TGU – Tying it together

Wednesday, March 28, 2018

6 a.m. So, my friends, if I have the idea right, you are tying together personal self-development – dealing with our individual issues – and development as a group. But I find, writing this, I am still a bit vague as to the latter.

Instead of thinking of yourselves as individuals only, we are encouraging you to see yourselves as individuals and as communities; similarly we are encouraging you now on another, larger, scale, to see yourselves as individuals and as part of a larger community which is itself also an individual.

Odd. It feels like you’ve said all that, only now it is new ground all over again.

There is a momentary blurring of focus, nothing important. Remember “as above, so below,” and you will see that the blurring comes chiefly from limitations of language that tempt you – and therefore us – to use the same words for different things, and sometimes different words to not recognize the same things.

In this case, it is a matter of scale which is being obscured.

Perhaps we need yet another coined word to distinguish things, in the way you named our larger being a Sam to help us keep things straight?

Too many specific terms may become a barrier to understanding to those who come in later. Better merely to plod, from time to time.

So in this case?

Here is the gist of what we mean.

The 3D human is one level. It is a collection of strands living together in the 3D crucible, and ultimately either fusing and attaining permanence, or not.

The All-D human of which the 3D-human is a part is itself both individual and part of a larger being. That is, it is both individual in its own right and it is a strand in a larger being. That larger being is itself also part of something still larger, but it passes from our range of vision. That is, we are concerning ourselves not with visions and abstractions and theoretical schemes here, but with structure as you may experience it practically.

You are sticking to the levels we may directly affect, and that may be directly affected by us.

That’s right. The 3D world is for effort, not merely for flights of fancy. Or, a better way to put it: It is important that whether you choose to occupy yourself with effort or with flights of fancy, you know which one you are dealing with. We hate to see you spinning your wheels thinking you are going somewhere. Spinning your wheels may be fun sometimes, or may be unavoidable in certain conditions, but it is well for you to know whether you are really working out your salvation, as the Buddhists would say, or are merely running in place, enjoying a daydream (or suffering a nightmare).

So, again. The 3D human: Individual yet comprising a community of strands. At another turn of the microscope dial, individual, yet, as an individual, only one strand in something larger.

Why don’t we invent a simple way to distinguish between whether we’re talking about us in one way or in the other?

The disadvantage to doing so is that as soon as we invent names, people will begin to see the distinctions as more absolute than they are. It is a tendency of left-brain sequential processing to exaggerate the individuality of things and forget their underlying unity. We have been going to some pains to counter that tendency. At the cost of some plodding, as we said, but it seems unavoidable.

All right. I can see it is a real dilemma, rather than only an apparent one. Either way, there’s a tradeoff.

However, even your being aware of the constraint aids understanding, so the discussion every so often is not a waste of time.

So, to return. We are currently tying together your lives as individuals-in-the-making (that is, experiencing the living-together of the strands that comprise you) and your lives as pieces-of-the-moment (that is, your lives as part of the experience, moment by moment, of the 3D world as it is shaped and affected by the vast impersonal forces – most of which you will never experience directly nor even conceptualize nor even suspect – that, in a larger sense, are the world).

We encourage you to reread that sentence slowly, encouraging your deepest intuitions to surface, not overruling them with logic or with previous assumptions. What if what we just said is true and perhaps not previously understood? How does the statement feel to you? It is a long and unwieldy sentence but it needs to be weighed as a unit, and not as separate pieces, and some of you will find it very hard to do that. If you find it hard, persist, as long as necessary (that is, repeatedly when you remember to), and the very effort will bring its reward.

The first half of the sentence, you see, is more or less Rita’s discourses to you, concentrating on the less obvious facets of the 3D experience in its All-D context. The second half is Nathaniel’s, concentrating on the day-to-day struggles of human life and their meaning for you. These are not separate agendas or separate fields of study, but one agenda, one field of study, necessarily considered separately at first and now rewoven. It is all well and good to study your lives as they appear once you remove some of the epicycles from your view of celestial mechanics, so to speak. And equally, it is all well and good to study your lives as the battlegrounds among forces and impulses that you experience. But it is far more enlightening to do both at once after the ground has been cleared, to see the intricate relationship between seeing the sun rather than the earth as the center of the solar system, and to see that for you the compound being you are continually shaping is and should be the effective center. This is not contradiction; it is expression of the fact that life is both.

I think of Yeats, in this context: “Why does the struggle to attain truth take away our pity, and the struggle to overcome our passions restore it again?” Something like that.

He was seeing the unity of the two subjects, you see. He wanted to see as profoundly as possible; he also wanted to overcome himself, so to speak. The two tasks sometimes seem contradictory; they may be better seen as reciprocating.

And that is why we have been able to broaden the scope of inquiry, finally, you see. You were given the necessary ideas. You have of course been living your lives which is itself instructive, assuming you pay attention. So now we begin to show you how theology sheds light on psychology, and inner work turns out to be outer work as well, and politics and ideology are seen to be not irrelevancies nor “external” (whatever that would be) but illustrations writ large of whatever work is yet undone in each person’s individual case.

Which is enough for the moment.

It felt, as we are going along, as if we were only re-treading familiar ground, yet I see that perhaps we did make relationships a little clearer.

You will find – you have found – that novelty is not as useful nor as much a sign of progress as one might tend to think. There is value in consolidating what one may think of as familiar territory. After all, you will not be the same person as you do so. you won’t be stepping back into the same river, because that can’t be done.

Impermanence. Very well, thanks and until next time.

 

2 thoughts on “TGU – Tying it together

  1. This, to me, is some of the most important material I’ve ever read (maybe just because of how it strikes me now). Even if I knew it or its pieces before, it feels like a new understanding now, to be inhabited. Somehow, I’m comprehending meaning and purpose, seeing them as absolutely and only practical, in the larger scheme of things.
    I like how this is presented as structure, vs being presented as vocabulary. It makes me find my own words to construct and connect the specific content, which feels more intimate/profound to me.
    It reminds me of the 12-step program. Each step is nothing until you go out and knock on that first door, apology ready, not sure the person will even recognize you or remember. Your life is breathed into and changed by taking that step. Then your understanding of yourself is forever expanded.
    That’s what your posts and my application of them in real life does for me.

  2. For me, some of these discussions about the different parts (strands) of us as individual 3-D humans, and how we are part of something bigger than “just me” often bring up a concept that I think I read on this blog. I liken it to parts of my body. This is my hand. It is a part of me. It goes to my wrist, which is definitely not my hand. But where, really, does my hand end and my wrist begin? Here? A little bit more this way or that? Is a particular cell in my body actually assigned to “hand”? Perhaps the current function of my hand further clarifies whether certain parts of my whole arm function as hand or wrist. And if my arm is in an odd position, it may restrict the functioning of my perfectly healthy hand.

    So, my hand is pretty definitely a part of me, but not so easily isolated as a well-defined part. It is also made up of cells that were originally grown by my parents and by their ancestors. Hence, I am physically a part of them, too. And so on and so on.

Leave a Reply to Jane Peranteau Cancel reply