Guided Acts
The diverse response and grades of significance that an object elicits can be illuminated this way:
An animal may see an oddly shaped black and white object, a tribal person a rectangular flexible object with curious marking. To a western child it is a book, while to an adult it may be a particular type of book, namely a book that makes incomprehensible, even ridiculous claims about reality. Finally to a physicist it may be a profound text on quantum physics.
Roger Walsh M.D., Ph.D. wrote that explanation of significance in his essay Hidden Wisdom. The point is that awareness occurs in stages based on beliefs and the knowledge we comprehend. In all cases the observer's were partially correct in their description of the book, but the full meaning and the significance of the book was not experienced by any of them except the physicist who comprehended different levels of significance. Walsh is pointing out that I may believe I fully understand something, but be completely unaware of its true significance. The universe and my own entity are constantly sending me messages which I overlook, because I am unaware and discount them. My reality is based on my awareness in the moment and within each moment new awareness is being projected by my inner consciousness. When I begin to sense inwardly, my level of significance increases with my awareness.
The Buddhist economist E.F. Schumacher explains the state of reality this way:
Facts do not carry labels indicating the appropriate level at which they ought to be considered. Nor does the choice of an inadequate level lead the intelligence into factual error or logical contradictions. All levels of significance up to the level of the meaning in the example of the book are equally factual, equally logical, equally objective, but not equally real. When the level of the knower is not adequate to the level of the object of knowledge, the result is not factual error but something much more serious: an inadequate and impoverished view of reality.
Schumacher's statement is a bit judgmental in terms of which reality is considered acceptable and which isn't. All realities are acceptable to the subject that is experiencing them even when they don't like them. The more they dislike them the more they stay the same in the vibration of that changing mental enzyme. That is the nature of consciousness. It is in a constant action moving from one aspect of reality to another in order to experience different levels of awareness, so even though I may miss the significance of a particular object at one energy point or self, I will experience it in another, as another self. Once I do experience the complete significance as one self, a morphogenetic reaction takes place and I am able to experience that significance using other energy points or other selves. Consciousness stimulates my awareness by introducing physical messages like the book scenario in order for me to expand in significance and awareness at my own speed. The book is just one basic example of the kind of messages I receive every minute.
Walsh and Schumacher are exposing me to this exercise to make me aware that I don't only see things the way I think they are, I also see them through my beliefs about what I think I am. When I expand my beliefs about my self, I significantly become aware of other realities that are moving through me constantly. When I begin to perceive the complexity of my entity, I expand my awareness in other clusters of consciousness. Everything is significant without degrees, when I allow my self the opportunity to expand outside of my current belief structure. When that takes place the book may become a series of books, which include guided acts of consciousness that make me aware of my own abilities to become multidimensional as well as plural.
http://halmanogue.blogspot.com/

Help



