THE ULTIMATE REVOLUTION
Essay by Rupert Spira
Well over a
hundred years ago the painter Paul Cézanne said, “A time is coming when a
carrot, freshly observed, will trigger a revolution.”
Has this
revolution taken place, is it slowly taking place or is it about to take
place?
And what is the revolution to which Cézanne referred?
How could
something as insignificant, inconsequential and ordinary as observing a
carrot trigger a revolution?
Cézanne meant that if we could see
even a simple everyday object such as a carrot, as it truly is, our
experience would be revolutionized.
But what does it mean to see an
object as it truly is?
The key is in the phrase ‘freshly observed,’
which means to see clearly, unobstructed by the concepts that thought
superimposes on our experience.
In fact, most of us are completely
unaware that our experience is filtered through a fine mesh of
conceptual thinking that makes it appear very different from how it
actually is.
As the Chinese sage Huang Po said, some 1200 years
ago, “People neglect the reality of the illusory world.”
The illusory
world? Now that’s even more radical than Cezanne! It’s one thing to look
freshly at a carrot, spade, house or world, but quite another to
consider it an illusion.
What did he mean?
We often hear phrases
in the non-dual teaching such as, ‘The world is an illusion.’
But such
phrases may create a rebellion in us, for we know that our experience is
very real.
So how to reconcile these two positions – one, ‘the
illusory world’ and two, the undeniable reality of our experience?
Anything that appears must appear in or on something.
For instance, an
image appears on a screen; a chair appears in the space of a room; the
words of a novel appear on a page; a cloud appears in the sky.
What about the mind, body and world?
Our only experience of them is what
currently appears to us as thoughts, images, feelings, sensations,
sights, sounds, textures, tastes and smells.
In other words, all we know
of a mind, body or world are appearances, and all these are continually
appearing and disappearing.
We may have a concept of a continuously
existing mind, body or world, but we never actually experience such an
object.
As Cezanne also said, “Everything vanishes, falls apart.”
All we know of the world are perceptions that continuously appear and
disappear.
However, anything that appears and disappears must do so in
or on something.
What is that something?
Start with thoughts:
wherever our thoughts appear is obviously what we refer to as our
‘self,’ ‘I.’
Our thoughts don’t appear outside of our self!
However, we
cannot see or find that ‘something’ in which thoughts appear because it
has no observable qualities.
As such, it is open, empty, transparent.
But that doesn’t mean it is not known.
It cannot be known as an object
and yet it is not unknown.
If we are reading these words we are,
by definition, seeing the screen on which they are written, although we
may not be aware that we are seeing it.
If we are reading a novel we
are, likewise, seeing the paper.
If we are watching a movie we are,
whether we realize it or not, seeing or experiencing the screen. If we
are seeing clouds, we are experiencing the sky. It is not possible to
see the words, novel, movie or clouds without, at the same time,
experiencing whatever it is they appear in or on.
So, if we are
experiencing thoughts we are necessarily experiencing whatever they
appear in. Likewise, if we are experiencing a sensation or a perception –
and the only experience we have of a body or world are sensations and
perceptions – then we are also knowing or experiencing whatever these
appear in or on.
In what does our perception of the world
appear?
In what do bodily sensations appear?
Perceptions of the world
don’t appear in the world; sensations of the body don’t appear in a
body.
Perceptions and sensations appear in exactly the same ‘place’ as
thoughts, that is, they appear in the open, emptiness of our self.
However, they do not just appear in our self; they are simultaneously
known by our self, for our self is not just present but also aware; not
just being but also knowing.
Hence it is sometimes known as Awareness –
the presence of that which is aware – or the light of pure Knowing.
Now, having discovered that all we know of a mind, body or world are
thoughts, sensations and perceptions, and having seen that all these
arise within our self, we may ask where they come from and of what they
are made.
What is their substance, their reality?
If we leave a
jar of water outside on a freezing cold night, ice will start to form in
it. The opaque ice is made only of the transparent water. However, the
ice appears to be something separate from and other than the water. It
seems to have its own independent existence or reality.
Likewise,
the ice has a form and yet it is made of something that has no form.
The ice gives form to something that is itself essentially formless.
How
is it possible for something that has no form of its own to appear as
form, without anything being added to or taken away from it? The
formlessness of the water has the capacity within itself to assume all
possible forms.
In fact, it is precisely because the water has no form
of its own, that it is possible for it to appear as this multiplicity
and diversity of forms.
Our experience is very much like this.
The multiplicity and diversity of experience – thoughts, feelings,
sensations and perceptions – appears in and is made out of our self.
This ‘self’, pure Awareness, in which all experience appears, with which
it is known and out of which it is made, is itself empty, transparent;
it cannot be named and has no form, and yet it is the substance or
reality of all names and forms.
All experience arises within our
self, this transparent emptiness.
And the only ‘stuff’ present in our
self, out of which all experience can be made, is our self itself. It is
our direct, intimate experience that all we know of a mind, body or
world is made out of and is identical to the transparency of our own
Being, the light of pure Knowing.
And what is present in our own
self, prior to the experience of a thought, feeling, sensation or
perception?
Just itself, pure Awareness!
All experience – that is, all
thoughts, feelings, sensations and perceptions – is a modulation of the
presence our own Being, the light of pure Knowing.
The entire
multiplicity and diversity of names and forms is made out of one
transparent, empty, indivisible substance.
Just as the screen on
which an image appears is usually overlooked due to our exclusive focus
on the image itself, so this open, empty, transparent presence of our
own Being is usually overlooked due to our exclusive focus on the
objects of the mind, body and world – that is, on thoughts, feelings,
sensations and perceptions.
However, just as it is not possible
to see an image without seeing the screen so, although this Presence is
usually overlooked, it is never truly unknown.
Just as all we really see
when we are seeing an image is the screen, so all we ever truly
experience is the transparent, open, empty presence of our own Being,
the light of pure Knowing. All It ever knows or experiences is Itself.
Love is the common name we give to experience when the ‘other’ is no
longer experienced as ‘other;’ when the subject/object relationship
collapses.
It is to see the appearance of an image but to know it only
as screen. It is to attribute the reality of the image to the screen. It
is to know everyone and everything as one’s own self.
It is this
transparent, empty Presence that, refracted through the mind, appears
as a multiplicity and diversity of names and forms.
However, the mind is
itself a modulation of that very Presence.
In other words, it is pure
Awareness itself which, vibrating within itself, takes the shape of mind
and, from the illusory point of view of one of the selves contained
within that mind, seems to see a multiplicity and diversity of separate
objects and selves, each with their own independently existing reality.
In other words, the separate self is only a separate self from the
illusory point of view of a separate self.
From the true and only
real point of view of pure Awareness there is only its infinite self,
refracted into an apparent multiplicity and diversity of finite forms,
but never ceasing to be itself.
This is what William Blake meant when he
said, “If the doors of perception were cleansed everything would appear
to man as it is, infinite.”
This is what the Sufis mean when they say,
“Wherever the eye falls, there is the face of God.”
This is what Huang
Po meant when he said, “People forget the reality of the illusory
world.”
This is what Jesus meant when he said, “The kingdom of the
Father is spread out upon the earth, and men do not see it.”
This is
what Parmenides meant, echoing the words of the Bhagavad Gita, when he
said, “That which is, never ceases to be; that which is not, never comes
into existence.”
This is what Cézanne meant when he said that art must
“give us a taste of nature’s eternity.”
All the great sages and
artists from all times and all places have said or expressed this in one
way or another. This is the one true revolution.
At the root of all
desire for change is this ultimate desire: to know only the reality of
all experience; to know only love.
Unless and until the problems
facing humanity are traced back to their ultimate source – the ignoring
of this reality – they may be temporarily alleviated but will never be
truly solved.
Rupert Spira
January 2013
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment