Quiet Mind: Finding Your Way Home by Harry Palmer From a new book entitled AVATAR: PRIVATE TALKS TO MASTERS by Harry Palmer (Scheduled for publication in December 1998). Consciousness has abilities that allow us to process and deal with the physical universe. Everyone is more or less aware of these abilities. Broadly they are imagining, thinking, and remembering. These are the aspects of mind. Only a few people are aware that consciousness has a much broader, intrinsic nature behind mind. This intrinsic nature is the realm of the Being. When it is entered, what was previously held to be important by imagining, thinking, and remembering is likely to become totally irrelevant. From this fathomless realm, all of the events and experiences of normal waking consciousness are satisfactorily encompassed by the curiously wise expression, "That's something." Assuming that people survive birth and fall within the normal parameters of genetic mutation, they are congenitally equipped with the thinking, imagining and remembering type of consciousness-a mind. In truth, they are hardly equipped with anything else. The result is that the Being grows up with its attention focused on the rewards and difficulties of surviving in a defined physical reality-celebration and struggle. Any hints that other realities exist (or could be created) that might offer more interesting games than variations of the pleasure-pain paradigm are relegated to fantasy or science fiction. For most Beings the first real suit of clothing is a hastily constructed conscious definition: "I'm the baby." That is an anchoring affirmation.
The sad part is that the Being spends the rest of its life at anchor. Its energy is spent patching and layering the original birthday affirmation with conclusions and experiences fashioned after physical reality. It is unwise to confuse the realm of Being with the physical universe.Finally, the Being arrives at the end of its physical-life days still anchored in the definitions of mind. You could call mind the shallows of consciousness. What did the Being miss? The wonder of life? The awe of creation? The ecstasy of the divine? Essentially, it missed any experience of truth. Its only real experience is a sense of having been unhappily identified with a complex definition that required endless maintenance. This is what passes for a sane life in physical reality. The Being departs the body and shakes off the amnesia of definitions. "Well," it says, "that's something," referring to the fading mental and decaying physical definitions that it dreamed was self. There is a belated recognition that thinking-imagining-remembering consciousness is severely limiting. It anchors life in one spot. So the Being gets the first lesson of Avatar, but without getting any of the tools. But it took a lifetime! That's way too slow. Can you imagine how many lifetimes it will take it to recognize that what it is experiencing may have something to do with what it is creating? Slow! What is needed is a way for the Being to raise the anchor of self definitions, without dying, and set sail into the eternal realms beyond mind. Getting back, going home. Exactly how to teach someone to do this has been the challenge of every spiritual practice. You see, the harder the Being works (imagines, thinks, remembers) to raise this anchor, the heavier the anchor grows. The mind can be an imprisoning paradox. But wait. Now the Being sees all these Avatars sailing around having fantastic life adventures and still in touch with something more permanent than a paycheck. Intuitively the Being knows that the right to happiness is more than an accident of birth. The Being knows that there must be a way to slip the anchor of the mind. And of course there is-Avatar. How does it lift the anchor? The secret is do nothing deliberately. How does a Being do nothing deliberately? That's a key world lesson. Without the Avatar tools, doing nothing deliberately is not easy to learn. It is a difficult skill to acquire. There are occasional moments in life when thinking stops and, among other things, a Being, becomes fully aware of the circumstances of its own existence without any reactions to them. At least there ought to be such moments-periods of time when attention moves beyond the scope of daily concerns. The common self falls asleep, and an extraordinary self awakens. This extraordinary self, a higher self, has a quality not found in the common self-quiet mind. Quiet mind is independent of time and does not react or create non-deliberately. The anchor of "I am this-not-that" disappears. An awareness awakens that is beyond any defining construction. This is a moment of enlightenment.
Intuitively the Being knows that the right to happiness is more than an accident of birth. The Being knows that there must be a way to Slip the anchor of the mind. And of course there is...
Achieving this state of quiet mind, even for a moment, is a great accomplishment. An even greater accomplishment is maintaining this state. It is such an unusual accomplishment that when you tell a Being that the quiet mind state is an expected result of the Avatar training, you are usually met with disbelief. |