Keep Your Eyes on the Prize

by Betty Bland

Originally printed in the Fall 2010 issue of Quest magazine.
Citation: Band, Betty. "Keep Your Eyes on the Prize." Quest 98. 4 (Fall 2010): 126.

Theosophical Society - Betty Bland. Betty served as President of the Theosophical Society in America and made many important and lasting contributions to the growth and legacy of the TSA. Can you remember learning how to ride a bike? After one has learned, it seems so natural that the actual learning is quickly forgotten—except by the traumatized parents who were trying to help the process. "It is all about balance," they would say encouragingly. So it proceeded through trial and error, until pretty soon the catastrophic wobble transformed into a tentatively directed ride before bursting into an exhilarating junket at full speed ahead. The balance was not something to be told about, but to do. Once mastered, the skill is always accessible; it may become rusty with disuse, but can quickly be recaptured.

Yet, balance has other, more subtle components. Focused attention is required to avoid the ordinary small obstacles such as a stone or bump in the road or a change in pavement, but attention must also be directed toward a wider outlook. If one kept eyes down on each little obstacle a tumble would surely result, or one might suddenly find oneself wrapped around a telephone pole.

Quite obviously this applies to our lives in general and particularly to the life of an aspirant. There are many levels of balanced functioning to be achieved, each building on the former and each requiring practice and attention. At every point in our growth, what we have already learned seems simple and what still lies ahead seems daunting.  However the three principles of balance, focus, and a constant eye to the horizon are essential elements of our practice. I recently ran across several little aphorisms by George S. Arundale (GSA), president of the international TS from 1934 to 1945, written in 1919 in a little book titled The Way of Service. I will use them to highlight the three principles mentioned above.

Balance: "Do not allow the force of your affection for another to disturb either your balance or his" GSA writes. "Your service must strengthen and not weaken." Isn’t it interesting that at the very outset we have to learn to balance what we generally call love? A multitude of sins can parade under the guise of love, such as an attachment to our way of defining a person and how they must act. In our desire to be helpful we need to keep balanced within boundaries so that each has the space to unfurl his or her own unique potential.

Balance in human relationships requires a great deal of self-awareness. We see through the filters of self-interest and protection of the group we belong to—whatever that may be. Each layer of learning about ourselves reveals one more way in which we might fool ourselves into thinking that our motives are purely altruistic when they actually may be quite self serving. And moving beyond self-interest to protecting our cultural bias with which we identify, we can become quite irrational in the way we react to and value our brothers and sisters. This has manifested in many ways including women’s issues, homophobia, race relations, and religious intolerance. All these throw us totally off balance in our view of reality.

Focus: "Do not be jealous of another's greater power of service," urges GSA, "rather be glad that a greater power exists to help those whom your own weaker force may be unable to reach." In other words, recognize the ideal of benefiting humankind as the goal rather than wondering whether you might shine or be recognized for any great talent. There are very few truly great people in the world and it is a certain bet that a part of their repertoire is humility. Even so, humanity has such a wide array of talents that excelling in one area is usually balanced by some other weakness. Comparing ourselves to others is like concentrating on the little pebbles in the road, assuring a certain crash.

We have been told by many religious teachings not to worry about the glamour of admiration or praise. Jesus told his disciples to pray in private rather than in public where everyone would recognize one for their righteousness. Jiddu Krishnamurti penned in the little book At the Feet of the Master that your mind "wishes itself to feel proudly separate" and calculates on behalf of self instead of helping others. Beware: anything that feeds the ravenous wolf of self is sure to result in the inevitable crash. As the saying goes, "Pride goes before the fall and mighty pride goes before a mighty fall."

A constant eye: "The less a person thinks about himself, says GSA, "the more he is really paying attention to his growth. Each little act of service returns to the doer in the shape of an added power to serve." To keep "a constant eye toward the ideal of human progression and perfection which the secret science depicts" as HPB stated in the Golden Stairs, our goal is to lift our eyes beyond our personal self to the good of the whole. This kind of habitual view is developed only through the practice of returning our gaze to the horizon again and again, whenever we begin feeling a bit off-balance. With the eyes of our soul uplifted toward this wide view, we gain a powerful tool for holding steady in our travels through life. Our great prize, if we keep our balance, focus, and vision, is the "reward past all telling—the power to bless and save humanity."

There is a road, steep and thorny, beset with perils of every kind, but yet a road, and it leads to the very heart of the Universe: I can tell you how to find those who will show you the secret gateway that opens inward only, and closes fast behind the neophyte for evermore. There is no danger that dauntless courage cannot conquer; there is no trial that spotless purity cannot pass through; there is no difficulty that strong intellect cannot surmount. For those who win onwards there is reward past all telling—the power to bless and save humanity; for those who fail, there are other lives in which success may come. (H. P. Blavatsky, Collected Works, 13:219)


From the Editor's Desk Fall 2010

Originally printed in the Fall 2010 issue of Quest magazine.
Citation:Smoley, Richard."From the Editor's Desk Fall 2010." Quest 98. 4 (Fall 2010): 122.

Theosophical Society - Richard Smoley is editor of Quest: Journal of the Theosophical Society in America and a frequent lecturer for the Theosophical SocietyIf there is an American religion, surely this lies at its core"”what William James called "the religion of healthy-mindedness," the belief that positive thoughts will not only triumph but can bend reality to their own shape.

The father of the religion of positive thinking was an obscure New Englander named Phineas Parkhurst Quimby (1802—66). Quimby started out practicing mesmerism, which attempted to heal by stimulating the flow of "animal magnetism" (something more or less like what we today would call chi or prana). But he soon found that the passes that mesmerists used to stimulate this flow were irrelevant to healing. He concluded that "all disease is in the mind or belief"; what really worked was healing patients' minds, which would automatically heal their bodies.

Quimby was remarkably successful, attracting many out-of-state patients to his Maine-based practice. After his death, his ideas"”which he came to call Christian Science"”lived on in the teachings of his most famous pupil, Mary Baker Eddy, who popularized the name and created a religion around it, as well as in subsequent movements such as New Thought, Unity, and Religious Science.

The twentieth century saw the gospel extended to financial success in Napoleon Hill's Think and Grow Rich and Robert Collier's Secret of the Ages and in the writings of Florence Scovel Shinn. It reached mass audiences with Dale Carnegie's Power of Positive Thinking and the works of Norman Vincent Peale. Over the past decade we have seen another crop, including Esther and Jerry Hicks, whose books, such as Ask and It Is Given and The Amazing Power of Deliberate Intent, channeling the words of an entity called Abraham, sat on the best-seller lists for months. Rhonda Byrne's 2006 book and DVD The Secret, based on the Abraham materials, were stupendous best-sellers in their own right.

Thus the American appetite for positive thinking is enormous. But how much truth is there in this idea? Certainly it would be hard to deny its fundamental insight"”that thought is creative and can shape reality around itself, often in ways that can seem bizarre or even paranormal. And yet there seems to be something missing in the positive-thinking gospel. Sometimes it manifests in a lack of compassion, of which New Thought groups are often"”and rightly"”accused. (After all, if your thoughts are the only things that are affecting you, and you get cancer or have to file for bankruptcy, it's really your own fault, isn't it?) We see the same tendency in mass culture, with its eerie habit of pasting smiley faces over everything while tens of millions are suffocating in anxiety and depression.

Taken in a certain way, accentuating the positive can make you oblivious. Many esoteric teachings say that the ordinary state of human consciousness is a form of delusion. Much of this is due to a deeply ingrained tendency to see the present in the light of past preconceptions. Most of us, it's true, have a bias toward negative preconceptions based on fear and anxiety. Replacing these with positive preconceptions is no doubt a step forward, but even so a positive preconception is no more likely to be accurate than a negative one. Either way you are filtering the present through the mesh of some foreordained conclusion that your mind (usually unconsciously) has drawn.

To me, then, it seems mistaken to extol positivity as an absolute. It may be better understood in light of Aristotle's concept of virtue, which, he said, consisted of a mean between two extremes. Courage is a mean between cowardice and recklessness, and someone who is financially prudent stands somewhere between the miser and the spendthrift. So it is with positivity. As an unthinking, automatic response, it will lead us no further on the path to consciousness than will any other form of automatic behavior. There is a balance to be struck between a monochromatic pessimism on the one hand and a dazed cheeriness on the other.

Many spiritual teachings express this truth in one way or another. The Chinese tradition offers the yang and the yin, which form the theme of this issue. The Kabbalistic Tree of Life has three pillars"”Mercy and Severity on the right and left, with the Pillar of Mildness mediating between them. Knowledge in the true sense means seeing where and when it is appropriate to use mercy or severity.

I grant you that the world often seems to be a terrible place, where negativity threatens to overwhelm everything. But I would add that the answer to this apparent onslaught of negativity is not a blind or unthinking positivity. It is the insight to see the truth in a situation and, as the Buddhists say, employing the "skillful means" needed to set it right.

Richard Smoley


Dadaji

by Alice O. Howell

Originally printed in the Fall 2010 issue of Quest magazine. 
Citation: Howell, Alice O.."Dadaji." Quest  98. 4 (Fall 2010): 153, 159.

Theosophical Society - Alice O. Howell is an author and astrologer based in western Massachusetts. Her works include The Web in the Sea; The Dove in the Stone; and The Heavens Declare: Astrological Ages and the Evolution of Consciousness, all published by Quest Books.Dadaji was the most exceptional Hindu I ever met, and you will just have to take my word for the incredible feats I am about to relate. His real name was Roy Chauderi. He lived the life of a simple householder. He was married, and in India he ran a small toy store. But once a year there would be a special ceremony where, in the presence of hundreds, he would transform milk into an edible solid substance.

            Though I  went to India twice, I never made it to Calcutta, where he lived. We met him in Ventura, California, in 1982. There was a meeting of Indians in a private home. There were only four Caucasians present. We sat in a ring and he gave a lecture. He didn't sound very special, just a dark wavy headed man, but as we bid him good night, he drew me down and whispered, "Come back tomorrow morning early." So, I did. He drew me into a private room and we had a spiritual conversation. Although we'd never met before, it was as if we were continuing where we left off the last time. Then he asked me if I would like to know the name of God? I was to move to another room. 

            This room turned out to be the host's baby's nursery. Besides the crib, Dadaji had a small altar with flowers, fruit, a small oil lamp and a few small ornamental bronze deities. I sat in a chair; he chanted a prayer, then took a small piece of paper and wrote a name on it in red ink. When he handed it to me and I unfolded it, it was totally blank! He smiled. Hypnosis?

            Then he instructed me to return that evening with my husband, Walter. Each of us was to bring a simple sealed jar of water. The trip was about 30 miles, each way, but I agreed. Accordingly, I filled two empty mayonnaise jars and another and we returned.

           The same group was gathered and we were summoned in one at a time. The rest of us meditated silently. When Walter returned, he looked amazed, but I was immediately next. This time, he was seated in a dark room lit by a few candles. Another low altar with flowers and fruit was in front of him. He smiled radiantly and asked for my jar. I handed it to him, determined to watch closely, which I did. To my astonishment, he took the jar, and prayed over it, it started to sweat water on the outside as he rubbed it! Then with a beatific smile he handed it to me, blessed me, and indicated I was to leave.

            When I returned to the group, we sat again quietly. The Indian next to Walter whispered "Open it!" When Walter opened his jar a beautiful fragrance wafted out. When I opened mine another fragrance but different from Walter's! When we came home and opened them again, the fragrances were still there and we had been told, it was safe to sip. I could not help but think of Jesus and his changing the water to wine at the wedding in Cana. This was still possible!

            We soon became good friends, and Walter and  I attended informal gatherings only to discover how loving and humorous he was. He showered us with his books, which I still have. Also a printed portrait framed. He was reluctant on one occasion to have his photo taken. At last, he relented, but when the film was developed it turned out to be that of a holy man with a beard! 

            Dadaji occasionally came to Connecticut, not to far from where we were living in Massachusetts, and we were invited to visit several times. There he would have an audience, one on one. A good friend of mine, who was both a Jungian analyst and Episcopal priest, came to see Dadaji. My friend had been through hell. He had lost forty pounds, and was at the lowest point in his life. He had been kicked out of his professional position having been publicly accused by his angry significant other of sleeping with one of his patients. Not quite true, as she had quit before this happened, but true enough. So he arrived a broken man and went in to see Dadaji. When he came out, his blue denim shirt was soaked in front and the fragrance was overwhelming! Apparently, Dadaji had stroked the front of it and the fragrance came out of his hands like oil. In India, this is called padmagandi,  and other gifted gurus have the same gift.

            As I had had known my friends his angry partner as well, I urged her to visit Dadaji. When she walked down his corridor, he waved and ordered her to stop. He told her, she might return in a couple of years but he could not see her that day. I had said nothing to Dadaji about the situation with either one of them.

            Walter, who was a Reiki practitioner had compassion for Dadaji who was clearly exhausted, so Dadaji agreed to let Walter treat him. It helped enormously and so the two men became dear friends. We were invited several times to visit and had the pleasure of meeting his wife.

            Needless to say, this encounter forced me to rearrange much of my mental furniture! I am by nature a skeptical Scorpio but I now have a true saying by fictional friend Gezeebius: Always keep an open mind and a good crap-detector! This has served me well over the years. 

Dadaji was an extraordinary human being and his teachings were wise and loving. I still hear his laughter and feel the warmth of his hugs. Though he is no longer in the flesh, his spirit, love and teachings continue. He is the one who called himself an anti-guru guru! He told me that everyone has the same access to the Truth. The only problem is that we are unconscious of it, so time is kind by coming in minutes, hours, and days as we live to say "Aha!" In that way, C. G. Jung is saying exactly same thing: the Self knows but it dwells in the unconscious!   I think of this as a candle. Everyone has an individual wick but the flame on every wick is the same flame!

 

           Imprisoned Splendor   

Truth is within ourselves; it takes no rise

From outward things, whate'er you may believe.

There is an inmost center in us all,

Where truth abides in fullness; and around,

Wall upon wall, the gross flesh hems it in,

This perfect, clear perception which is truth

A baffling and perverting carnal mesh

Binds it, and makes all error: and to KNOW,

Rather consists in opening out a way

Whence the imprisoned splendor may escape,

Than in effecting an entry for a light

Supposed to be without.

— Robert Browning (1812—1889), from Paracelsus


Alice O. Howell is an author and astrologer based in western Massachusetts. Her works include The Web in the Sea; The Dove in the Stone; and The Heavens Declare: Astrological Ages and the Evolution of Consciousness, all published by Quest Books.

 


The Age of Synthesis

by Corinne McLaughlin with Gordon Davidson

Originally printed in the Fall 2010 issue of Quest magazine. 
Citation: McLaughlin, Corinne; Davidson, Gordon. "The Age of Synthesis." Quest  98. 4 (Fall 2010): 144-146.
 

 

Theosophical Society - Corinne McLaughlin and Gordon Davidson are co-authors of  Spiritual Politics, and Builders of the Dawn. They are co-founders of The Center for Visionary Leadership, based in California and North Carolina, of Sirius, a spiritual and ecological community in Massachusetts. Corinne coordinated a national task force for President Clinton's Council on Sustainable Development. Gordon was the Founding Director of the Social Investment Forum and of Ceres, the Coalition for Environmentally Responsible Economies. They both are fellows of the World Business Academy and the Findhorn Foundation. This article is adapted from their latest book, The Practical Visionary

Today many disparate things are blending, fusing and synthesizing. Races, religions, cultures, nations, genders, and styles no longer seem as separate as they did in past times. The walls between opposites are beginning to dissolve, and dualities are transforming into a higher synthesis.

The cutting edge in every field is fusion and synthesis: holistic, hybrid, integral, multiracial, multicultural, multinational, interfaith, transpartisan. These reflect many aspects of the Age of Synthesis, described by scientists such as Dr. Carl W. Hall, that we're now entering.

Synthesis is a process of reconciling apparent diversity. It is a dynamic dance that transforms separateness and brings diverse parts into right relationships with one another and with the whole, resulting in something creative and enriching. It sounds a whole tone that tunes and harmonizes all other frequencies within its range of influence. Embodying synthesis fosters the ability to perceive the highest, the light in everything. Synthesis takes the best from the past and what is relevant and useful from the future, and applies it in the present. Life is loving synthesis in action.

Synthesis dictates the trend of all the evolutionary processes today. Everything is working toward larger unified blocs, toward amalgamations, international relationships, global planning, economic fusion, interdependence, interfaith movements and ideological concepts that deal with wholes rather than isolated parts. Now humanity is gradually building a synthesis in time and space through our modern, interconnected civilization and technology such as the Internet and jet travel.

An immensely popular holistic health industry, for example, unites mind and body. Hybrid cars blend gasoline and electric energy. Fusion music blends diverse styles and cultures. Social-benefit corporations fuse entrepreneurship and philanthropy. "Third way" politics synthesize the best of the left and right. New religions teach that Spirit and matter are no longer separate, as Spirit infuses matter. Spirituality is becoming more practical and applied to everyday life, which is attested by the new movements that bring together seeming opposites: Spirit in Business, Spirituality and Science, the Soul of Education and Spiritual Politics,. The signs are everywhere.

Van Jones, a practical visionary and the former director of the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, says today is the age of hybridity, when things are coming together in new ways. He says that the new generation doesn't want to be limited by binary thinking—either/or—that they want both/and. They want whole systems change—transforming the world at multiple levels simultaneously.

In this new Age of Synthesis, it's notable that the United States elected a president, Barack Obama, who embodies synthesis in his multiracial makeup, multicountry residences, multifocus career and transpartisan politics.

The spirit of synthesis is emerging in every field today, as interdisciplinary approaches by practical visionaries become the leading edge in academia, government and business. Disruptive, breakthrough innovations usually come about when you mash together different disciplines, says Salim Ismail, a former executive with Yahoo!, who directs the new Singularity University on the NASA Ames base in California. The university's mission is to solve the world's biggest problems by synthesizing academic disciplines.

The movement toward fusion and synthesis is even reflected  in  the way mainstream refers to holistic approaches of health care. At first, it was called "alternative medicine" because it was an alternative to mainstream, allopathic medicine. As it became more popular, it was called "complementary medicine," and now that it's accepted by many people in the mainstream medical profession, it's referred to as "integrative medicine."

The trend toward synthesis reflects the truth of the  Ageless Wisdom teaches that Spirit and matter aren't separate but are merely different frequencies along the same spectrum of energy. Spirit is matter at its highest frequency; matter is Spirit at its lowest frequency. You could say that matter is Spirit moving slowly enough to be seen.

Integral philosopher Ken Wilber says that "spirit is unfolding in this world and as this world." He goes on to note that in the nondual spiritual traditions, the absolute (spirit) and the relative (form) are not two but one: "In order to have a full realization of Spirit, you have to realize formlessness, this pure unmanifest presence, and you have to realize Spirit
in action in the manifest world of form. Spirit is present—immanent—everywhere in the world. Today, spirit of systhesis is about recognizing what already is present—seeing reality more clearly.

While many spiritual people like to hang out only in the realm of spirit, they need to move back and forth between spirit and matter to grow and to generate energy, just as energy is generated in a battery or an electrical system. True synthesis is a state of being that you can learn to recognize and identify with. The secret is aligning your personal will with a higher spiritual purpose. Psychologist Roberto Assagilli noted that "synthesis is brought about by a higher element or principle which transforms, sublimates ansd reabsorbs the two poles into a higher reality…The method of synthesis which is analogous in a certain sense to a chemical combination, includes and absorbs the two elements into higher unity endowed with qualities differing from those of either of them. "It's like individual musical instruments playing together to create the wonderful harmonies of a  symphony—without a conductor to orchestrate it.

The new integral approaches to life,  which address both the inner and outer and the personal and collective aspects of every issue, are key methods for creating unity. The "integral revolution" spearheaded by author Ken Wilber is an important example, as is the Spiral Dynamics work by Don Beck and Chris Cowan, which portrays civilization as an evolutionary spiral moving toward a more comprehensive and universal awareness.

The Ageless Wisdom teaches the importance of resolving duality: If your eye is single, all is light, as the Bible says. You  see how everything has purpose and goodness to it. You walk the razor's edge between the two great lines of force.

Your intuition can help you transcend polarity and binary thinking, such as either/or and us versus them, and focus instead on both/and thinking. Your inner light helps you embrace a higher synthesis of seeming opposites, such as mind and body, subject and object, form an emptiness, wave and particle, spirituality and science, rational and intuitive, Eastern and Western, traditional and innovative, personal and political, liberal and conservative, masculine and feminine, practical and visionary, and spirit and matter.

On a practical level, how can you work on transforming duality and bringing this energy of synthesis into your daily life? You learn to embody synthesis by looking for the right relationship between separated parts and gathering the parts into right relationship with the living whole. You can begin exploring the larger pattern or whole that includes the opposites.

For example, you can look for the grain of truth on each side of an argument to see how each contributes to the bigger picture. You can practice listening to someone who holds a different philosophical or political view from your own, and then look for points of agreement or common ground. You can also work on walking in someone else's shoes and seeing the world from his or her perspective. This seems simple, but it is incredibly profound and revealing. You can psychologically role-play someone who is different from you to develop empathy. Seeking out different cultural, racial and religious experiences can expand your perspective as you learn to harmonize with them. Another good technique is reading the literature of people with opposing views and trying to keep an open mind, looking for the grain of truth.

The questions for today are: How much can each of us synthesize in our consciousness? How many seemingly different realities and opposing views can we hold at once? To what degree can we identify with the whole? A good time to practice synthesizing is when we hear competing views from different political spokespeople. We highly recommend it—and it certainly makes the evening news more interesting!

Following are some examples.

In Politics

  • the creation of "third way" and transpartisan approaches beyond left and right.
  • the resolving of polarizing conflicts through mediation techniques.
  • the building of regional unions among nations.
  • the explosion of multi-sector partnerships—government, business, nonprofits.
  • the intergenerational collaborative movement among young and old.
  • the blending and intermarriage between races, cultures and sexes.

In Religion

  • the dialogue among different religions in the interfaith movement.
  • the renewed emphasis on both contemplation and social action.
  • the trend toward adopting beliefs and practices of several religions at once.
  • the blending of religion with social activities and entertainment in modern mega churches.

In Psychology

  • the integration of the conscious, subconscious and superconscious.
  • the fusing of Eastern and Western approaches.
  • the emergence of somatic education, integrating mind and body.
  • the integration of the whole field of the psyche in integral psychology.
  • the blending of psychology and ecology in behavioral ecology.
  • the popularity of cross-cultural studies, trainings, tours.

In Business

  • the new concern for doing well by doing good—profit and values.
  • the harmonizing of environmental and economic concerns.
  • the merging of for-profit with nonprofit mission in social benefit corporations and social entrepreneurship.
  • the trend to support work/life balance in the workplace.
  • the merging of economics with psychology in a new field called therapeutic economics.

In Science

  • the discovery of nuclear fusion which unifies atoms, rather than splitting them, as in nuclear fission.
  • the massive hybridization of crops.
  • the blending of physical science and social science;
  • the merging of biology and ecology to create the new field of epigenetics.
  • the teaming of science with religion in neurotheology to study the effects of prayer and meditation and prove the existence of the soul.

In Technology

  • the creation of hybrid cars, using gas and electricity.
  • the open-source, free software collaboration among self-organizing communities such as Wikipedia.
  • the hyperlinking and networking among diverse groups.
  • the "mash-ups" that remake videos or music by splicing in diverse sequences from unusual sources.
  • the blending of traditional journalism with citizen media, such as cell phone videos, Twitter feeds, video pods and use-news sites.
  • the fusing of education and technology through "educasting" and online courses.
  • the merging of real life and virtual life through online avatar games.

In the Arts

  • the trend toward fusion music and world music, blending styles and cultures, such as hip hop with Indian sitar.
  • the widespread use of mixed media in works of art.
  • the interactive, cross-platform entertainments.
  • the profusion of political statements in art, music, film, literature.
  • the transforming of two-dimensional figures into multidimensional scenes called "diorama."

In Medicine

  • the holistic approaches, which include body, emotions, mind, spirit.
  • the complementary approaches of alternative and allopathic medicine.
  • the integrative medicine of indigenous and contemporary modalities.
  • the new "energy medicine" that relates the physical and etheric bodies.

Corinne McLaughlin and Gordon Davidson are co-authors of  Spiritual Politics, and Builders of the Dawn. They are co-founders of The Center for Visionary Leadership, based in California and North Carolina, of Sirius, a spiritual and ecological community in Massachusetts. Corinne coordinated a national task force for President Clinton's Council on Sustainable Development. Gordon was the Founding Director of the Social Investment Forum and of Ceres, the Coalition for Environmentally Responsible Economies. They both are fellows of the World Business Academy and the Findhorn Foundation. This article is adapted from their book, The Practical Visionary (Unity House).


The Power of Great and Small

by Stephen Karcher

Originally printed in the Fall 2010 issue of Quest magazine. 
Citation: Karcher, Stephen. "The Power of Great and Small." Quest  98. 4 (Fall 2010): 139-143.
  

Theosophical Society - Stephen Karcher, Ph.D., is one of today's most creative and controversial writers and practitioners in the field of I Ching studies, divination and myth. He is an internationally recognized scholar, translator, graphic artist and an initiated diviner, teaching, and lecturing on the I Ching and other divination systems internationally. His works include:  Total I Ching: Myths for Change; I Ching Plain and Simple; The Kuan Yin Oracle; Illustrated Encyclopedia of Divination; Ta Chuan: The Great Treatise; The Way of I Ching; and The Classic Chinese Oracle of Change. I Ching, the "Classic of Change," is the world's oldest and most sophisticated system of wisdom divination, the fundamental source of China's philosophy, medicine, and spirituality. Change, as it is often called, aims at adding something crucial to our awareness that can connect us to what the old sages called the Dao (or Tao), the ongoing process of the Real. Its job is to make us deeply aware of the now, the present moment, and what is truly at play in the everyday events of our lives. It was put together in a time of troubles much like our own and can speak directly to our situation in the modern West. 

Myths of the Pair

 Among the basic units of Change are pairs, sets of two interconnected six-line figures or hexagrams. Each pair locates and describes a transformation, a specific paradigm with its own thematic concerns. These pairs reflect the creative power of the mythological imagination and its holographic capacity to produce dynamic models of complex realities.

A basic way of imagining these pairs is as a set of spindles on which an unbroken thread is wound back and forth like a Mbius strip, or as a great egg that turns itself inside out without breaking its shell. The thread is the thread of life itself as it passes back and forth across the spindles of "inspiration" and "realization," circulating in us through a series of hidden pathways that establish the deep background of a situation. The pair reflects the basic teaching in all Eastern thought: nothing stands alone; each thing can only truly exist when held in creative tension with its opposite.

 Gates of Change 

We are all familiar with the terms yin and yang and often use them to organize our own thinking about dualities and polarities. But these terms were created comparatively late in the written tradition of Change, which begins about 1100 BCE. Yin and yang came out of the synthesizing thought of the school of Cosmologists (c.300 BCE), who were attempting to organize the complexities of the old world of myth and ritual world into a conceptual system. A whole world of myth and image is hidden behind them.

The oldest example of the Chinese myth of the pair is probably the underworld Ghost River, which unites the Sun Tree and the Moon Tree in a constant interchange between light and dark, life and death, acting and being. These two powers were seen as Gates of Change. Everything that exists in the world we live in is created by passing through these gates. The yang pole was the Dragon Gate, qian, "inspiring force, dragon" (figure 1), which signifies spirit, creative energy, active transforming power and inspiration, the male sexual organ, and the masculine drive. It activates, animates, commands, and guides. It is strong, tenacious, untiring, and firm.  

Theosophical Society - The ancient Chinese ideogram for qian, composed of yan, lush hanging vegetation, jungle (1); dan, dawn, the sun just above the horizon (2); and yi, animating vapors or breath that spread to nourish the All under Heaven, the world we live in
Figure 1. The ancient Chinese ideogram for qian, composed of yan, lush hanging vegetation, jungle (1); dan, dawn, the sun just above the horizon (2); and yi, animating vapors or breath that spread to nourish the All under Heaven, the world we live in (3, 4). 

The yin gate was the Earth Gate: kun, the field, the dark animal goddess (figure 2). Kun is the earth, the world, space, concrete existence, moon, mother, wife, servants, ministers; she is all that is supple, adaptable, receptive, yielding, and fertile.   

Theosophical Society - The ancient ideogram for kun, composed of tu, earth (1), and shen, spirit power, the primordial waters, the rhythm of birth and death (2).
Figure 2. The ancient ideogram for kun, composed of tu, earth (1), and shen, spirit power, the primordial waters, the rhythm of birth and death (2).

 These gates established a pattern of interconnected opposites that permeates the oldest layers of Change. It is seen in the many sets of paired words that turn "either-or" into "both-and": strong and supple, sun and moon, transformation and continuity, above and below, inside and outside, life and death, me and you. All the changes in the world we live in were seen as a product of the mysterious doubling embodied in the Gates of Change.

 Great and Small

 In the later evolution of philosophical thought, these old images became the well-known pair of yin and yang. But in the old mythic world, the two powers were directly embodied in two words that represent stances or qualities of the will. These are the oldest words for yin and yang. They are personal processes, not abstract qualities:

Da, "Great," calls upon you to be great and strong. It means to collect your strength, organize yourself around a central idea or purpose, impose your will, and act to help and protect others. The Great Person is someone who has done this, who has acquired this power. The Great People are ancestor spirits and those through whom they manifest blessings: great rulers, sages, ritual experts and diviners, people in contact with the bright spirit that offers great insight and the power to manifest it.

Xiao, "Small," calls upon you to be flexible and supple, to adapt to whatever crosses your path. It means letting go of your sense of self-importance and yielding in a spontaneous and flexible way. The Small Person is one who adapts to and follows what crosses his path, an important step in finding the Way. Traditionally, the Small People were nobles without lands who had to take service with a lord and were subject to his whims and commands. They could hope to influence their situation only through adaptation and inner work. The Small Person became a Daoist byword for those who could see the small beginnings of change, unencumbered by pride and complication.

 The Realizing Person

 These processes or orientations of the will were the tools of the Realizing Person (figure 3), the person whose goal is use Change to act in accord with the Way and accumulate the power and virtue to become who he or she was meant to be.

Theosophical Society - Junzi, the Noble One or Realizing Person, consists of jun, chief or lord, a hand holding a scepter and a mouth that speaks truth (left); and zi, son or sonhood, the figure for a child, indicating the reappearance of an ancestor spirit. It is the suffix meaning "sage" or "master" in names such as Lao-zi (or Lao-tzu), the "young-old master." Figure 3. Junzi, the Noble One or Realizing Person, consists of jun, chief or lord, a hand holding a scepter and a mouth that speaks truth (left); and zi, son or sonhood, the figure for a child, indicating the reappearance of an ancestor spirit. It is the suffix meaning "sage" or "master" in names such as Lao-zi (or Lao-tzu), the "young-old master." 

The Ghosts and Spirits

 The world of the Realizing Person was populated not only by humans but by the ghosts and spirits, the guishen. As the tradition says: "Between heaven and earth there is no place the guishen do not exist." These spirits of heaven and earth are loosely divided into two types representing the two basic spirit forces that act on and in the heart-mind.

Gui, ghosts (yin), are spirits of the past who freeze things in place, stopping movement. Dark spirits who live in the tomb and the earth, they can be angered or offended by mistreatment and turn into furies, spirits of vengeance. The ghosts represent hidden traumas that prevent us from acting creatively and spontaneously, frozen negative emotions that can easily cause a paralysis of the personality. Metaphysically, they are the passion bodies or bodies of fate of departed beings that cannot find release. On a moral or collective level they represent a deep and fixed negativity, the embodied memory of fear, pain, and rage (figure 4). 

Theosophical Society - Gui, ghost, shows a person (male or female) with a fearsome or demonic head (1), someone who is possessed (2). 
Figure 4. Gui, ghost, shows a person (male or female) with a fearsome or demonic head (1), someone who is possessed (2). 

Shen (figure 5), bright spirits (yang), are spirits of the future. They are transformative, potent, and mobile forces of nature that confer intensity, clarity, and depth on the soul. In the oldest thought, the bright spirits existed entirely outside the individual. Sages went through elaborate ceremonies to induce them to take up residence in within them as helping spirits or inner guides. The bright spirits are centered in the heart. They brighten and vivify, animating the Myriad Beings. They are stars, mountains, and rivers. They inspire awe and wonder, cut across boundaries, and combine categories. 

Theosophical Society - Shen, spirit or spirits, shows an altar and the sign for the One Above (1) along with a lightning bolt, representing sudden enlightenment (2).
Figure 5. Shen, spirit or spirits, shows an altar and the sign for the One Above (1) along with a lightning bolt, representing sudden enlightenment (2).

 The Name of the Book

 The most important word in the divinatory tradition of Change is its name, yi or i. Philosophically, this is primordial change, the mutations or transformations that initiate the process of generation and transformation in all the Myriad Beings. It is inscribed in the actual order of things, the ongoing process of the Real.

Though it contains models of orderly change (hua), such as the round of the seasons and the stages of life, and models of transformation (bian)—like ice becoming water or life turning into death—yi or change is first of all experienced as destabilizing change, a challenge to all that is fixed, overdeveloped, oppressive, or outmoded. It evokes sudden storms, the times when the stable becomes fluid and structures fail. It is also the response to this kind of situation: openness, versatility, and imaginative mobility. The process is described in the part of the I Ching known as the Great Treatise: 

 One dark (yin), one light (yang), that's the Way. 

To follow this tells you what is good.

To completely identify with it shows you the essence.

If you want to be benevolent, see it as benevolence.

If you want to be wise, see it as wisdom.

People use this every day without knowing it.

Using it as a Realizing Person is what is rare.

It is the gift of life concealed in everything you do.

It does not share the philosopher's anxiety about imperfection. 

Now listen very carefully:

As the birth of all births, this Way is called Change.

Change is made of symbols.

What moves and completes the symbols is called the Dragon Gate.

What unfolds them into patterns of living is called the Earth Gate.

What shows our fate through these symbols is called divination.

Penetrating the transformations is called the work.

What we cannot understand in terms of the dark and the light is called spirit.

As we do the work, the spirit arrives. 

Accumulating Power and Virtue

 An old maxim—one dark yin, one light yang, that's Dao—is actually a choreography of the creation of meaning, a constant stepping back and forth between the opposites, always in motion, never putting both feet in the same place.

     As we have seen, the oldest terms for yin and yang were the paired terms "Great" and "Small." In Change we first meet the term "Small" in Hexagram 9: "Small Accumulates/Gathering in the Ghosts" (figure 6). Its circle of meanings include: accumulate the Small to accomplish the Great; nurture, raise, support, retain, hoard, shape; breeding animals, raising children; dealings with the ghost world, assembling the scattered parts of the soul; a festive procession, a protective shell or carapace like protection in the womb. The old characters show a river and three silk bundles on a planted field, dark and mysterious. This figure links the Small with inner alchemical operations that work with the ghosts, the yin world of the Earth Gate.   

 

Theosophical Society - iao, "Small," the character above left, shows three grains of rice or sand or a river between two banks (1). The character below left, chu or xu, "accumulate," is composed of silk bundles, si (2) and a field with plants, tian (3). 

Figure 6. Xiao, "Small," the character above left, shows three grains of rice or sand or a river between two banks (1). The character below left, chu or xu, "accumulate," is composed of silk bundles, si (2) and a field with plants, tian (3).

We first meet the term "Great" in Hexagram 26: "Great Accumulates/Gathering in the Spirits." Its meanings include: concentrate, focus on one central idea, bring everything together; support, nourish, train, gather, hoard; accumulate energy and wisdom by stepping out of the habitual; a great effort that brings great achievement; a protective shell or carapace, like protection in the womb. The old characters show the great people and their power to protect and shelter, and three silk bundles on a planted field, profound, dark, and mysterious.  

Theosophical Society - Ideogram Da (left) shows the Great Person (1) and his ability to support and protect. As in figure 6, the character second from the left, chu or xu, "accumulate," is composed of silk bundles, si (2), and a field with plants, tian (3), which together form the ideogram xuan. Together the two figures at left form the ideogram da chu, "accumulating the Great."  This figure links the Great with alchemical operations that work with the bright spirits, the yang world of the Dragon Gate.

 

 

 

 

 

Figure 7. Da (left) shows the Great Person (1) and his ability to support and protect. As in figure 6, the character second from the left, chu or xu, "accumulate," is composed of silk bundles, si (2), and a field with plants, tian (3), which together form the ideogram xuan. Together the two figures at left form the ideogram da chu, "accumulating the Great."  This figure links the Great with alchemical operations that work with the bright spirits, the yang world of the Dragon Gate.

 The Jade in the Shade

The symbol that connects the Small and the Great, weaving the ghosts and the bright spirits together, is xu, "accumulate": to take care of, support, tolerate, encourage; help one another, overcome obstacles; tame, train; domesticate, raise, bring up; gather, collect, hoard, retain; seed, shell, carapace; the protection of a germ that is broken through in spring, protection in the womb.

In Early Old Chinese, the character xu has a hidden twin, the key term xuan, dark mystery. 

Theosophical Society - Xuan, dark mysteryFigure 8. Xuan, dark mystery. 

Xuan is the center of a strange old family of terms that point at the "mystery infolding into mystery" that draws things back to the Source. It is represented as jade, which is the most precious of all gemstones because it is strong and supple at the same time. It symbolizes something profoundly hidden or covered, the fertile chaos of the origins. As the mother of all words indicating the fertile chaos, the term unites two completely disparate clusters of meanings: (1) mysterious, profound, hidden, subtle, silent, solitary, somber; obscure, distant, esoteric, mystic; calm, peaceful; penetrating, a profound discernment that itself cannot be penetrated; and (2) disordered, confused and/or confusing, troubled; false, fraudulent, cruel; extravagant, extraordinary.

A mysterious union of opposites, this symbol suggests a profound trickster quality, a kind of creative fraud that cannot be seized or understood but somehow penetrates all beings. It is the strange contradictory quality that permeates the practices and secrets of the inner life. It is represented as interconnected silk cocoons with an endless thread running through them rising from a plowed field, the circle of Heaven divided by the crossed lines of the square field of Earth (figure 8).

In acting through the constant alternation of the Great and the Small, the dark mystery becomes the alchemical accumulator of meaning and transformative energy, gathering in the voices of the ghosts and the bright spirits. This practice of gathering the light and the dark acts like a condenser or a capacitor in an electronic circuit, accumulating a specific charge within us that is spontaneously released as a carrying wave of new energy, a connection to the spirits that will carry you through. 

The Friendship of the Spirit 

Moving from the concepts of yin and yang to the psychoactive symbols that lie behind them opens a potent, mysterious, yet knowable world. It is a personal way to the spirit, a way of transformation allied to early practices of mediumship and spirit possession. The experience of this helping spirit can make you sage: clear-seeing, knowing death and birth, feeling the friendship of the spirit and compassion for fellow humans. In the words of C.G. Jung, it is the ground of the symbolic life; it reclaims the reality of the psyche.

Jung also remarked that the exclusion or repression of this old world of gods and spirits is actually quite illusory. In the words of one of his book titles, we are "modern men in search of a soul," who nonetheless are far from having left these gods and their sacred cosmos behind: 

Modern man has rejected only their verbal specters, not the psychic facts. The gods have become diseases, producing curious specimens for the doctor's consulting room or disordering the brains of politicians and journalists who unwittingly let loose psychic epidemics on the world. 

Jung also maintained that recognition of this unseen world and the language it represents is the therapeutic act par excellence. It turns us away from the prisons of logical thought to the underworld of the psychic image, to what he called the "living units of the unconscious psyche that are the architects of dreams and symptoms."

This way of using Change as a process of spiritual transformation is what we are recovering from the later conceptual and philosophical systems that reduced it to verbal specters as opposed to the psychic facts. It is a radical reinvention of the oldest practices of talking with the spirits and responds directly to individual concerns, offering protection, insight, and self-realization. This way of the spirits is the most powerful and perennial appeal of Change, the thing that has drawn people to it for thousands of years.

In following this practice, we are imitating the early spirit intermediaries who could see and hear what is occulted, giving those above (shen, the light spirits) and those below (gui, the dark ghosts) what is due to them. This imaginative generosity causes a luminous spirit to descend. As it takes up its home within, we become daimonic and clear-seeing, profoundly connected to the invisible world. An early Daoist text called the Guanzi (c.400 bce) gives us a sense of this practice: 

When you life-energy is on the Way,

It vitalizes you.

When you are vitalized, you imagine.

When you imagine, you know.

When you know, you stop.

The hearts of all beings are shaped like this.

If your thirst for knowing seeks to go farther,

You will kill them.

There is a limit to knowing in the true sense, and that limit is imagination. Change puts you on the Way, vitalizes your imagining with its symbols, opens your heart—and that is enough. As the Guanzi says: 

Look, there is a spirit within your person.

Now it goes, now it comes.

No one can capture it,

But if you reverently clean its abode

It will return of itself.

You will recover your own true nature,

Fixed in you once and for all.


Stephen Karcher, Ph.D., is one of today's most creative and controversial writers and practitioners in the field of I Ching studies, divination and myth. He is an internationally recognized scholar, translator, graphic artist and an initiated diviner, teaching, and lecturing on the I Ching and other divination systems internationally. His works include:

Total I Ching: Myths for Change; I Ching Plain and Simple; The Kuan Yin Oracle; Illustrated Encyclopedia of Divination; Ta Chuan: The Great Treatise; The Way of I Ching; and The Classic Chinese Oracle of Change. He lives in Ojai, California. 


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