself with that process, with the ecstatic evolutionary impulse that initiated the kosmos, with the ecstasy of God, which re-creates all of reality in every second of existence.
Are you ready to respond to this invitation, to offer yourself to the infinite love intelligence that wants desperately to show up in the world through and as you?
Photo Credit: Stuck in Customs
One of the simplest definitions of sanity used in the psychological literature is knowing who you are. To be sane is know your identity, to recognize your name.
For example if I tell you that my name is Ken Wilber when my name is really Marc Gafni and I insist on being called Ken Wilber there is a fairly good chance that I am a bit insane. Or more than a bit. Because I am claiming a name not my own and I do not know my true identity. But the distance between the identity of Marc and Ken is relatively small, actually almost negligible, when compared with the vast distance between my separate self and true self.
The distance between belief that I am but a skin encapsulated, merely Marc, and the knowing which literally blows my mind, that I am True Self, and that the total number of true selves is one- is literally infinite. To be sane is to know that I am not merely a separate self but true self. From the place of true self I am able to access not only my limited power, knowing, creativity and love, but rather all of the power, knowing, creativity and love in the universe flows through me.
From the place of true self there is no reason for me to be jealous of you, to lash out at your or to do anything other then love you as myself. Because in some sense you are myself. The pathological competition, grasping, and abuses produced by the contraction are deconstructed in the emergent glory of True Self. You access a spacious sense of peace, joy and harmonious equilibrium with all other expressions of being and becoming on the planet. The world literally becomes a different place. These are the goods of what has classically been called enlightenment.
So here is the great question. If enlightenment is sooo good, why isn’t everyone doing it? If enlightenment is the answer and it actually delivers on all of its wildly amazing promises — which it does — why is the world not flocking to Center for World Spirituality and other contemporary enlightenment schools, for intensive enlightenment studies? The enlightenment teachers for the most part explain that this is because of the clever brilliance of the ego which does everything in its power to avoid its own death. The ego does not want to die so it attaches you to a narrow identity of small self. Other teachers say that the work of practice required to liberate into True Self beyond ego is simply to demanding for most people. Still other teachers blame the blandishments of culture and society as being so seductive with their pseudo comforts that is hard to free yourself from the game.
All of these explanations certainly carry some weight. But the deeper truth is that the problem is not with the seekers of enlightenment who are in all of the explanations considered in some sense deficient. Rather there is a core defect in the teaching of classical enlightenment itself. You see the teaching of classical enlightenment is boring, dislocating and alienating at its very core.
It is dislocating because the seeker, student, asks rightfully, If I give up my separate self –ego identity, then where am I? The seeker asks correctly, “but what about me”? The enlightenment teacher responds by saying this is just the voice of the ego. The price for enlightenment is, “ die to separate self”. Well that is true but also partial. The seeker senses that “I will disappear into the undifferentiated oneness of True Self — which while blissfully seductive – at some deep level feels not only terrifying but wrong. It feels like a violation of the sacred dignity of the individual.
But not only that, it is also boring. The sense of creative edge, vitality and becoming seems lost in the being-ness of it all. In this case it is the students of enlightenment not the teachers who are holding the higher intuition. The classical teaching of True Self enlightenment is counter intuitive and our intuitive and are intuitions are. It is the Unique Self enlightenment that liberates enlightenment and reclaims its vital energy of transformation as a genuine and necessary option. Enlightenment is not a loss of identity but a reclaiming of your true identity.
Rather enlightenment is the move beyond your separate self to True Self, which is the ground for the awakening of your Unique Self. You correctly sense that the source of your dignity and value is your irreducible uniqueness. What Unique Self teaches is that enlightenment is not a loss of individuality. Rather it is the reclaiming of your infnite individualty as the unique expression of essence that lives as you. To be enlightened means to your realize your True Nature as an utterly unique perspective and manifestation of consciousness. This is not boring. Rather it is the energized edge of your evolutionary creativity and becoming that is both indivisibly part of the greater one and ecstatically You. This is sanity. This is what it means to live in a larger context as an evolutionary lover. This is enlightenment.
Photo Credit: Tie Guy II
By Joe Perez
Bestselling author Seth Godin describes “the scalability of money” on his blog. He writes:
You’re not half as annoyed when you get a $25 parking ticket as you are when the fine is $50.
An investment banker isn’t twice as excited about a $20 million bonus as she is about a $10 million one.
There are threshholds that determine how we feel about money-related events (good and bad), but beyond those threshholds, the relationships get all out of whack. Being a million dollars in debt feels about the same as being five million in the hole.
The way you feel about more (or less) of something probably doesn’t rise or fall based on how much it cost to produce that feeling.
Read the whole thing.
Here’s my follow-up question: Is there something related like “the scalability of enlightenment”?
If you are generally pretty convinced that life is meaningful, what you do is purposeful, and you trust in the universe or God, does it really matter where you rank in a diagnostic scale of ego-development maturity?
If you have mastered onespiritual technologies, one from your home religious tradition (meditation, scripture memorization, chanting, Aikido, etc.), does it really matter if you have mastered 3 or 4 of them? What if you mastered two different technologies from two different traditions? Does it matter that you haven’t mastered 10?
I suspect Seth Godin’s point has a correlate in spirituality. There are threshholds that determine how we feel about spiritual achievements, but beyond a certain point, it just doesn’t matter any more. Our spiritual homes are comfortably furnished, and we have little interest in remodeling or moving homes every few years.
What matters most perhaps is that we feel that our journey of seeking has gone out of the “lost in the woods” phase into the “accumulating wisdom and giving My Unique Gift” phase.
It’s time to stop talking about Enlightenment as if it were an Either/Or state of being. Ther is no such thing as, “I am Enlightened,” or “I’m not Enlightened.” There are degrees of brightness, fathoms of depth, arrays of lightness, and all the Levels, Quadrants, Lines, Types, and States of Integral Spirituality (AQAL).
A better question is, “Is Our Enlightenment ‘enough’?”
And looking around at a world in disarray, with war, famine, gross inequality, gross lack of healthfulness, fear of death, fear of living fully, filled with destructive ideologies and -isms, and so on… the answer is definitely Not.
What do you think?
By Joe Perez
Some say the world needs more peace and others say the world needs less complacency.
Some say the world needs fewer carbon emissions and others say the world needs more jobs.
Some say the world needs less hunger and poverty and others say the world needs more gratitude.
Some say the world needs a cure for terrible diseases and others say all disease is in the mind.
Some say the world needs equal rights for women, racial, ethnic, and sexual minorities…and others say the world needs to recover a social order from ages past.
Some say the world needs more conservative solutions to problems, and definitely more individual liberty. But others say the world needs more progressive solutions to problems, and definitely more cooperation.
Some say the world needs people to feel more and get “out of our heads.” But others say the world needs people to be smarter, more rational, and moved less by irrational feelings.
Some say the world needs nothing: that it is perfect just the way it is.
So… What does the world most need now?
The principles of Integral Spirituality teach us that every one of these answers has a part of the truth. They all see the world from a different point of view. But not all windows on the world are equal; they don’t all have an equal part of the truth. There are many different levels of truth, if you will, as there are many different layers of an onion… and peeling back the easier, superficial answers isn’t for the faint of heart.
Also, the Integral toolset gives us a great starting point for organizing ideas about what the world needs now: it can help us to visualize how each of these issues involves many different dimensions, and it can tell us a great deal about how different people with different psychological profiles and intellectual worldviews make sense of these needs.
But in itself, the Integral Framework does little more than specify a range of possible answers to the question and frame the potential answers. It doesn’t actually answer the question in the abstract, absolute sense. An integral spiritual operating system requires the addition of an empowering and ennobling and wise vision within which to work its particular magic.
And it is this vision of an embodied Integral way of being human that people in the World Spirituality movement from around the world are articulating, learning about, putting into practice, and building community experiences around. It is one hugely important way God is speaking and Spirit is working in the world today.
World Spirituality is, as Marc Gafni frequently says, about democratizing enlightenment. World Spirituality affirms that no task is more important right now than enlightenment… and that this is not just a project for cave-dwelling monks but the highest and most profound calling direct for each and every one of us.
It also suggests the HOW of enlightenment in a wide variety of ways that do justice to all the complexity and developmental perspectives. This is important because adhering to the tenets of a World Spirituality based on Integral principles helps us to avoid making mistakes like lapsing into fundamentalism, scientism, postmodernism, or any other ideology masquerading as the Total Truth.
And one of the most central insights of all is that we all have a Unique Self, a personal face of essence, that is to say, an Ultimate Identity. Therefore we must all be our highest and wisest and truest Self, and not try to hide or diminish it. Our True Self knows needs that our body, feelings and mind do not by themselves apprehend.
So the answer to the question, “What does the world most need now?” begins with YOU.
Only and uniquely YOU.
If you are living from the True Self, that indistinct suchness that is All That Arises, then you are not acting selfishishly and egotistically or just concerned about the ideals of people just like you and the groups with which you associate. On the contrary, you are concerned about every sentient being and want the best for everyone and all creatures.
You need not concern yourself with all perspectives on the question, “What does the world most need now?”
You only need concern yourself with just enough perspectives to help you move forward step by step from where you are right at this moment. You need not be paralyzed by worrying that you won’t do the perfect thing. You need not be frantic, tossed about by haphazard winds of the power of self-will.
THE NEXT THING YOU DO is what the world most needs now, if you are practicing a genuine World Spirituality based on Integral principles.
Marc Gafni, D.Phil. is Editor-in-Chief of Spirit's Next Move, Scholar-in-Residence and Director of the Center for World Spirituality. He is a contemporary philosopher, public intellectual, a lineage holder in Kabbalah, and the author of many books including Soul Prints, a winner of the NAPRA Nautilus Award for Best Spirituality Book. He has several books in publication including Your Unique Self and Radical Kabbalah, which is based on his doctoral dissertation at Oxford University.
Joe Perez is Executive Editor of Spirit's Next Move, Director of Communications and Scholar-in-Residence at the Center for World Spirituality. He has eight years of blogging experience and has seen two of his blogs published as books including Soulfully Gay, a pioneering Integral Spirituality memoir. He is an Honors graduate of Harvard University, has studied at The Divinity School at The University of Chicago, and holds a certificate in Integral Leadership from Pacific Integral. He also blogs at Gay Spirituality.
Dr. Mariana Caplan is the author of seven books and numerous articles on cutting edge topics in Western spirituality, including the seminal books Halfway Up the Mountain and Eyes Wide Open. She has won three national awards for the Best Spiritual Book, and the COVA Visionary Award for Book of the Year.
Liza Braude-Glidden, MA, is a Los Angeles-based mystic in the market place, a community catalyst and author with a long history as a core team member and process leader in both nonprofit and for profit groups. Liza is Co-founder and Creative Director of Beanfields Snacks, a values based natural foods company with award winning taste that features beans as the main ingredient.
Sally Kempton, formerly known as Swami Durgananda, is recognized as a powerful meditation guide and as a spiritual teacher who integrates yogic philosophy with daily life. She is the author of highly acclaimed books including The Heart of Meditation, and writes the popular Wisdom column for Yoga Journal.
Hans Jecklin — Some 40 years ago, as an entrepreneur in music business, Hans Jecklin got involved in Jungian psychology, leading into a deep exploration of various forms of meditation, spiritual traditions and processes of inner change. His integrated experiences are the basis of his present work as a coach and mentor for conscious evolution in and beyond Switzerland. Hans, the author of two books including A New Spirit in Business, is an initiator of Global Spirituality.
Kristen Ulmer has been named by Women’s Sports and Fitness Magazine as the most extreme woman athlete in North America. She is a pioneer in big mountain (extreme) skiing and was, for about a dozen years, named the best overall woman skier in the world by the media and her industry peers. She is also a popular speaker, television show host, and sports journalist.
July 16, 2012 By Hans Jecklin Leave a Comment
July 2, 2012 By Hans Jecklin 1 Comment
Thank you for visiting SpiritsNextMove.net, a spot which has been the home of the Center for World … [Read More...]
Thank you for visiting SpiritsNextMove.net, a spot which has been the home of the Center for World Spirituality’s new blog for the past several months. As part of our organization’s web presence reorganization, we have moved the contents of this blog and will no longer be posting here. You can find the new Spirit’s Next […]
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