Conversations September 4, 2010

Saturday, September 4, 2010

4:45 AM. You were going to conclude your list of the way our lives change by discussing how we express various aspects of ourselves.

And, as you knew immediately, this was a major topic far too important and too involved to be dealt with as an afterthought or even dealt with on the same basis as the others. Nor is our list necessarily complete; thought would suggest other ways in which lives in the three-dimensional world change. But it is complete enough for our purposes.

Now, in talking about change in various aspects of a given group, we come to the center of our explanation/argument. For, you will remember, we said that various “levels” of reality each changed within the level, and both did and did not affect other levels, an impossible paradox, surely. And we said that “levels” like “individuals” is a convenient fiction. And above all, we said, as above, so below, which says, investigate your own level closely enough and you can come to understand the repetitive pattern that constitutes the reality in which we live and will always live.

Continue reading Conversations September 4, 2010

Conversations September 3, 2010

Friday, September 3, 2010

4:50 AM. Still pursuing the statement that any given level does not depend upon or affect other levels — and yet does.

Clever of us to put it  just that way, apparently. It holds your interest and it holds continuity.

All right. And I have it in mind that you intend to illustrate your point by way of inner biography.

Continue reading Conversations September 3, 2010

Conversations September 2, 2010

Thursday, September 2, 2010

5:45 AM. Did some everyday-life chores yesterday, after our brief conversation about how to structure my workshop on robots. The day off really does help, even though I spend it entirely differently than I expect to.

The new Sphere And Hologram arrived yesterday afternoon, and the three Robert Clarke books. They now sit on my shelves saying, “when are you going to do the promotion and selling?” and I can’t quite answer them.

All right, to begin. And I might remark here that I realize now why it goes better when I have at least looked over the previous material, or made notes of my questions. It is the same old story: More focused questions get better answers, and they come only by my having a question in mind (except I notice that sometimes you continue like a house afire regardless).

Continue reading Conversations September 2, 2010

Conversations August 30, 2010

Monday, August 30, 2010

5:15 AM. I have just spent half an hour or so reviewing the material given since August 19, and I am a bit staggered by the amount of new information, new ways of seeing things, that you have provided, so smoothly and quietly, in that time. And equally impressive is how, once I absorbed it, it’s now so obvious-seeming.

In that, you see the benefits of sending this out in real time — day by day — and getting feedback from this or that person as you go along. The interchange, the suggested ideas, even the misunderstandings, are all productive.

Are they not!

Continue reading Conversations August 30, 2010

Conversations August 31, 2010

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

6:15 AM. About robots. I am going to do a workshop on reprogramming robots at the end of the month — next month, I mean — but my view of things is expanding and changing so quickly that I can’t imagine what my theoretical framework will be by that time. I don’t know how long ago it was, but it wasn’t all that long ago that I was thinking of robots as a problem. Then they became seen as more symptoms than the problem itself. Then I started to see them as easily self-correcting, then as an opportunity. Now I see them as not robotic at all, but aspects of consciousness functioning at a different level, with us ourselves perhaps being the robots that a higher level of consciousness has to deal with. Time to change the metaphor?

Time anyway to do more thinking about the subject — that is, to recalibrate consciousness, which in a way is what thinking is, or to reprogram yourself (as we shall explain) which is also what thinking is, except that this is a particular kind of thinking done in a particular way.

In all this, you’re going to have to realize that you are not reinventing the wheel. Are not, should not, and in any case could not. An attempt to do so would be futile and misleading and ultimately discouraging to anyone who tried to follow that new truth. We are saying, in short, you should

Continue reading Conversations August 31, 2010

Conversations August 28, 2010

Saturday, August 28, 2010

4:30 AM. Last night’s program had 22 people, and all but one seemed to me to experience the receiving of guidance in a two-person exercise. Very satisfying, particularly as I had done no special preparation, but had relied on notes from previous programs and the inspiration of the moment. So now the next program will be one on robots, and sometime between now and the end of September I have to figure out how to teach what I have discovered.

All right, my friends. It is all coming together nicely — which I suppose should be an indicator that it’s about to be pulled to pieces, or blown to bits.

Would we do that to you? We smile.

You mean, would you do that to us — again. But I’m certainly not complaining! I thought yesterday’s material was just wonderful and again I thank you for it and for this whole series. I joke with you — and about you — a lot, but you know how greatly privileged I feel to be in such a connection.

As well you should — to use your own joke. But — seriously meant, too. The connection is available to all; it’s just a matter of desire and application. But not everyone will or should live their lives as you live yours, and not anyone will or should experience just what you are experiencing, any more than you can live anyone else’s life, or would enjoy it if you could. So — it is always well to understand the particular ways in which your individual lives have been blessed, and to be grateful for it. Far better be grateful than to confuse blessings bestowed with rights earned! In other words, with thanks goes humility. And humility is always a productive state of mind, far more than any sense of entitlement or any sense of appropriation of credit for gifts.

That may not be clear. May I?

Certainly.

They’re saying, simply, that it is fitting for us to be grateful for our blessings — for what we are, for the gifts we have been given to express — and it is better to feel that way than to assume that we somehow deserve credit for the gifts we have been born with.

It seems to us that this is just what we said.

Perhaps it was. At any rate, you have the floor.

We are more or less at the point where you need to do the work of summarizing the past few sessions so as to hold it more in your mind. This sharpens your focus which makes it easier to sharpen our focus.

Care to expand upon that?

You might look out at this way. We have said, your limited RAM forces you to try to make efficient use of symbols if you are to be able to hold complex associations in mind long enough — simultaneously enough — for you to process them. Writing does that by substituting permanence — or, we should say, persistence — for momentary awareness. But as you absorb information, as you process it and make what was new into an accustomed part of your mental library, you — in effect — cease to need RAM to process that particular information, and can therefore associate it with new information. You understand?

You only absorb new material, beyond a certain point, by having previously absorbed and assimilated the material received previously.

That’s right. And material received in right-brain fashion particularly requires left-brain processing, for it will not have received it in the way information received in other ways would have been received. You know from your experience that information given out in this way does not go into short-term memory unless recalled via conversation or via re-hearing from a recorder or re-hearing from a written record. But — more than that — neither you nor anyone reading this will be able to absorb this material by reading it and then going on to other things. It is to be thought about — not remembered, certainly not memorized, but thought about — so as to incorporate it. We’ll say a couple of words about that.

Your mind, we have said, is in the non-physical, and your brain in the physical. While you are functioning in the body your access to information must be filtered to you in one of two ways (usually, in both, actually, but that would not assist the analysis, so we will proceed for the moment as if only one or the other). You may receive intuitively — that is, directly, without the interference or intermediation of thought processes — or you may receive sensorally, which for our purposes at the moment (not forever) we are going to define as employing the habits of cognition.

You mean, I take it, by association or deduction or induction. But why call that sensorally? I recognize, you want an opposite to intuitive, but is that the proper opposite term in this case?

We are open to suggestion, as you say.

Well why not simply oppose intuition to thought? “Thought” could include induction, deduction and association, surely.

We’ll accept that scheme, subject to later correction if necessary. It overlooks for the moment the part that your sensory apparatus plays in what seems to you a process of thought unconnected to the senses, but we can always discuss that at another time. Make a note.

So, then, intuitive and thought-filtered reception. If you come to a new place via thought processes, the procedure itself will assure that the new material associates with the old, at least in the context in which it occurred to you. You study a subject, you learn it by systematizing your knowledge in one way or another. If, though, instead of studying systematically, you receive a thought (for that is how it seems to us, reception rather than production, for you should not take the credit for that which you did not deliberately produce) that does not have any context but the one that produced it — if it is what you call a “stray thought” — you will probably lose it, perhaps forever, if you do not in some way associate it with other thoughts beyond the momentary context. This, after all, is a main function of a journal, to store such thoughts against a later time in which they will find another more permanent or more significant context.

Such stray thoughts are not what we mean by intuitive reception, however similar to it they may be. They share the quality of evanescence, but they are received via a quite different process. In fact, that word “process” well describes the difference.

You are, in your left-brains, word processors. You process sequentially, first this, then this, then this. It is the nature of the left-brain.

In your right-brain (typically; not of course universally or even strictly speaking, but as a useful generalization) you process non–verbal gestalts; entire irreducible relationships; things that can only be grasped whole if they are to be grasped at all. Landscapes, photographs, road maps (disregarding the processing that must follow the initial reception of the spatial relationships).

For the purposes of illustration, the right-brain material may be looked at as that which is more easily grasped than expressed, and, for that matter, more easily felt than grasped. There is nothing more fleeting than an unexpressed, on absorbed, feeling. Nothing but direct intuition.

The work you are doing in studying material that has been received intuitively is the associating of its component ideas into a coherent system for yourselves, so that it may be fitted into the rest of your lives. Else, what good to you could it be? It might serve as encouragement, true, but it could not do much beyond that. If it is to transform your life, it will do so by transforming your mental life. And this it can do only if you do the work of absorbing it and its implications.

What we are saying here is only common sense and common experience. You never own anything until it has become a part of you, and this never happens until you take it into yourself. Doing the work of sitting with new material, absorbing the “feel” of it, and thinking about it, and applying it, is the price you must pay if it is to be yours.

I heard, more or less between the lines, that everybody is going to hear something different in this material, that no two people are going to construct the same mental model.

No, and how could they? It is in the association with the rest of your life that this material is made yours. Given that by design everyone’s life is very different, how could or should the end-result be the same in any two instances? But — that is not a weakness but a strength. Just as variety in plants is safer than genetic motony, so variety in the application of insights is more reliable, more versatile, more enduring, then any lockstep memorized catechism could be. It is in the unvarying adoption of uniform expression of thought, that thought dies. What is as dead and deadening as petrified thought? Be, instead, living wood, growing, assimilating, connecting sky and earth and the deep underground.

Nice image.

We’ve done this before.

Seems like a place to stop, and it has been an hour and a quarter. Anything you’d like to say about last night’s program?

Only that, you see, this is the time. You and others spent many a long year yearning for the time to come round, and here it is. You are within it. Enjoy the time.

Sounds like a plan. Okay, till next time. Thanks as always.

Conversations August 27, 2010

Friday, August 27, 2010

7:15 AM. The theme continues to be, “as above, so below.” This is the key to many things, and it’s why people repeat it even not having the slightest idea why they do, they not knowing what it means.

You want to know why “as above, so below”? Because anything else implies separation.

Think about that. Anything else implies that on this side of the line, life is one way, but on that side, it is another way. A physical analogy might be — below ground versus above ground, or land versus ocean, or earth-atmosphere versus outer space. Your physical existence is full of boundaries, some realer or more definite than others, but always reinforcing the illusion of separation into units.

But the world — that is, reality — is not like that. In reality, not even the barrier between physical and non-physical is what it appears from your end.

Everything, from lowest to highest, is another iteration of the same scheme. Everything is suffused with life because there is nothing else. There is no “dead”ness to the universe, no “dead matter” into which “life” is inserting itself, contrary to Shaw’s fable. And there is no level of being that is in pieces that can be (or theoretically could be) detached.

Anything, looked at under a microscope, reveals itself to be not solid but porous. Anything, looked at through the largest telescope, reveals itself not to be chaotic and unrelated to the rest, but patterned and interrelated. The skies — that is, the heavens, the galaxies and universes and nebulae etc. — are as much a solid as the table you write on. The table is as much a wilderness of space connected in regular solid patterns as those same nebulae. And so you in the body as well. “Man is the measure of all things,” not only physically but non-physically, because that is the scale of measurement that is most convenient and appropriate to man.

We are not confining ourselves to physical appearance or structure — although those analogies do apply. For our purposes here, we are pointing out that you extend downward and upward equally; you are part of the microscopic world and the macroscopic world equally. (It ought to go without saying, but doesn’t, so we will say it for completeness, that the entire physical world has its underpinnings in the underlying world, the non-physical world; therefore all manifestation is at the same time an expression of the unmanifest.)

Try to understand, these are not just poetic images, not just philosophic words, but literal if allusive description. If you once receive into yourself the image and feeling of what we are saying here, you will hold it and it will change you. It is in order to do this that we have worked with the concept of the person-group and the social-group, to begin to accustom you to see how it can be that you are an expression of continuity with the microscopic and macroscopic worlds, literally, both physically and non-physically.

As we “guys upstairs” are part of you but are not confined within any arbitrary grouping, as the molecules of your body at any given time are part of you and then not part of you, seamlessly, as you breathe and cells die and are born and bits of air are breathed in and out, so you, considered as a sort of metaphorical unit, are neither really bounded nor defined. Your constituent organs are actually collections of person-groups at a lower level. You are actually part of person-groups at a higher level. And just as your constituent groups function — relative to you! — at a lower, more automatic level, so you function relative to the next higher level — and so correspondingly up and down the scale.

What we have just said is enough. It is the entire key, once understood. Everything we add to it is only because it will not be understood at any given time by any given person according to any predictable schedule.

Now we’ll try saying it again in different contexts, for context helps define what is being examined.

Let’s suppose that you are doing some robot-work. That is, you and another are attempting to discover and reprogram autonomous complexes so as to disable undesired automatic reactions and either enable different automatic reactions or create a space for conscious choice in the moment. To you, it appears that the intelligence operating (constituting) the robot is far less acute, far less conscious than you are. You are functioning in the moment. Hence, you are focused. It has not been functioning in the moment, in that sense of the term. That is, it has functioned moment to moment in terms of scanning the situation, alert for a match between the external situation and the situation it has been programmed to be activated by, but it has not functioned and does not function “in the moment” in the sense of actively thinking, perceiving, self-examining, except in so far as it decides whether or not it is being called to action.

When you, being in the moment, focus on it, it temporarily enjoys a higher consciousness, as your being-in-the-moment-ness creates a temporary joint consciousness. It experiences contact with a higher mind. It intuits purpose. It is reshaped.

Does any of this sound familiar?

Now, notice. The “it” that has been through this experience did not choose the experience. From its point of view, it was chosen. It was — shall we say — the grace of God that it experienced. It was an experience, it would feel, of Cosmic Consciousness. It was something that other person-groups, not having any consciousness of having experienced something similar, would dismiss, perhaps, as “woo-woo.”

Does it sound familiar?

The person-group that you reprogrammed has had its mission altered (for reasons beyond its ken) but since it cannot hold its larger more focused consciousness once you move on to other things, it may well forget. It may wall off its memory of the inexplicable experience and try to go back to normal. May indeed return to normal not quite noticing the course-change.

Or it may found a religion around the experience and its perception of the meaning of the experience. Or it may in its own way suffer from a neurosis of sorts, knowing that it has experienced what its beliefs insist could not have happened.

Or perhaps it will devote time and effort to attaining that moment of enhanced consciousness again — that is to say, either at will (hence, magic, control) or as a favor received (hence, ritual, devotion, willing surrender).

Can you see that from its point of view any of these reactions would be perfectly defensible, depending upon the psychological context? And yet, everything we have just sketched is inaccurate and misleading in so far as you identify with the person-group rather than any one strand of that group. For you could consider yourself a person-group looking downward, so to speak; looking upward, you could consider yourself but one strand of a larger person-group.

Yes, I do see that. And you’re about to tie this in to our work sideways, so to speak.

Exactly. “Know thyself” did not refer merely to knowing oneself as a unit. In fact, that is a trivial and misleading view of the saying. To truly know yourself — as you are learning — you must know that in all the world physical and non-physical there is no such thing as a unit, except provisionally, temporarily, and from a certain point of view.

So. Learn the other members of your person-group, bearing in mind that every strand has a right to be there, regardless whether you like it or not. This holds true for other members of your person-group in your body (as it seems to you) and equally true for other members of your person-group not seemingly sharing your body.

That isn’t going to be clear.

We know. You try.

We are not single or separate but inherently part of something larger, and also are made up of things smaller that cooperate to constitute us. This is true physically and non-physically. Thus we have to learn who else functions as part of the “I” we think we know, and we need to learn who else we as a composite form one part of.

You think that will be clearer to people?

Who knows? It tries to express what I am feeling you expressing.

All right. Class dismissed, and well done.

Glad we’re done for the moment. Only a bit more than an hour, but some intense concentration here. I suppose the bait in the trap is this continuing experience of higher consciousness?

Not exactly higher consciousness, but more intense focus, which is a necessary prerequisite perhaps.

You’ve provided a tremendous lot of food for thought, these past few days. We thank you.

You express your thanks — any and all of you — in so far as you do the work, and for that we thank you in turn.