Zisirum
Title: .
Gender: Male
Age: Ageless
Sun Sign: Aquarius
Chinese Sign: Water Snake
About Me:
Once took part in a social ceremony known as “marriage” wherein a total stranger declared my wife and I to be, as we still are, “legally” married. “Born”, raised, and currently living in an area of the world commonly known as Ontario, Canada.
I've been a “student” of spirituality and philosophy for more than 30 years. My “purpose” is to reveal some insights regarding life, its apparent problems, the metaphysical world, and the True Self.
The two things in this world which I strongly condemn are religious fanaticism and nationalism. I reject names, flags, labels, boundaries, and any other arbitrary means of trying to dissect and categorize the World and the process known as Life.
However, I do love nature, laughter, music, friends; and, of course, my adorable wife.
My other blog can be seen here
Some quotes on spirituality (not mine) can be seen here
An Introspective Look Outward
Reach out. Look at your hand. Look at the world beyond. Now look down at your body, your legs, your feet. Now, without using a mirror, try to look at your face. Without having it reflected in some way, you cannot see it. Even when you do see it, in a mirror or photograph, it is just a representation. You have never seen your face, and you never will.
Like a sword that cuts, but cannot cut itself;
Like an eye that sees, but cannot see itself. *
Your true “face” is the outward which is reflected back to you in the form of sight, sound, touch, smell and taste. Looking outward, we see the Self. Looking inward — in terms of thoughts, beliefs, tenets, ideas, concepts, etc. — we see the ego-self.
When we are self-conscious (i.e., ego-conscious), we are aware of this identity we have created playing its part in the drama of life. We can actually picture the ego-face as we interact with others and with whatever situation is unfolding. That image disappears however when we are enraptured by a present moment activity that “absorbs” us completely.
But we also have another way of looking inward; of sensing our being: becoming aware of the Source from which our being and the being of all others arises. This introspection is not concerned with the outward problems of the world. This is a search of Self-discovery.
The irony here is that we cannot find the Self by seeking. What we seek is here and now. It is this moment; whole and complete. Once an attempt — via a thought process — is made, the moment is lost. Therefore, that which is sought is best left unsought and allowed to arise on its own.
You cannot get it by taking thought;
You cannot seek it by not taking thought. *
This is not to dismiss activities such as self-enquiry, meditation, and silent introspection. Many would advocate these as ways to dissolve the illusory dualistic line between the inner self and the outer world. Perhaps. But only in the sense that an illusion can be dispelled by knowledge; by a deep understanding that manifests itself. The illusions of ego and a world separate from “you” cannot be tossed aside or made to disappear by some “technique” or action of the ego-self. Any such attempts are sure to lead to frustration and failure.
Whether we are looking “out” or looking “in”, the activity of that moment is contained in one effortless action — being.
To see the True Face, we need only see. To hear the voice of God, we need just listen.
- Zisirum
* from the Zenrin Kushu
Where Duality Flies
Seeker of Truth — Enlightenment Sleuth;
to what ultimate goal do you climb?
Is it not here on this Earthly sphere?
Is it not in this instant of time?
Concepts and thought spin dreams and we’re caught
in the merry-go-round of the mind.
Try as we may, we can’t find a way
to leave image and ego behind.
Where do we look — through words in a book?
The answer seems so well concealed.
Secret it’s not — we simply forgot;
in this moment the answer’s revealed.
Left on its own, the silent Unknown
brings to light what it once seemed to hide.
Where duality flies — so say the wise —
goes the myself and True Self divide.
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They say that with age comes wisdom. But does it?
What knowledge do I possess now that I did not thirty, forty, or fifty years ago?
Exactly who is it that is now wise, where he was once “unwise”? Was I not already endowed — from birth — with all of the essential qualities needed to experience life? Have I not always been able to see, hear, smell, taste, and touch? Have I not always been a “child of the Universe”?
Real wisdom is inherent in everyone. We know how to live; how to exist; and we do. Moreover, we live without effort; but our conscious minds tell us otherwise.
From an old blog entry:
Does real living require any effort? Think about the five senses. It takes no effort to see, hear, touch, smell or taste. No effort is required for your heart to beat. Thoughts come and go — effortlessly. Your blood circulates, you breathe, you maintain a proper temperature, you digest food and your body rids itself of waste; all with no conscious effort. Hair and nails grow, your mouth stays moist with saliva, cuts and bruises heal on their own.
Everything which is done without conscious attention is done effortlessly. When ego and conscious attention get in the way, a “struggle” ensues and life seems difficult.
When we still our restless thoughts and see beyond concepts, duality, and all the illusions created by the conscious mind, we experience life as it is — an effortless expression of the True Self.
We are at our best when we are empty — free from greed, lust, opinions, prejudice, desire, ambition, and ultimately even hopes and dreams.
Attempting to define the unknowable One is like trying to see the entire Universe with one glance.
Once thoughts arise (damn that little voice!) we lose sight of what is.
You, me, us, them, nature — everything may be viewed as parts of the One. Realizing that Oneness is another matter. It happens when the self (the ego-image) takes its rightful place as an amusing, insignificant feature of the Whole.
Still your mind by absorbing yourself in the pleasures of this moment.
Knowledge is nourishment required for transformation. Silence is the incubator.
Seeing ourselves in others is a key. It speaks to the interconnectedness of us all. Giving our time to others not only demonstrates love; it is an act of selflessness which, whether we realize it or not, contributes to our spiritual growth.
We want to be distracted at all times, as if to avoid the silence where we just might get a glimpse of the True Self. We're afraid of losing the ego-image; afraid that it would be the end of what we're accustomed to and comfortable with; afraid of losing our “identities”. But it really comes down to an avoidance of who we are; an avoidance which produces and perpetuates misery, suffering, sorrow, hardship, heartache, adversity, grief, and all the “problems” associated with life.
“My” mind and “your” mind; “my” body and “your” body are of the same realization. There is but one Mind, one Body.
True, lasting happiness is not something we can attain by some switch we “decide” to turn on. It is available to us all, now; for it is our True Nature. However, it is clouded, hidden, and obscured by ego. No “decision” is going to dispel that particular illusion.
We react to situations as they arise and it appears as if a choice has been made. Life just happens. It is, for all intents and purposes, a no-choice proposition. There is no “you” (as an individual) to make decisions as to what should be done and then to lament what could have been done. In reality, it is not in “your” hands. Life flows like a river, always in the present moment. The past (as in lamenting a choice) and the future (as in imagining the outcome of a choice) exist only in the mind.
We must take action and live what we preach. And if we preach just being, then the greatest actions are seeming un-actions; such as contemplation, meditation, and simply marvelling at life.
Why is there any ego illusion in the first place? Ego is necessary in the sense that it's the essential element in the “game” of life. If we didn't have this illusion, the entire “drama” wouldn't exist. It seems to be the whole point of existence and the source from which all the adventures in life are born.
We are, in reality, a single unified process. But life entails a forgetting of the Eternal Process. In order to put drama into life, we pretend that we are not, in fact, the One.
The drama of the human experience implies an absence of “balance” — dualistic thought ensures it. The Universe — the One — however, is always in balance. The non-dualistic mind realizes itself as an expression of the One, balanced and whole.
The difference between being selfless like a cog, (i.e., being a mindless part of a process) or being selfless in the sense of having great awareness and insight wherein one sees oneself as the entire process, is patent. A lackey towing a political line obviously has nothing in common with a wise old sage who is content with just being. The latter feels boundless joy while the former is dead to the world.
Pay no heed to the illusion of ego. An illusion can be strong or weak, but it is ultimately just an illusion.
When we are aware of the here and now and when we eschew the trivial egocentric desires that motivate our everyday way of living, we give way to a new sense of Self.
Seeing is sight. Hearing is sound. My mind and my experience are one. There is no need to differentiate between them.
Neither does the world’s most brilliant mind nor the world’s wisest sage possess any knowledge beyond that which is truly in everyone.
Only peaceful souls can effect a peaceful world.
If we are having difficulty finding peace, then let's be still for a moment. Maybe it will find us.
We're off to read the whimsy,
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Member Since: Friday, May 25 2007
Last Visit: 38 days ago.
Profile Viewed: 2844 times (last viewed less than a minute ago)
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