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Beyond the Personality: the beginners guide to enlightenment

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B Preface and Synopsis of Contents

Guides to Enlightenment Posted on October 20, 2011 by The BookMarch 6, 2013

Beyond the Personality

The beginner’s guide to

enlightenment

by

The Implicate Technology Centre

 The Implicate Technology Centre 

London

Preface

 

The meaning of life is: life is.

 

The fulness of this can only be understood through experiencing the unity that is reality. This understanding through experience is not possible within the terms of your ordinary, day-to-day awareness. The first and most difficult step along the path to understanding is to attain the state of awareness known as the psychological stage of enlightenment.

 

This state of awareness is accessible to you if you are prepared to commit your whole being, your whole sense of purpose, to the enterprise. This book teaches any ordinary intelligent person how to experience the first or psychological stage of enlightenment within the context of ordinary, day-to-day life. This is the great adventure of the human spirit.

 

It is your destiny.

 

The Implicate Technology Centre.

 

Synopsis of Contents

 

Preface (above)

 

1 Introduction to implicate technology 

1.1 How this book works.

1.2 Personality: what it is and what it does.

1.3 The need to transcend the personality in order to understand the meaning and purpose of life.

1.4 Reality: how it interacts with the personality.

1.5 Reality devours the personality.

1.6 Suffering, and escape from suffering.

1.7 Models of reality: Eastern and Western, ancient and modern.

1.8 Comparable Eastern and Western implicate technology products.

1.9 How to use implicate technology products.

 

2 The self-help technology

2.1 Meditation: its uses and benefits.

2.2 What being set face to face with reality brings to your life.

2.3 The simple meditative technique:

2.3.1 the role of intuition in meditation

2.3.2 the practice of meditation

2.3.3.1 the framework within which meditation unfolds:

the link between thought and breathing

2.3.3.2 how to concentrate the thoughts on the flow of breath

2.3.3.3 the problems of distraction, and their cure

2.3.4 how to measure success in meditation

2.3.5 the transformation of consciousness

2.3.6 the key to enlightenment.

 

3 Characteristics of the period prior to the psychological stage of enlightenment

3.1 Measuring progress towards the first stage of enlightenment.

3.2 Act.

3.3 Problems encountered on the spiritual path.

3.4  Coping with uncertainty.

3.5 Centred in the midst of conditions.

3.6 The ten conditions and the associated power structures.

3.7.1 The power discipline:

3.7.2 Input.

3.7.3 Pivot.

3.7.4 Act.

 

4 The time of testing

4.1 The unifying power of karma.

4.2 Intuition and karma.

4.3 How karma operates.

4.4 Why you are tested.

4.5 The successful outcome of the tests.

4.6 The unconditioned state.

 

5 Confirmatory experiences

5.1 Gaining perspective.

5.2 Introduction to the Implicate Technology model of reality.

5.3 Serenity and harmony.

5.4 The meditation on the Implicate Technology model of reality.

5.5 The unity of time.

5.6 Hearing.

5.7.1 Sexual energy: conventional morality and sexual energy

5.7.2 the first step: retaining sexual energy.

5.7.3.1 the second step: understanding the retained energy

5.7.3.2 deep, slow meditative breathing

5.7.3.3 the natural flow of sexual energy

5.7.3.4 raising the sexual energy.

6 The all-pervasive influence of the emotions

6.1 The need for detachment.

6.2 Why me?

6.3 Detached, yet sensitive.

6.4 Fear and desire.

6.5 Anger.

6.6 Forgiveness.

6.7 Giving.

 

7 Advice on failure to attain the psychological stage of enlightenment

7.1 Anyone can attain the first stage of enlightenment.

7.2 The test of the validity of the teaching.

7.3 Problems despite consistent practice.

7.4 Intermittent practice.

7.5 Doubts about starting meditation.

7.6 Blocks in progress:

7.6.1 problems you are aware of

7.6.2 problems you are unaware of.

 

8 Conclusion—the far journey

8.1 The far journey.

8.2 Embrace everyday life.

8.3 Relationships with others.

8.4 The process of cultural evolution.

8.5 The role of the enlightened person.

8.6 The goal of the teaching.

 

9 Bibliography

 

10 Glossary

 

11 The Formula

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B 1 Introduction to implicate technology

Guides to Enlightenment Posted on October 20, 2011 by The BookMarch 5, 2013

1 Introduction to implicate technology 

There is only one reality. Reality is one. All religions can be understood as models of the one reality, each relevant to particular cultures over particular time periods.

1.1 How this book works.

1.2 Personality: what it is and what it does.

1.3 The need to transcend the personality in order to understand the meaning and purpose of life.

1.4 Reality: how it interacts with the personality.

1.5 Reality devours the personality.

1.6 Suffering, and escape from suffering.

1.7 Models of reality: Eastern and Western, ancient and modern.

1.8 Comparable Eastern and Western implicate technology products.

1.9 How to use implicate technology products.

 

 

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B 1.1 What does this book teach you?

Guides to Enlightenment Posted on October 20, 2011 by The BookOctober 20, 2011

1.1 What does this book teach you?

 

This book starts from the basis that within the natural limitations of your personality, all you can experience is your individual measure of joy and sorrow, pain and pleasure. It teaches that you will never understand the true nature of reality if you deal with people and things only through your personality, neither will you understand why your life has happened to you the way it has. This book teaches you that if you truly want to understand what your life is about, you must learn how to live beyond your personality.

 

This book teaches you how to attain a state of mind, tranquil and clear, which enables you to understand reality and your life in a balanced and harmonious way. You are shown how to experience directly, for yourself, that both your life and all life are only apparently separate elements in reality. You are shown how to experience for yourself that all things, all life, are in reality integrated and unified aspects of a meaningful whole: this level of experience is known as enlightenment.

 

Enlightenment is only possible once you learn to live beyond your personality. A simple way to achieve this is through practice of the meditation technique taught in chapter 2. Follow the detailed instructions, work to the best of your ability in the way directed, and you will travel along the path towards enlightenment.

 

This book for beginners teaches you how to realise the first, or psychological, stage of enlightenment with one hundred days of committed meditation practice. Psychological enlightenment is a state of mind in which you can experience a genuine and lasting detachment from emotional unhappiness. This book, then, prepares you, through the resulting peace and clarity of mind, for the advanced teachings on meditation, which lead, through experience, to a full and direct understanding of the inherent unity of reality. That state is known as the final, transcendental, stage of enlightenment.

 

This book teaches you how to understand reality through experience. The fruits of your experience can be expressed in religious or secular terms, according to your choice. This book is a self-help guide to experiencing the unity that is reality.

 

This book is entirely practical. It contains no theory. Daily practice of the simple meditation exercise, within the context explained, leads to understanding reality through experience.

 

Begin the journey on this path now. All the material you need is to hand in your own life. This book teaches you how to live the meaning and purpose of your life.

 

The key is to integrate these teachings into your ordinary, everyday life. Committed daily practice of these teachings leads to a gradual, entirely natural and harmonious transformation of your experience of life. This teaching requires no overt changes in your life, no visible markers, no new allegiances or beliefs.

 

Simply practise the meditation and think about your life in the context given.

 

 

 

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B 1.2 What is the function of the personality?

Guides to Enlightenment Posted on October 20, 2011 by The BookDecember 24, 2012

1.2 What is the function of the personality?

 

From the point of view of normal, day-to-day awareness, reality is experienced through the limitations of one’s personality. The personality acts as a filter through which one interprets and understands the experiences of one’s senses interacting with one’s emotional, intellectual and belief structures. Each personality has its own strengths and weaknesses, its own limitations: bounded by individual limitations, one tries to understand the experience of oneself interacting with the world.

 

The personality encompasses the whole complex of emotions, intellectual ideas, fears, values, hopes, needs and desires which are accessible to, and form the contents of, ordinary, everyday awareness. Our well-developed psychologies teach us that each individual’s behaviour is to a significant extent influenced by underlying psychological constraints. Normally, one is unconscious of one’s own constraints; awareness of these underlying constraints, which determine much of one’s understanding of reality, usually dawns gradually by means of the long and laborious process of maturing through time.

 

The key term ‘consciousness’ refers both to one’s level of awareness at any given time and place and to the context within which this awareness operates at that time. In other words, one’s level of consciousness at any time is what one is aware of, understood within the context of one’s conscious and unconscious limitations. Considered objectively, each personality defines a limiting structure to the experiencing of reality.

 

The personality is a constraint upon one’s level of consciousness. This should be reflected on carefully until it is clearly understood. Put simply, there is much more of reality which you can experience when your level of consciousness is not constrained by the personality.

 

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B 1.3 What, then, is reality which is both experienced and understood within the limitations of the personality?

Guides to Enlightenment Posted on October 20, 2011 by The BookOctober 20, 2011

1.3 What, then, is reality which is both experienced and understood within the limitations of the personality?

 

Reality is the total of what can be known and experienced. Reality encompasses things, oneself and other people, and the manifold layers of meaning within which experience can be understood. Reality is in a constant state of flux; each moment is different from any other.

 

To ordinary consciousness, reality is experienced only as a state of constant flux rather than as a meaningful process. This is to say that reality is a process which includes, and interacts with, the personality. Each personality is subject to the process of reality.

 

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B 1.4.1 What are the characteristics of the interaction between one’s personality and the process that is reality?

Guides to Enlightenment Posted on October 20, 2011 by The BookOctober 21, 2011

1.4.1 What are the characteristics of the interaction between one’s personality and the process that is reality?

 

Through the complex of one’s needs and desires, one attempts to live a fulfilling and satisfying life. This one achieves to a greater or lesser extent according to one’s own way of measuring such matters. We all experience certain things in common. We all have our measure of joy and sorrow, physical and emotional pain and pleasure. We each have our sufferings, frustrations, disappointments and failures; our own weaknesses and fears which we face or fail to face as we are put to the test.

 

A common pattern of our lives is the attempt of the individual personality to attain fulfilment through the control of aspects of reality. This usually manifests itself as the wish to impose one’s will on others or on oneself and the world. This is doomed to failure: we can only temporarily bend the world to our will. In the end, reality, apparently external to the needs and desires to the personality, is too powerful.

 

Again and again one pitches one’s personality against an apparently external and uncaring world. The twin forces of one’s personality and reality dance in constant opposition. In this way we waste our lives and our energies in an unwinnable struggle.

 

 

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B 1.4.2 Can we develop a framework, a context, in which to understand the interaction between the personality and reality?

Guides to Enlightenment Posted on October 20, 2011 by The BookOctober 20, 2011

1.4.2 Can we develop a framework, a context, in which to understand the interaction between the personality and reality?

 

Such a framework can be established, but not by the traditional Western technique of presenting a structured argument which states Its premises, develops its reasoning based on these premises, then leads to Its logical conclusion. Any such intellectual approach is inadequate to the task of understanding reality. Understanding can only be based on experience; the function of the intellect is to assist in organising one’s understanding of experience, nothing more and nothing less.

 

Instead, the traditional Eastern technique of starting with a presentation of the central point will be used. A function of this book is to provide a teaching, the practice of which will lead to an understanding through experience of the central point or goal. When the practical instructions are followed and the framework within which the consequent experiences unfold is understood, then, at one’s own pace and in one’s own way, understanding will develop.

 

The central point, the goal of the teaching, is to achieve an understanding through experience that: reality is a process which devours the personality. The personality is a defence against the corrosive effects of reality on the ego, the limiting and relatively illusory sense of the individual ‘I’.

 

To understand the truth of this requires a perspective, located outside the constraints of the personality, on one’s life experiences, which are an integral part of reality. To attain this perspective, one’s focus of awareness must move, quite naturally and at one’s own pace, from the individual ego-based constraints of the personality to the freedom of the transpersonal self. When the focus of awareness settles in the self, the resulting serenity, clarity and quiet joyousness is the psychological state known as enlightenment.

 

Once the psychological stage of enlightenment has been reached, many aspects of the personality are understood in a different light. Gradually, one comes to realise that the experiences of one’s life have taken place within a meaningful context. All one’s experiences and sufferings are now understood to have a purpose; but it should be kept in mind that the understanding of meaning and purpose after the psychological enlightenment is different in nature from any such understanding held in the context of normal consciousness.

 

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B 1.5 What does it mean to say, ‘reality is a process which devours the personality’?

Guides to Enlightenment Posted on October 20, 2011 by The BookMarch 6, 2013

1.5 What does it mean to say, ‘reality is a process which devours the personality’?

 

To understand this, it is necessary to develop a point of view, a way of seeing the objective nature of the interaction between the personality and reality. Within the context of the personality, one’s experiences and insights are subjective; however powerful, intense or varied in joy and suffering they may be, they are, in the end, personal and subjective. Viewed objectively, from a transpersonal point of view, the function of the process which is reality is to bring each individual consciousness to an awareness of its true nature.

 

From a focus of awareness rooted in the context of the personality, i.e. within normal consciousness, one’s life is experienced in terms of the extent to which one achieves a balance between the satisfaction and lack of satisfaction of one’s needs and desires. To remain locked in such a low level of consciousness is to be subject, without release, to the endless play of opposites. One experiences constantly the conflicting tensions of emotions, desires and objective reality.

 

Just as time devours the physical body in the course of its passage from youth through physical maturity to the gradual physical decay leading to death, so too does reality, through the passage of time, lead the personality from the innocence of childhood, past the idealism of youth and the draining realisations of life’s harsh realities in maturity, to the emptiness and fear of an old age unprepared for death. A consciousness shaped by the constraints of the personality fears profoundly the transpersonal, which is, correctly, sensed as inimical to the ego, or sense of the individual self.

 

This, then, is what is meant by saying ‘reality devours the personality’:

 

One who remains rooted in the personality is fated to suffer the endless conflicting tensions of desire and non-fulfilment of desire. Driven by the ego-based desires of the personality, one fears that dissolution of the sense of ‘I’ which is the hallmark of the transpersonal. This is commonly found in the individual’s fear of death. One is devoured by constant conflict and fear; in the end, one dies unfulfilled, empty, unprepared and fearful of death.

 

 

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B 1.6.1 Is this suffering necessary?

Guides to Enlightenment Posted on October 20, 2011 by The BookOctober 20, 2011

1.6.1 Is this suffering necessary?

 

For one whose level of consciousness is confined within the constraints of the personality, such suffering is both inevitable and necessary. It is the product of inescapable natural laws which govern our lives as much as do the physical laws explored so thoroughly by our explicate Western technologies. Whether or not one believes in these implicate laws is irrelevant to their domination of the shape and structure of our lives. Just as the decay of the physical body is inevitable, so too is the suffering experienced within the constraints of the personality.

 

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1.6.2 How can you escape from the endless cycle of psychological suffering and fear of death?

Guides to Enlightenment Posted on October 20, 2011 by The BookOctober 20, 2011

1.6.2 How can you escape from the endless cycle of psychological suffering and fear of death?

 

This is possible through following a path which leads to the movement of the focus of awareness from the personality-confined ego to the transpersonal self. Such a path is laid out in practical detail in this book. It is attainable by ordinary people regardless of their economic or social position in society or the circumstances of their lives.

 

In following the practical path detailed in this book, it will become increasingly clear that what matters is less the events of one’s life (which are the preoccupation of normal consciousness) than the way in which one reacts to these events. As one moves towards the psychological enlightenment, the obsession with the outward patterning of events gives way to a deeper concern with the content of one’s life experiences. With the attainment of the psychological stage of enlightenment, the understanding of one’s life circumstances and their meaning merges into a harmonious sense of wholeness.

 

This is a profound feeling of psychological wellbeing which transcends one’s material circumstances.

 

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B 1.7 Is there a framework which provides us with the terms of reference adequate to the task of describing the direct experience of reality?

Guides to Enlightenment Posted on October 20, 2011 by The BookOctober 20, 2011

1.7 Is there a framework which provides us with the terms of reference adequate to the task of describing the direct experience of reality?

 

There is only one reality. We each experience fragments of the one reality within the constructs of our personalities. In our late-twentieth century Western culture, we have lost sight of our cultural model of the one reality, of which our day-to-day experiences form a small but vital part.

 

There are many models of reality available to us today: Indian, Chinese and Tibetan Buddhism, Indian Hinduism, Chinese Taoism, Christianity, Judaism and Islam, and the old Western Mystery models of the Druids and the pre-Christian Pagans. Each model is an attempt to describe the path leading to an understanding of reality in terms appropriate to a particular culture at a particular time and place.

 

No one model of reality gives exclusive access to the truth. Each model reflects particular historical and cultural requirements. In the West, over the past two thousand years, our culture has been shaped by the ethical framework of Christianity. Now, for great numbers of people, the old models of reality have lost their relevance.

 

Yet the need to understand the fulness of reality and one’s place in it remains strong. So some turn back to the old Western models and others lean hungrily towards the venerable Eastern models. Few seem to find satisfaction; the great majority just live their lives from day to day in quiet desperation with no great sense of meaning or purpose. In fact the predominant world view is the woefully inadequate mechanistic model given by our science.

 

The scientific model of reality denies our natural desire for wholeness. Only a committed minority find satisfaction and fulfilment in the available religious models. The simple fact is that we have no culturally relevant framework within which an ordinary intelligent person can find guidance and assistance on the path to wholeness.

 

This book is an attempt to provide this guidance in terms accessible to such a person. For one who follows the path taught in this book, it is possible to express the resultant experiences within the terms of any religious or spiritual model of reality. All are valid in different ways; any claims to sole access to the truth are a form of religious or spiritual egotism.

 

However, for the majority, the atheists, agnostics, cynics and the spiritually desperate and starving, there is at present no generally accessible and relevant model. This book points towards a beginning, no more and no less; it offers guidance on the path to wholeness and fulfilment, without requiring commitment to a particular belief structure or way of living. The starting-point is now, and all the material required is to hand in your own life.

 

The test of the validity of this teaching is whether you experience the growth of consciousness of reality through practice. Whether or not you believe in the teaching is irrelevant. This book offers you knowledge based on experience.

 

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B 1.8 By what process was this book written?

Guides to Enlightenment Posted on October 20, 2011 by The BookMarch 6, 2013

1.8 By what process was this book written?

This book is based on the direct experiencing of reality by members of The Implicate Technology Centre. It explains how a simple daily exercise, practised in the context of your ordinary, day-to-day life, and understood within a relevant framework, leads to a transformation in your level of awareness.

 

From the vantage point of this more developed consciousness, which is accessible to everyone regardless of individual life circumstances, the central validity of the old models of reality is apparent. That is to say, each describes reality in a valid and culturally different way. This book is simply a recasting of the ancient teachings in contemporary Western cultural terms.

 

This book is not a new translation of books of other cultures. It is a recasting of the experience those works teach about into the ordinary language and concepts we use in the West. For those who are interested in such things, chapters 2 and 5 are based on the Chinese Taoist book, The Secret of the Golden Flower. Chapters 3, 4, 6 and 7 are a recasting, through the filter of experience, of the discussion on the Sidpa Bardo in the Tibetan Buddhist book, The Tibetan Book of the Dead. Chapter 1 is a recasting of the key message of Gautama the Buddha and many other teachers: this life leads us only to suffering unless we find a way to rise above it. Chapter 8 discusses the difficulties of having such experiences in a culture ignorant of such processes.

 

As an illustration of this process of recasting, consider carefully the following example:

 

The Secret of the Golden Flower begins with the key to the process of attaining enlightenment: “The secret of the magic of life consists in using action in order to attain non-action.”(Wilhelm and Jung, The Secret of the Golden Flower; London, Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd. 1965, page 21).It elaborates this point: “The Master is further concerned that people should not miss the way that leads from conscious action to unconscious non-action. Therefore he says, the magic of the Elixir of Life makes use of conscious action in order that unconscious non-action may be attained”(Ibid, page 24). The text goes on to say that conscious action consists in the process and product of meditation.

 

The final chapter underlines the significance of this. “The most important things in the great Tao are the words: action through non-action. Non-action prevents a man from becoming entangled in form and image (materiality). Action in non-action prevents a man from sinking into numbing emptiness and dead nothingness”(Ibid, pages 53 – 54).

 

What does all this mean? Clearly, to the authors of the book, it is a matter of profound significance. Many in the West are drawn to understand the meaning of this; yet we do not have an understanding of the context within which Chinese culture produced such a discipline for living.

 

To establish this context, we must become aware of the differences in the technologies developed by East and West. Here in the West, we have well-developed explicate technologies; that is to say, we have developed technologies to deal with material reality; these are far beyond the explicate technologies developed in the East and the West’s products are eagerly sought in the East. Because of our advanced material technologies we consider ourselves the more developed culture, we acknowledge a responsibility to help the materially poorer cultures to raise their living standards.

 

Just as the West has turned its best minds to technologies which help us to understand and harness the power of material reality, so too has the East turned its best minds to the development of technologies which help in understanding and harnessing the power of non-material reality. Throughout the East there are many highly advanced technologies available. In contrast to the path we in the West took, these are implicate technologies; that is to say, technologies that deal with non-material reality. The products of these technologies are eagerly sought by many in the West: for years now, there has been growing interest in implicate technology products such as the martial arts, the various systems of Yoga and Zen and other Buddhist disciplines.

 

It is within this context that we can begin to understand what is meant by “action through non-action”. It is the product of Chinese Taoist implicate technology. Its function is to direct the consciousness of any person towards understanding how to deal with the experiences which comprise ordinary life so as to obtain the greatest fulfilment from that life.

 

All this can be understood by an ordinary intelligent person, but it does not yet explain what the words of the above-quoted phrase mean. We can only understand their meaning through practice in using a comparable product of Western implicate technology; such a product cannot be grasped or measured with the intellect alone. Only by incorporating such a product into one’s day-to-day life can its benefits be realised. This, then, is the key to gaining fulfilment in life, expressed in Western cultural terms.

 

 

Act according to your intuition.

 

Don’t interfere.

 

Just let things happen.

 

A fuller discussion on how to apply this product of Western implicate technology will be found in chapter 3.

 

 

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B 1.9 How do you use implicate technology products?

Guides to Enlightenment Posted on October 20, 2011 by The BookOctober 20, 2011

1.9 How do you use implicate technology products?

 

The function of all technologies is to make available specific products to assist us in dealing with reality. In the West we are well acquainted with the uses of the products of our explicate technologies which enable us to deal with material reality; we are all familiar to a greater or lesser extent with the uses of television, cars, computers and the myriad other products of our material technologies. We use them to enhance the material quality of our lives; we live within a consumerist ethos where the possession and use of explicate technology products is a prime concern. Yet our deepest intuitions tell us there is more to life than the consumption of material products.

 

The function of implicate technology products is to direct the focus of awareness inwards, to assist us in learning how to deal with the non-material aspects of reality. There are many such products available in the marketplace today; some train the body and the mind, some heal the body and mind. Many, especially those from the Eastern implicate technology systems, such as Hindu, Buddhist or Taoist yogas, take one along the path towards the psychological stage of enlightenment.

 

It is important to be cautious in choosing implicate technology products. In the final analysis, all products of non-material technologies lead one towards the psychological stage of enlightenment, that is to say they lead one out of the inevitable suffering of the personality into the freedom of the transpersonal. This is the birthright of each one of us – freedom cannot be bought, it can only be earned.

 

In our current marketplace, there are many Eastern and Western implicate technology products available. Many of the vendors of these products require a financial commitment involving sums of money not insignificant to an ordinary person. Question closely the motives and experience of individuals or organizations seeking to exchange implicate technology skills and products for money.

 

The Implicate Technology Centre releases inexpensive products, in the form of mass-produced books, which require no further financial commitment for their successful use. Everything that is taught in this book has been tested through the experiences of members of the Implicate Technology Centre. There is no theory in this book, only practice.

 

All Implicate Technology products are used by incorporating them into your daily life. Their primary function is to direct the focus of awareness inwards towards a true understanding of one’s own nature. It is only by attaining the psychological stage of enlightenment that you can begin the long journey we each must travel in seeking to set ourselves in a harmonious balance with the process that is reality.

 

This book is used by carrying out the simple practical instructions in chapter 2. The remaining chapters are read and re-read until one is familiar with the framework. Read the book at least once consecutively, then in any order you wish.

 

At different times, as your work develops, different chapters will take on significance, according to the needs of the moment. This is an indication of where, in the process of moving towards the psychological enlightenment, you are at any given time. This book functions as a self-help guide in the process of transformation of awareness.

 

The directions are simple to read, but very demanding to apply in practice. The fruits of this teaching, freedom from the endless cycle of suffering and the fear of death, are available to anyone willing to commit their whole being to the enterprise. The price of enlightenment is no less than this.

 

 

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B 2 The self-help technology

Guides to Enlightenment Posted on October 20, 2011 by The BookMarch 5, 2013

2 The self-help technology

2.1 Meditation: its uses and benefits (below contents)

2.2 What being set face to face with reality brings to your life.

2.3 The simple meditative technique:

2.3.1 the role of intuition in meditation

2.3.2 the practice of meditation

2.3.3.1 the framework within which meditation unfolds:

the link between thought and breathing

2.3.3.2 how to concentrate the thoughts on the flow of breath

2.3.3.3 the problems of distraction, and their cure

2.3.4 how to measure success in meditation

2.3.5 the transformation of consciousness

2.3.6 the key to enlightenment.

 

2 The self-help technology

2.1 Why should anyone bother to practice meditation?

 

The practice of meditation has been a prime feature of many models of reality. In Eastern cosmologies or worldviews it is a practice of paramount importance; in our Western models of reality it features either directly as meditative practices or indirectly as a highly focused form of prayer. In both Eastern and Western models, meditation and what we in the West know as prayer are often closely intertwined.

 

Clearly, in the past, meditation and prayer have been highly significant and valuable forms of activity when operating within the context of a given model of reality. The committed Muslim or Hindu or Buddhist or Christian has had meditative or prayer practices to turn to as a support in the difficulties of living. Our late-twentieth-century Western culture, however, is primarily secular in nature.

 

The vast majority no longer acknowledge the power and authority of the mainstream religious models of reality, yet a phenomenon of recent years has been the successful import into our Western cultures of meditative systems from the Eastern models of reality. Many have turned to meditation seeking simple benefits such as release from the stress which is such a major feature of our lives, or as a form of self-healing. Many turn to meditation within the context of a specific model of reality in an effort to understand the meaning of their lives.

 

All of this is a testament to the enduring power of meditation or prayer in people’s lives, but it does not explain why, in a secular culture, one should bother to practise meditation.

 

The majority of people in our culture do not accept the comfort of the existing models of reality. That is to say, most people cannot relate the teachings of the major religions to the deep and unarticulated core of their lives. In general, our lives are lived and understood within the impoverished framework of our mechanistic worldview.

 

To provide purpose and meaning in our lives, a way must be found to learn to understand the true nature of how we each interact with reality. This is the purpose and function of implicate technology. It is a practical self-help technology, available to anyone in any circumstances.

 

To ask why one should bother to practice meditation is to ask: what is the relevance of implicate technology for me?

 

We live in a culture which places us increasingly under stress. The forces which shape our lives are moving increasingly out of the individual’s control. We are all, to a greater or lesser extent according to our individual life circumstances, subject to the power and influence of politicians, unions, corporate and state institutions, terrorists, etc., a vast complex of social, economic, political, moral and personal pressures. We each need to learn to accept, to endure, to change and to effect change according to our circumstances.

 

In addition to these forces, we are subject to natural laws. Some of these laws, such as the law of gravity, are well understood by our explicate science; others, although well understood and expressed in Eastern models of reality, are barely glimpsed by our explicate sciences. Each of us must live our lives subject also to these forces.

 

Within this vast network of implicate and explicate forces, we each must act out our lives. None is exempt from this. These are the forces which comprise both our day-to-day lives and the deeper context which many of us intuitively sense is reality.

 

Within this context, we each must live out our lives and face our deaths. How does one make sense of one’s individual life? How does one gain sufficient independence from these apparently overwhelming forces to live out one’s life with a sense of freedom?

 

The purpose of implicate technology is to equip the individual with the skills necessary to attain this degree of freedom, and the understanding of how to use them. This is a state of freedom in which one has the capacity to remain clear, serene and quietly joyous regardless of external circumstances. This is the state of mind in which one is set face to face with reality.

 

 

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B 2.2 What does it mean for one to be set face to face with reality?

Guides to Enlightenment Posted on October 20, 2011 by The BookMarch 6, 2013

2.2 What does it mean for one to be set face to face with reality?

 

From the point of view of ordinary daily consciousness, one experiences reality through the limitations and constructs of the personality. Within the framework of the personality, one enacts the experiences of one’s life and death. Through the development of the personality, one moves from the naive idealism of youth to the mature awareness of life’s harsh realities.

 

Inevitably, in the course of one’s life, one experiences sorrow, pain, misery, grief and despair. This is a natural consequence of experiencing reality through the limitations of the personality. Reality devours the personality.

 

The inevitable suffering of one’s life is a consequence of not being set face to face with reality. Only by experiencing reality directly, face to face, can one escape the cycle of suffering and fear of death. The simple meditation taught in this chapter is an Implicate Technology product structured to enable ordinary intelligent people to face reality directly.

 

For one whose focus of awareness is centred on the personality, suffering is inevitable. Release from this suffering can only be found through a natural shift of one’s focus of awareness to the transpersonal self. Daily practice of this meditation, coupled with committed efforts to integrate its results into one’s ordinary life, leads to the first, or psychological, stage of enlightenment.

 

Through the use of this implicate technology product, one learns how to focus the thoughts simply and clearly on one thing at a time. This is the essential skill one must develop to enable one to be set face to face with reality. Although the practice is simplicity itself, the difficulty of achieving success is not to be underestimated.

 

Implicate technology applied consistently over sustained periods of time and understood within a practical context transforms one’s awareness of reality. The simple meditation technique taught in this chapter develops the single most important feature of any meditative system. This is the ability to focus the thoughts consistently and continuously on one object, aim, thought or experience at a time.

 

 

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B 2.3.1 What is the tool for the transformation of awareness and how does one use it?

Guides to Enlightenment Posted on October 20, 2011 by The BookOctober 20, 2011

2.3.1 What is the tool for the transformation of awareness and how does one use it?

 

Just as each human body shares a common physical anatomy, so, too, do we share a common non-material anatomy. This common structure we share extends beyond our psychological make-up. This cannot be understood by reading about the subject, or by being told, it can only be understood by direct experience.

 

The purpose of any structured meditative system is to direct consciousness along the path towards understanding through experience.

 

Although there is a great deal of interest growing in the West about using, understanding and realising the benefits of Eastern meditative systems, they are not generally appreciated in terms of their full cultured potential. In part, this is because they are implicate technology products stemming from cultures which have developed expertise in articulating certain key aspects of reality far beyond the present level of understanding in our Western cultures. This is expressed most clearly in the uses of the terms chi and prana in the Hindu, Buddhist and Taoist implicate technologies.

 

Anyone who has even a cursory knowledge of Eastern meditative systems will have come across these terms generally translated as ‘breath’ or ‘life force’. The aspects of reality to which these words direct one’s awareness will gradually become clear through practice of the meditation taught in this chapter. To help in understanding, you should be aware that prana is also known as intuition.

 

In Tibetan Buddhist implicate technology, intuition can also be understood as ‘quick knowing’. The consistent daily practice of the meditation taught here, with a full commitment to understanding, will lead to the awakening of your intuitive faculties. As your intuition develops, so will your understanding of these teachings unfold.

 

To begin from the viewpoint of ordinary consciousness: we experience the material world through the five senses – to our senses, the material world is solid and real. For centuries, we in the West have relied on our sciences to aid us in understanding physical reality. In pursuing an understanding of physical reality, twentieth-century quantum physics sought to establish the existence of fundamental particles of matter. After all, everyone knows that matter is solid and so must be composed of particles uniting to form trees, bodies, hills, etc.

 

Here our science discovered a characteristic of material particles which is at odds with the everyday experience of our senses. Quantum physics has established that matter occurs both as particles and as waves – in other words, matter is both solid (as our five senses tell us) and not solid (which is not at all apparent to common sense).

 

On the one hand, we experience physical reality as actual and solid; on the other hand, our most advanced science tells us that matter is somehow both solid (particles) and a form of energy (waves). Our science has established that physical reality is not as it appears to our senses. How, then, are we to experience the true nature of reality if not through the five senses?

 

Each one of us possesses the latent capacity to understand the true nature of reality through the experience of a form of thought which we know in the West as intuition. This is also known in the West as the sixth sense. The function of meditation is to develop this sixth sense, a truer and more reliable experience of reality than that afforded by the other five.

 

To understand how meditation works to achieve this requires both continuous practice in meditation and a framework in which to place the experience as it unfolds through time.

 

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B 2.3.2 The practice of meditation.

Guides to Enlightenment Posted on October 20, 2011 by The BookApril 22, 2013

B 2.3.2 The practice of meditation.

Firstly, begin with the practice. The simplest form of meditation is to concentrate on one’s own breath. All that is required is seclusion for a minimum of fifteen minutes daily.

 

One sits upright, in any comfortable position, focuses the eyes on the bridge of the nose, or on an object five to six feet away, and counts both the duration and frequency of the breaths. If this is too difficult, it will be sufficient to count the frequency of the breathing. Typically, we breathe about seventeen times a minute – as the practice of meditation develops through time the frequency of breathing drops gradually down to roughly once a minute.

 

All this is very simple to say but very hard to achieve, as anyone who has tried meditation will acknowledge. The key to achieving the considerable rewards of meditation is an accessible framework within which one can understand and develop the experiences of thought during meditation.

 

 

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B 2.3.3.1 The framework within which meditation unfolds.

Guides to Enlightenment Posted on October 20, 2011 by The BookOctober 20, 2011

2.3.3.1 The framework within which meditation unfolds.

Secondly, then, consider the framework. To ordinary consciousness, the primary experience of thought is of a continuous web. Whirling around in awareness, sometimes faster and sometimes slower, always the continuous stream of thought is there.

 

The aim of meditation is to slow the stream of thoughts; this process, as it develops through time and practice, to be integrated into day-to-day life, leads to great changes in awareness. One develops the capacity for a different type of thought- intuition, or true thought. As the capacity for insight develops, one’s awareness of the true nature of reality develops concurrently in a profoundly satisfying way.

 

The central task for anyone seeking to gain the benefits of meditation is to learn to slow the thoughts. This cannot be done by thought itself. An intellectual approach is inadequate to the task.

 

The link between thought and breathing.

How, then, is one to gain control over one’s thought? This is to be done through the breath. There is an intimate link between breathing and thought.

 

Each breath we take is accompanied by a thought. This is a process apparently without end. We cannot influence thought directly but we can influence thought through influencing the breathing.

 

As the breathing slows in meditation, so, too, does the flow of thoughts decrease. As this happens, true thoughts, which have continuity in themselves, begin to become accessible to consciousness. As this process develops, one’s awareness of reality transforms slowly, naturally and wonderfully.

 

The key to meditation, then, is to focus one’s awareness on one’s breathing. This is by no means a simple task to sustain for even fifteen minutes daily. When one starts meditation, the thoughts are in a whirl.

 

One is preoccupied with the awareness of the physical surroundings and one’s own comfort. One is driven to think of emotional concerns, the problems of the day and intellectual concerns. The hardest thing to achieve is the task of concentrating solely and simply on one’s breathing.

 

How then are we to achieve this control over the breathing? For the process to succeed, the transformation must take place at a gradual, natural pace. One is not to force the breathing to be slow.

 

The breath should flow in through the nose, into the lungs, then deep into the abdomen, quietly and easily. The breath should flow out of the nose easily and naturally. The mouth remains closed, the teeth lightly clenched and the tongue touching the roof of the mouth.

 

This last is most important: the tongue acts as a connector to allow the full flow of the body’s energies. This can be formally studied, for example, in Taoist or Hindu esoteric yoga. It will also occur quite naturally if no attention is paid to the process.

 

 

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B 2.3.3.2 How to concentrate the thoughts on the flow of breath.

Guides to Enlightenment Posted on October 20, 2011 by The BookOctober 20, 2011

2.3.3.2 How to concentrate the thoughts on the flow of breath.

 All that remains to explain is the hardest task: how to concentrate the thoughts on the flow of breath.

 

Meditation is very hard to master, but very easy to sustain once mastery has been achieved. The major area of difficulty is distraction.

 

This takes two common forms and the differences between them are best understood as they occur in practice.

 

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B 2.3.3.3 The problems of distraction, and their cure.

Guides to Enlightenment Posted on October 20, 2011 by The BookOctober 20, 2011

2.3.3.3 The problems of distraction, and their cure.

Theoretical knowledge of meditation has little value; meditation can only be understood through experience. One is in seclusion, seated comfortably in the posture described above, trying to focus one’s thoughts on the awareness of breathing, and inevitably one is distracted. As said above, this can take two main forms, both of which are a variety of laziness.

 

The first area of difficulty which may be encountered during meditation is sleepiness. This represents a form of distraction of which one is substantially unconscious. Quite simply, one dozes off.

 

The cure for this is also very simple: get up and walk around for a little. This is very important. On no account should one take the lazy option and fall asleep. The key lies in focusing the thoughts, not in diffusing them.

 

The second area of difficulty is distraction through fantasy. This refers to any chain of thought which occurs to distract one from awareness of one’s breathing. Such chains of fantasy can be based on a myriad of initial thoughts—sexual desire, financial concerns, emotional or relationship difficulties, an event of the day, etc.

 

The list is endless, and the attractions of fantasy are very great. Meditation affords many opportunities to indulge in self-satisfying fantasies. One is easily tempted to follow through such chains of thought.

 

All such chains of thought, such fantasies, are to be resisted vigorously and with discipline. They are all, without exception, illusory, regardless of how important the subject matter is to the person meditating. Distraction through fantasy is easier to deal with than sleepiness; this is because, with discipline, one can become aware of the distraction and so exercise self-control. The discipline is simply to bring one’s awareness back to one’s breathing.

 

All the problems which crop up are a function of distraction or laziness. They may manifest as fantasies, sleepiness or laboured breathing. The two cures are straightforward, either walk around a little until the mind is settled or focus the thoughts on one’s breathing.

 

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