
We are seldom, if ever, locked into a reality we
cannot change.
In 1987, an educational
psychologist named Harry Palmer outlined an intriguing series of mental
procedures. When correctly applied, these procedures unraveled many of the more
profound mysteries of human consciousness. As the procedures evolved, they
literally became a passport to the secrets of the universe.
Like color vision, Palmer's work
was one of those rare evolutionary keys that quite unexpectedly unlocked a
whole new realm of the conscious landscape. For the first time, a clear
interrelation between the operation of human awareness and the technologies of
man could be demonstrated. Subjects as dissimilar as religion and physics
suddenly found themselves sharing common ground. Concepts such as universal
mind, mass consciousness and extrasensory awareness moved from being dim and
speculative to being tangibly experiential.
True to prediction, Avatar
rippled through the collective planetary consciousness. By May 1996, the Avatar
Materials had been translated into 14 languages and a 30,000-member network of
Avatar graduates spread across 51 countries.
What is Avatar's mission in the
world? To quote Palmer, "The mission of Avatar in the world is to catalyze
the integration of belief systems. When we perceive that the only difference
between any of us is beliefs, and that beliefs can be created or discreated
with ease, the right and wrong game will wind down, and world peace will ensue.
Today, the 2,000 offices of the Avatar network are licensed by the
international headquarters in Altamonte Springs, Florida.
What
Is Avatar®?
Perspective went
directly to the source and interviewed Harry Palmer, author of the Avatar®
Materials.
Perspective: I suspect the question you are asked most often is:
“What is Avatar?" So, what is Avatar?
Harry: Avatar is about every reality that is, was or will be.
I know that's not very descriptive, but it is the truest statement I can make.
Avatar deals with creation, which I define as anything that has
definition or limits in space, time or awareness. That covers the universe and
everything in it.
Since most people are not really ready to engage
Avatar at such an all-encompassing level, I usually talk about beliefs.
People have an Instinctive
recognition that what they believe has a consequence in their lives. The
principle dilemma of existence is what to believe. That's the philosophic abyss
that confronts everyone. That's the abyss called, “I don't know." It's
dangerous not to know. At the edge of this abyss are the shops of the belief
peddlers. Some shops are lavish and hallowed with histories. Some are
Volkswagen buses driven by cult recruiters. Everybody is selling a program and
a one-way pass to the land of truth on the other side of the abyss. There are
thousands of bridges across the abyss, and each one leads to a slightly
different reality.
What is different about Avatar is that the program is blank, and the pass is round trip!
Perspective: Are you
saying that we don't always know what we believe or experience what we say we
believe?
Harry: That's right.
And that is the flaw in positive thinking. You can stick signs on every mirror
in the house saying, "I'm happy to be me," and chant it for a half
hour before every meal and still not experience it. The reason it won't take
you across the abyss into an experience is because you are already across
experiencing something else. Maybe you came on the ticket, "Nothing really
makes me happy." That is the real belief that is underlying and
motivating all of the positive assertions.
Perspective: So how do I
discover what I really believe? What ticket did I purchase at the belief
bazaar?
Harry: The easiest way is to work backwards from what you're
experiencing. If you are experiencing unhappiness, you can be pretty certain
that your leap of faith across the abyss was on a belief that you were going to
be unhappy.
When you find the real belief, you can use the Avatar
techniques to change it. When you do, what you are experiencing will change.
Until you find the real belief, you're "believing over," and what you
are experiencing is only
superficially affected.
Perspective: That's a
good point. I have seen a lot of people do a workshop or a seminar and add a
new coat of belief to their lives. It doesn't really affect the way they act
for very long.
This brings me to another question. What is the
difference between belief and truth?
Harry: Sometimes
the border between belief and truth is a little hazy, particularly when we are
dealing with qualities that are not purely physical.
There is usually some agreement in regard to empirical
events. For instance, the tree falls. No question in anyone's mind. The tree
was standing and now it's toppled over. We can measure where it fell, how
strong the trunk wood was, how old it was, etc. No one has to take any of this
on faith. You can go and kick the tree. It's a truth. The tree has fallen. But
now ask, "Why did the tree fall?" Now we are confronted by what to
believe.
It was old and rotten. The wind blew it over. It was
an act of God. It was a sign. That type of tree is always toppling over. It was
a malicious spirit. It was pollution in the air. It was a thinning of the ozone
layer. It was an earth tremor. These are all beliefs. Of course, once you
believe one you will find the evidence. The wind was blowing at 36.5 miles
per hour and created a load factor that exceeded the strength of the tree.
And you say, "Oh, sure, and why didn't every tree
fall or why did the wind reach 36.5 miles per hour just before the tree
fell?"
Solar temperatures caused an atmospheric imbalance
between the ocean and the land.
And you say, "Okay, and why did that happen?"
If you happen to feel a little perverse, just keep
pushing for a more fundamental why and eventually you will reach our abyss,
which could just as well be called, "I don't know."
It is at this "I don't know" that the whole
concatenation of beliefs begins as to why the tree toppled over. As long as we
make the concatenation long enough that no one runs off into the abyss, we have
a "scientific" technology that explains why trees topple over.
Perspective: So why did the tree topple over?
Harry: Honest answer? I don't know. But you see, not knowing
is dangerous. Fear arises. Fear motivates explanation.
So let's say I pushed the
tree over so I could make a point. I did it deliberately.
Perspective: And the point?
Harry: The point is that around this singular event of a tree
falling over, a whole belief-generated reality can develop. A reality with
winds and stress factors and solar thermal, etc. Anyone experiencing within
this reality finds the same beliefs at the foundation of the reality.
Of course, there are equally plausible alternate
realities. For instance, soil moisture and root rot.
The interesting thing is that the people experiencing
the soil moisture/root rot reality can easily see that the reality of the
wind/stress factor people is a belief system. They're not always so discerning
about their own reality.
Down deep inside of us is this sad little guy who
clearly sees that everybody else's reality is based on belief. He's trapped in
his own truth. He's backing away from the abyss and explaining as fast as he
can. When he permits himself to see his own reality he will discover
illumination.
Perspective: That is an insightful metaphor. I guess my next question is why would I
want to use your word, discreate my reality?
Harry: You don't have to. It's not the intention of Avatar to
destroy your reality or what you believe. Avatar is about reminding people that
they were once and can be again the source of their reality and may - that's
a key word - conclude their association with one reality and move on to
another. We are seldom, if ever, locked into a reality that we can't change.
Perspective: So in Avatar it's up to the person to decide whether or not to change?
Harry: Absolutely. The only reason we choose to change is
because as we grow more experienced, there is a desire for our realities to
become more reflective of our new wisdom.
You don't have to complete every
problem in an arithmetic book before you move on to algebra. There comes a
point when you get it. These numbers and these functions produce these results.
Got it! Time to move on.
What? You
say I've got to spend 16 more weeks doing arithmetic problems? No way! I've got
Avatar and I'm out of here!
Perspective: And
arithmetic is a belief system?
Harry: Yes. And so is algebra. So is every reality when
viewed externally. But that doesn't mean you can't submerge yourself in a
reality and learn the foundational beliefs and play the reality to your heart's
delight.
Just don't get so stuck that for the rest of your life
all you do are arithmetic problems.
Perspective: I
can't help thinking of the expression, "one-trick pony."
Harry: Exactly! The purpose of using Avatar is so that your
life doesn't turn into a one-trick pony life.
Perspective: I
think we all can relate to the idea that we've learned what we need to know
from certain problems and events in our lives, and now it's time to move on.
Why Avatar?
Harry: Are you asking me to create a belief system? Okay.
Let's believe that creating and experiencing reality is only one of many
potentials possessed by life. And let's believe that when we conclude our
exploration of these realities, we awaken to new potentials.
Perspective: That
sounds like a truth to me.
Harry: Good. Then we can let it serve as truth until we are satisfied
that we have learned what we need to know and are ready to go on. When we reach
that point, Avatar will reappear.
Perspective: That's interesting. Are you suggesting that the reason
for Avatar's appearance at this time is because a lot of us are ready to move
on?
Harry: Yes. I think a lot of people are ready to assume
responsibility for their own, as well as for civilization's, deliberate
evolution. As
life evolves it becomes more integrative and less defined. The opposite
direction, where life becomes more separate, solid and defined, is decay.
Evolution and decay can be confused.
Perspective: Something
else occurred to me while we were talking - maybe it's just a belief. I mean of
course it's a belief. How do we go on talking? It's all belief, right? I just
got that!
Harry: No problem. Let's just entertain each other and
believe we're discovering truth.
Perspective: Okay,
I'm willing to believe that
I'll deliberately believe that! Oh, I just understood the title of your
book!
Anyway, where was I? Oh, what
occurs to me is that the beliefs that are supported by the body's senses are
more solid and real but then seem to fade in certainty toward the edges of our
sensory envelope. Is that right? Are we pushing the envelope of our own
reality?
Harry: That is a good way to look at a reality.
There's an old story about a
farmer who places a budding pumpkin in a jug. As the pumpkin grows, it fills
the jug and can't grow any larger. The jug is the limit of what we can
experience. When the jug is broken our reality expands.
Perspective: Seems
like I remember reading an article by you in the Avatar Journal
called "The Unlimited Self."
Harry: That's right.
Perspective: Okay,
then I've got another question. If your reality just keeps growing, how do you
ever get out of it to create a new reality? How do you get back across the
abyss? Aren't you just adding to and changing the reality every time you break
the jug?
Harry: You are right. There really isn't an exit out there at
the limit of a reality bubble. From the inside, every reality appears to be
infinite.
The return ticket in this infinite reality is located
exactly right where you are, and it is validated by fully experiencing, notice
I did not say thinking or believing, fully experiencing yourself as source of
the creation. Now, I'm not talking about blame. I'm talking about power and
ability. As source of the reality, you can turn it on and off. When it's on,
it's infinite. When it's off, you're back home.
Thinking, figuring, believing, etc., are tools for
exploring a reality. They will not turn it off. Only experiencing a
reality fully will turn it off.
Perspective: Is
that possible - to experience a reality fully?
Harry: Yes it is, but it is an ability that needs to be
understood and developed. Many people have experiencing confused with recording
or judgments or emotions. All of these are really efforts not to experience
what is.
Some people mistake experiencing for thinking or
remembering. Everything gets categorized. Some people have experiencing
confused with believing or imagining, some with suffering - it's a very
misunderstood concept.
Perspective: How
would you explain experiencing?
Harry: It's actually a more fundamental phenomenon than
language or understanding. It's something an Avatar Master can lead you to in a
short period of time, but there's not a lot he or she can say about it, at
least not a lot that is helpful as far as introducing you to experience.
I guess the best thing I can say
about it is that experience is the other half of reality.
Perspective: I know you have invited people to feel you. Do you
mean to experience you?
Harry: Yes.
Perspective: When I feel you, I get that there is something beyond
all the should's and ought-to's and qualifications and classifications that
dominate our lives.
Harry: Yes.
Perspective: Actually you do feel quite
good. Why is that?
Harry: What feels good is the action of
experiencing. When I invite someone to feel me, for a moment they drop their
fixed ideas and beliefs about themselves and reconnect with their own sensation
of being alive and sovereign. That feels good. It's sort of an
incomprehensible, sublingual connection. It crashes when we try to understand
or explain it. When we feel, we share a definitionlessness am.
Perspective: Definitionlessness am?
Harry: The source of I am.
Perspective: I have a sense of this. It
actually feels sacred or religious. Are we dealing with God here?
Harry: Perhaps, or maybe just another
explanation.
Perspective: I've got one last question for you. Let me ask it and get it out of
the way. There's a lot of money involved with Avatar - 30,000 graduates at
$2,000 each - that's $60 million dollars. Where does that money go? Who gets
it?
Harry: It is a lot of money, but you
have to remember to divide it among the 2000 or so offices that deliver Avatar,
the 30 or so countries that collect taxes, the expenses of operating a
worldwide network, etc. Then you will begin to wonder how we manage on so
little.
Money, power and sex tend to be the most aberrant
subjects in our current civilization. I think that is because they have the
most lies asserted about them. It takes a little digging to find out what a person
really believes about these subjects.
Our view of money, by the way, is that it is an energy
and a medium that permits us to rapidly and enjoyably create an enlightened
planetary civilization. Beyond that, it's not really of much concern.
Perspective: It has become obvious to me from talking with you and with some
other Avatars that money is a means of accomplishing your objective rather than
the objective itself.
Harry: That's our belief.
Perspective: Why did you decide to share Avatar with the world?
Harry: I think it had something to
do with perceived need.
What Is Avatar?
Avatar is a gentle, non-confrontational adventure in
self-discovery. It is a series of experiential exercises designed to unlock the
knowledge already contained in your consciousness. There is nothing you have to
believe. Nobody is going to judge you, tell you who you are or how it is.
When you find yourself wanting to explore the inner
workings of consciousness, wanting to become more familiar with the creation
that you regard as self, we recommend reading Living Deliberately and
ReSurfacing® as the first step.
Living Deliberately: The
Discovery and Development of Avatar is
a gateway into a new perspective on life, a rare synergy of ideas and insights.
$15USD
ReSurfacing®: Techniques for
Exploring Consciousness contains
thirty exercises that take you beyond someone's interesting theory into an
actual, tangible experience of your own mental power. $15USD
When you order the Power Package for
$25USD you will receive both books, a subscription to the Avatar Journal, a
How To Create Magic In Your Life audiotape and the Ten Actions booklet.
For credit card orders, call toll free 800-589-3767 or 407-788-3090.
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