Awakening can be talked about as extraordinary and ordinary, and even extraordinarily ordinary (!), and all of it has some truth to it.
THE EXTRAORDINARINESS OF AWAKENING
A spiritual opening or awakening can seem special and amazing in contrast to an unawake state. This can last for a while until the awakening becomes more familiar, lived, and – in a sense – ordinary.
Finding what we are gives us what we most deeply long for. When the One takes itself to be something separate within itself, it tends to create neediness, a sense of lack, and longing. And awakening is the solution for that neediness, lack, and longing.
When we notice what we are, we can more easily dissolve any wounds, hangups, and traumas we have as human beings in the world. It’s not an easy process, and it can be messy, but we are coming from the right place to do and allow it. (It partly comes from intention and doing, and partly allowing.)
Presenting it as special and amazing can be used as a strategy to attract people. It appeals to our wishes and dreams when we come from an unawake state. (To me, this seems a bit too deceptive, even if there is a grain of truth to it.)
THE ORDINARINESS OF AWAKENING
At the same time, awakening is simple and ordinary, and the essence of it is already familiar to us.
It’s the ordinary consciousness we are all familiar with that wakes up to itself as that which all happens within and as.
What we find we are has always been here. We have just been temporarily transfixed by the assumption that we most fundamentally are something within the content of experience (this human self), and we have taken the rest – consciousness, the rest of the world – as others. When we find what we more fundamentally are, in our own first-person experience, we realize we (also) are what we took to be background or context.
We discover that our world, as it appears to us, happens within and as what we are. This is compatible with just about any worldview, whether it is atheistic or spiritual of some kind.
Since, to us, the world happens within and as awakeness or consciousness, it may seem that all of existence IS awakeness or consciousness. But that’s a step beyond what’s in our immediate experience. It’s good to be honest about this and differentiate what’s our own nature and fits most worldviews, and what’s an assumption about reality itself and fits only more spiritual or religious worldviews.
This is all pragmatic, practical, and something we can explore for ourselves. We can also say it is, in a sense, logical and even inevitable. To ourselves, we most fundamentally have to be what our world happens within and as. We are not, most fundamentally, any particular content of our experience since it all – including this human self – comes and goes and is in constant change.
THE EXTRAORDINARY AND ORDINARY
If we only present awakening as extraordinary, we leave out the inherent ordinariness of it. And if we only present it as amazing and perhaps blissful, we leave out the messiness and challenges of the process. In both cases, we present only part of the picture, it’s misleading, and we are likely doing people a disservice.
If we only talk about the simplicity and ordinariness of it, we leave out how amazing it can seem when we first discover what we are, that it is what we most deeply have been seeking, and the ability of this noticing of what we are to dissolve wounds, hangups, and even – over time – trauma.
Including both gives a slightly fuller picture, and gives people a slightly more accurate idea of what the process may entail.
INITIAL OUTLINE
- Awakening
- special
- in contrast to unawake state, last for a while until becomes familiar and – in a sense – ordinary
- gives us what we most deeply long for
- to attract people, appeal to wishes/dreams, strategy
- ordinary
- this ordinary awakeness that’s always here
- the world as it appears to me
- explore in sense fields
- is / can be pragmatic, grounded
- …..
- special
…..
Some who talk about awakening make it sound special and amazing, and I understand some of the reasons why.
….
We can take the next step and assume that all of existence is like this, and there are some benefits to seeing it this way, but it is a step beyond what’s in our immediate experience
….
COMBINING THE TWO IN HOW WE TALK ABOUT IT
If we only present awakening as special, amazing, and perhaps blissful, we may do people a disservice. It’s far from the whole picture. We leave out the ordinariness of it, and the messiness and challenges of the process.
And if we only talk about the simplicity and ordinariness of it, we leave out how amazing it can seem when we first discover what we are, and the ability of the noticing of what we are to dissolve wounds, hangups, and even – over time – trauma.
…..
There is something extraordinary and ordinary about awakening. It can be talked about as special and amazing, and as simple and ordinary, and there is some truth to both.
…..
Since, to us, the world happens within and as awakeness or consciousness, it may seem that all of existence IS awakeness or consciousness. But that’s a step beyond what’s in our immediate experience. It’s good to be honest about this and differentiate what’s clearly and obviously here and fits most worldviews, and what’s an assumption and a step beyond what’s here and fits only more spiritual or religious worldviews.
….