Home Blog Page 260

Jester Guru Chronicles, Part 6: Closed Captioned for the Thinking Impaired

1

“You may control a mad elephant;
You may shut the mouth of the bear and the tiger;
Ride the lion and play with the cobra;
By alchemy you may learn your livelihood;
You may wander through the universe incognito;
Make vassals of the gods; be ever youthful;
You may walk in water and live in fire;
But control of the mind is better and more difficult.”
~ Paramahansa Yogananda

The best road is always the one you make. There are many other roads, adventurous roads, overlapping roads, crisscrossed crossroads, but no road is ever better than the one you make yourself. The one you design from learning from the mistakes of other roads.

closed+captioning+services

The one you plow with the plowshare of experience gained from the way of those who came before. The one you carve like a labyrinth through the heart of god. The one you kill the Buddha on, over and over again. The one where you hide like a wayside robber prepared to liberate others of their certainty.

The one where the universe is allowed to be you, and you’re allowed to be the universe; an ever expanding process of cosmic flourishing.

Like Alan Watts said, “You’re not something that’s a result of the big bang. You’re not something that is a sort of puppet on the end of the process. You are still the process. You are the big bang, the original force of the universe.”

joseph-campbell-if-the-path-before-you-is-clear-youre-probably-on-someone-elses

That’s the best road to be on. That’s the road where I’m writing this from. And I’m here to tell you that you have it in you to make your own path, to not be a sort of puppet on a puppet master’s road, to get back on the path of being a part of the process instead.

I’ve been to Hell, and I’m here to tell you, it’s a waste of your time and energy. It’s a waste of your fear and loathing. It’s an infinitely laughable cartoon, a badly told joke. It never ends precisely because it never begins.

The demons that reside there are hollow shells of nothingness with nothing for eyes that see nothing. Satan is a pathetic red fog of fleshy oblivion. I slit his throat and surfed the black wave of his blood back to Earth to inform you that he/she/it/they is/are dead, and really never even existed in the first place, but for the parochial thinking of outdated human thoughts.

I’ve also been to Heaven. And I’m here to tell you, it’s also a waste of your time and energy. It’s a waste of your angst and adoration. It’s a pathetic dream-world, an infinite jest, a placation of the soul. It also never ends precisely because it never begins.

jesus-lamb-of-god-description-arm-wrestling-and-devil

The angels that reside there are empty husks of righteousness with halos that might as well be nooses choking them into eternal myopia. God is a pitiful white cloud of phantom nothingness. I slit his throat and surfed the red wave of his blood back to Earth to inform you that he/she/it/they is/are dead, and really never existed in the first place, but for the parochial thinking of outdated human thoughts.

“Forgive, O Lord, my little jokes on Thee, and I’ll forgive Thy great big joke on me.” ~ Robert Frost

Indeed, I’ve overthrown so many gods that I’ve become one. But there’s a difference between me and them. I’ve plucked out the conceit of my goddery. I shit it out in the abyss. I buried it like I buried my ego, along with a fishbone and The Book of Certainty. I gripped the throat of my animal-happiness and I have not (I will not!) let go.

I’ve been on many roads: most of them crossroads, most of them illusions, most of them cartoons in the brain built by unhealthy men with unsustainable worldviews. I’ve toppled weltanschauungs, especially my own. I’ve punctured worldviews until they lay bleeding like flopped clocks in a Dali painting. I’ve pierced the heart of Truth so deeply that it revealed its unfounded secret: absolute vicissitude.

From all this tumbling tumbleweeding, from all this kicked up dust, I’ve fallen onto a self-made path of wanderlust. There’s no looking back, but in appreciation for all the painful steppingstones and cutting-edge philosopher’s stones that sharpened me into an instrument worthy of cutting deep into the heart of things.
Life-has-no-meaning
So it is, I write to you from the path of my own adventure, and with a humor of the most high, I hope beyond hope that you too will find a path of your own. One not littered with the obsolete gods of your shortsighted forefathers. One not tainted by the antiquated devils of your myopic ancestors.

The world is yours for the making. The road begins within you and is built outward into that world. But only you can build it. Nobody else can build it for you. You and you alone hold the building blocks of change toward a road that may lead to a healthier world for us all.

I’ll be waiting for you in that place beyond good and evil, beyond moral and immoral, where the Amoral Agent shines like a lighthouse in the darkness and glimmers like a beacon of shadows in the too-bright light, where the infinite crossroads of our each-our-own roads overlap and join and become one: a bridge from human to ubermensch.

In the meantime, my manifestos will be written as death warrants to myself in the hope that others – more courageous, intelligent, and compassionate than I am- will take over. I may have a tin ear for language but I make up for it with a mercurial tongue and a trickster’s wit.

Since many of us are accustomed to watching, rather than doing, and yapping rather than acting, it is difficult to imagine a mighty torchlit-insurrection erupting on the superhighways of the internet. But you never know.

That’s me in the brambles twisting fate into Chinese handcuffs. My feet are so sharp from walking on the cutting edge that when I dance I cut the universe. I slice and dice it into tiny dancers of finitude that are okay with being a part of a greater infinity. I’m the sine qua non of sangfroid.

I’m the blood on the palimpsest you call a bible. I’m the knowledge that two plus two also equals five.

Like Mark Twain said, “When we remember we are all mad, the mysteries disappear and life stands explained.” I exit hackles high, whistling a sojourner’s song.

Image source:

Closed captioned TV
Joseph Campbell quote #1
Arm-wrestling
Joseph Campbell quote #2

7 Trippy Videos to Blow Your Mind

10

Art is a wonderful way to expand consciousness, good art tickles your grey cells and draws you out of your comfort zone. Here are a list of seven trippy videos, some with knowledge to impart some with good animation and sound, while others just take you on a windy path to nowhere. Go ahead, you’re going to love these.

Big Bang Big Boom

This one is unimaginably beautiful, according to the creator its ‘an unscientific point of view on the beginning and evolution of life … and how it could probably end.’

BIG BANG BIG BOOM - the new wall-painted animation by BLU

Don’t Hug Me I’m Scared

You’re going to wonder why this childish video made it on this list, well the video has the answer as well. This short clip tries to portray the media conditioning children into thinking a certain way.

Don't Hug me I'm Scared

Sing Sang Sung – Air (2009)

Follow the black ball through the forest of mushrooms and seas full of diamonds. The soothing tunes combined with dreamy, comforting visuals creates a beautiful video.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oei7SYOYodI

The Music Scene

It’s now time for your mind to melt, enter a post-human New York where TV and animals rule. Enjoy the vibrating splashes of color which reconstruct again into vibrating pieces of psychedelic flesh.

Blockhead - 'The Music Scene' (Official Video)

Jeu

This short animation film is going to spin your world around, literally 🙂

Jeu (2006)

Frontier Psychiatrist

This is probably the most common one on this list, if you haven’t seen or heard it, this is your chance. Made it on this list cause I probably need therapy…

The Avalanches - Frontier Psychiatrist (Good Quality)

Pencil Dance

Just love the old school feel in this one. Watch Chris Casady drawings on white paper with ink pens and reversed, using traditional animation. There are 24 drawings per second in this video.

Pencil Dance 1988 by Chris Casady

Resources:

Daily Psychedelic Videos ~ Top 25

5 Unconventional Ways to Trigger the Heart Chakra

15

The heart chakra is the central chakra, right smack in the middle of the phenomenal kundalini process. It is the pivot of the human soul, the spiritual hinge of the human mind.

Unconventional Ways to Trigger the Heart Chakra

In Buddhist circles it is known as heartmind, as it connects the higher and lower aspects of the human condition. It’s where Shiva (the divine masculine) and Shakti (the divine feminine) are eternally dancing, yin-yang-happy with their moving in and out of being and not-being, mind and no-mind, attachment and detachment, life and death, finitude and infinity.

There are infinite lessons hidden within such dancing, most of which are difficult to tap into.

For the sake of uncanny exploration, let’s dive into five unconventional ways to trigger the heart chakra.

1) Let your heart break over and over again

“If you’re really listening, if you’re truly awake to the poignant beauty of the world, your heart breaks regularly. In fact, your heart is made to break; its purpose is to burst open again and again so that it can hold evermore wonders.” ~ Andrew Harvey

We too often hear people say, “I don’t want to get hurt.” We hear it, and we usually nod sympathetically. But wait a minute. Who ever said getting hurt wasn’t a part of love, or even a part of life? Comfort can lead to believing that being human is easy.

let your heart break

Pain either leads to a wakeup call or it simply hurts, but it can never lead to believing that being human is easy; which is a good thing, because being human is anything but easy. Guarding against getting hurt is the opposite of daring to be vulnerable.

Don’t let your heart become a tank. Shatter the pseudo metal and reveal to the universe the naked vulnerability of your heart. When you are able to learn from the pain of heartbreak you become more spiritually robust.

A heart that is broken open, and stays broken open, is a soul alert to its calling. So let your heart break. Let it shatter into a million pieces that you can piece back together again into an instrument worthy of love and human flourishing.

Don’t fear pain, use pain as a wakeup call. Use it as a tool to leverage your higher self. Everything changes; it’s the most apparent absolute. Your heart is your finest instrument. It too must change.

It stays tuned by breaking open over and over again to the magnanimous beauty of the world. It remains harmonious to the vicissitudes of life by loving, letting people love the way they need to love, and then letting love go. If you can do this over and over again, your heart will remain open to the awesome magnitudes of life and your higher chakra will be prepared for a journey of the most high.

2) Heartstorm with a child

“Keep me away from the wisdom which does not cry, the philosophy which does not laugh and the greatness which does not bow before children.” ~ Khalil Gibran

planets_heart_by_sophiiiii-d4u0r7p

We’ve all heard of brainstorming: A method of problem solving in which members of a group contribute ideas spontaneously. But you probably haven’t heard of heartstorming: a method of soul-questioning in which members of a group contribute creative questions spontaneously.

Heartstorming is living alchemically. It’s the ability to adapt and overcome creatively in any given social situation.

It takes the art of questioning to the nth degree to a whole new level. It flattens the box of convention and makes us less easily pigeonholed. Like Nicolas Manetta said, “Those who do not think outside the box are easily contained.” And when we can do this with a child, we automatically double (if not more) our creative potential to question the universe, and especially ourselves.

If as Oscar Wilde said “the soul is born old but grows young. That is the comedy of life. And the body is born young and grows old. That is life’s tragedy,” then it behooves our souls to engage in a heart-to-heart with children. The mind of a child is flexible.

Most of us adults have become too rigid in our thinking. Engaging in a heartstorming session with a child is an extremely humbling and entertaining process. It helps us to see things in a new light while it opens our minds to new ideas and keeps our hearts open to wonder.

It’s the reason why Goethe advised us: “one must ask children and birds how cherries and strawberries taste.”

3) Transform the mundane into mythos

“The mystical is not how the world is, but that it is.” ~ Ludwig Wittgenstein

Heart-Chakra

There are no ordinary experiences. Everything is amazing if we allow it to be. Fascination can be found in anything from a tiny grain of sand to a fiery sunset.

It’s just a matter of disposition, and nobody else has control over your disposition. You might at times relinquish control, and give people the power to cause a particular disposition, but you always have the power to take it back.

One way to do this is to transform the seemingly mundane into a significant myth, to baptize the ordinary into the extraordinary, through a personal coup de maître (a sudden masterstroke of genius). Indeed, counting coup on the heart frees the heart to count coup on the universe.

If we are able to pull off this masterstroke, we will experience a mysterious transaction between the infinity of the soul and the infinity of the universe.

This transaction will fill our hearts to bursting with rich, spiritual prana; a loving energy that is so overwhelming that we have no choice but to see the world through rose-colored glasses and to drink to the dregs from the glass-is-half-full beer stein.

And suddenly everything tastes better, sounds clearer, feels smoother, and reveals itself to be connected and infinitely interdependent with all things. It causes us to discover the hidden secrets behind things. It gives us the courage to leap out of our comfort zone.

It causes us to shout with ecstatic joy, “I found the door to human flourishing! Here it is, but only you can walk through it.”

Like Helen Keller said, “No pessimist ever discovered the secret of the stars, or sailed to an uncharted land, or opened a new doorway for the human spirit.”

Transforming the mundane into a mighty mythos is the epitome of optimism.

4) Practice the Zen of Fearlessness

“The heart has its reasons that reason knows nothing of.” ~ Blaise Pascal

japanese-samurai

Change can be a scary thing. And the fact that we are living in an ever-changing, ever-morphing universe is astronomically scary.

Compound this with the fear-mongering tactics of fearful groups of people vainly trying to keep things the same so that they can feel safe and secure in their comfort zones, and you have a system that is exorbitantly scary from all psychosocial angles. And that’s all perfectly okay. That’s just fine and dandy.

You know why? Because it’s all mere fodder, it’s all ridiculously useful fuel, for those of us who dare to practice the Zen of Fearlessness.

Like Judith Leif profoundly elucidated, “The essential cause of our suffering and anxiety is ignorance of the nature of reality, and craving and clinging to something illusory. That is referred to as ego, and the gasoline in the vehicle of ego is fear. Ego thrives on fear, so unless we figure out the problem of fear, we will never understand or embody any sense of egolessness or selflessness.”

meditation_by_psychedelicstuff-d55hywb

The Zen of Fearlessness is the radical acceptance that the universe is a scary place and the even more radical acceptance that: so what!

Courage feeds off precisely this type of fear, and I will always choose Courage over Worry. Fearlessness is about transforming fear from an unskillful worry into a skillful courage.

It’s an authentic freedom from the delusion that we are unchanging beings in a static universe and the radical acceptance that we are changing beings within a dynamic, interconnected and interdependent cosmos.

Fearlessness is not the rejection of fear, it is intimacy with fear. As Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche said, “regard fear as the kindling to build a big fire of fearlessness.” In this fire we free ourselves to become the Phoenix we always knew we could be.

5) Develop your own metamorality

“We need a kind of thinking that enables groups with conflicting moralities to live together and prosper. In other words, we need a metamorality. We need a moral system that resolves disagreements among groups with different moral ideals, just as ordinary first-order morality resolves disagreements among individuals with different selfish interests.” ~ Joshua Greene

Here’s the thing: Morality is more than it evolved to be (Joshua Greene). To borrow Wittgenstein’s famous metaphor: “morality can climb the ladder of evolution and then kick it away.” So it stands to reason that we too can “kick it away” if we so choose.

Governing this precept, it behooves us to rise above historic notions of morality (especially outdated and parochial notions) and create our own contribution to the continuing leitmotif of the evolution of morality.

Sounds tricky, but not really –we have only to take the cosmos, as an interdependent whole, into deeper consideration to discover new ways of being a moral human in an indifferent but profoundly interconnected universe.

Like Swami Vivekananda said, “Undifferentiated consciousness, when differentiated, becomes the world.”

This is powerful for a multitude of reasons, but the main reason is the empowerment of the individual heart. It liberates the heart from outdated notions of right & wrong.

It frees the human soul to rise above the bifurcation of immorality-morality and to fly with the open-ended courage of amorality into a new interdependent metamoral dawn.

In a world drowning in ego, we need more individuated egos with a healthy understanding of how things are connected. We need more people who are encouraged by, instead of fearful of, the way the cosmos is put together.

Like Immanuel Kant said, “Two things inspire me to awe –the starry heavens above and the moral universe within.”

The point where these two powerful inspirations join could be the future of a metamorality that has a potential to transform our world into a healthier version of itself.

Image source:

Metal heart
Josh Almeida heart chakra painting
Fractal Heart

Silence: The Journey Within

2

“Only when you drink from the river of silence shall you indeed sing. And when you have reached the mountain top, then you shall begin to climb. And when the earth shall claim your limbs, then shall you truly dance.” ~ Khalil Gibran

Silence-can-be-deafening

Silence can be a tricky thing to handle. Imagine yourself stuck in a traffic jam in rush hour, the cacophony of horns doesn’t seem to bother you as you find yourself teleported on the top of a peaceful hill.

Have you stepped into the country side, for a couple of days and start to feel something is amiss? You realise that you were actually more comfortable in the midst of the maddening noise. Initially, you feel bored and in some time silence gets to you – it becomes deafening.

To fill this void of silence, you turn to external stimulation like the TV, phone, Internet, social media, etc, its not the external noise you miss, but perhaps its the inner chatter that has amplified and become more powerful when you are quiet or in a peaceful environment.

It’s not the silence you’re uncomfortable with, but the voices coming from within. The urge to be surrounded by this external noise is only an escape from the inner turbulence.

Over the years, I’ve met several people who are not at ease in a quiet close-to-nature setting for a very long time. Its the mind that doesn’t allow you to immerse yourself in the stillness, instead it floods you with waves of negative thoughts, judgments, fear, jealousy and so on. The external commotion of our environment combined with the inner chatter of the mind leaves little room for us to truly experience silence.

We seldom anchor ourselves in the present moment long enough to listen and appreciate what silence brings.

The Benefits of Silence

“Within you there is a stillness and a sanctuary to which you can retreat at anytime and be yourself.” ~ Hermann Hesse

Silence is the space that allows you to navigate within and open new doorways to places where your mind is frightened to enter. Silence is pure, much like the pureness of a child’s smile. If you immerse yourself fully, it gives you the power to silent the ego and refuel your mind. The beauty of silence is that it simply “is”.

When I was growing up, my mother used to keep following “vow of silence’ for a day, more as a religious practice. ‘Vow of Silence’ is a personal, voluntary oath to refrain from speaking.

But when you think of it such practices can be used as a time to introspect and understand ourselves better. Making friends with silence gives us the opportunity to make peace with that part of ourselves that feels separate, apart from the sacred presence within.

Silence is all around us, you just have to make an effort to tune into it. Fill your heart with the noise of silence, become aware of the pulsating energy flowing through your veins, let go of all that doesn’t serve you and you will find the spot where magic happens.

Silence is such a useful tool when you need to resolve issues, arguments, indifferences between people. After a heated argument it helps to remain silent; regain calm, composure and clarity in the mind.

How can you be friends with silence and make it a part of your daily life?

Making time for yourself is important and utilising that “off” time to connect with nature instead of encouraging your thinking mind to take control and drifting away with it. In the past four to five years, nature has played a crucial role in my life, from being an amazing teacher and a reliable doctor, I feel more attuned with the silence of nature.

ramdass-quieter-you-become-more-you-can-hear

Spending time regularly in nature, even if its for 30 mins a day, will clear your mind of negative thoughts and help you unburden and be aware of your insecurities and problems. Throw off those sandals and walk barefoot in a garden or on a beach. Watch the sunset.

Tune into the sounds of nature, chirping birds, flowing water, and immerse in all its beauty. Dance, meditate, do yoga or any form of exercise that interests you, cook, sing your favorite song, grow plants or vegetables (even if its in a small pot).

These activities brings your mind back home, as you find yourself being more aware and submerged in the moment – this is experiencing silence. Silence and stillness work in tandem, taking us deeper into the realm of our true self.

Thich Nhat Hanh said, “It’s very important that we re-learn the art of resting and relaxing. Not only does it help prevent the onset of many illnesses that develop through chronic tension and worrying; it allows us to clear our minds, focus, and find creative solutions to problems.”

Slow down, enjoy the silence. You will become more aware of your thoughts and feelings, and not let it mess up with your mind. It is empowering and reveling in its companionship will liberate your innermost fears!

“The pause – that impressive silence, that eloquent silence, that geometrically progressive silence which often achieves a desired effect where no combination of words, howsoever felicitous, could accomplish it.” ~ Mark Twain

The Sound of Silence

The Sound of Silence: Dr. Gage Paine at TEDxSanAntonio 2012

Image Source
Silence

Reference

Thich Nhat Hanh on Silence

5 Compelling Reasons to get to Know Your Shadow

5

“Maybe you have to know the darkness before you can appreciate the light.” ~ Madalene L’Engle

You see the darkest blackest flag of your own despair whipping in a cruel wind. Its shadow is fierce and snapping inside you, filling you like hot smoke.

know-your-shadow

All of your guilt, all of your pain, every worry and every stress, all of your grief is there contained. All of your memories of angst and love-loss blasts through this shadowy self-apocalypse.

A vision of your birth, the suffocating feeling of birth-pangs, wracks your body. A vision of your death does the same. Everything else is crushed between.

The full-frontal meaninglessness of your tiny existence slams into you with such ferocity that you have no choice but to give in to the storm. You weep. You bleed existential fear. It tears you apart and puts you back together again. But before it does, it draws you to the brink of the Existential Black Hole.

It forces your head over the edge of its event horizon, showing you the end to all adventures, the end to all journeys. Your breath catches and drags. Your soul warbles in its sheath. You know now why you have chosen to embrace your shadow.

You would rather embrace the pain that comes from knowledge than the bliss that comes from ignorance. When you rise to your feet with a full heart, you’re aware that you are the universe itself rising with a full heart. And suddenly you are not so small…

Have no doubt: shadow-work is light work. Here are five compelling reasons why.

1) A sacred transformation of your shadow transforms the shadows

“All things excellent are as difficult as they are rare.” ~ Spinoza

Despair can be a crippling thing, but it can also be motivational. Like Tyler Durden says in the movie Fight Club, “It’s only when we’ve lost everything that we’re free to do anything.” This is a liberating disposition that flips the tables on the concept of despair itself.

Likewise, a sacred transformation of your shadow has the power to transform the shadows themselves. It expands your perception, causing you to become more aware of what would otherwise become suppressed or dissociated. Life is a rollercoaster ride, filled with peaks and valleys.

We all too often express the peaks and repress the valleys. And why not? The highs are so wonderfully happy and the lows are so dreadfully melancholy.

But “if wisdom is defined by our ability to hold the tension between opposites,” as Loius G Herman claims, then does it not behoove us to hold the tension between peak and abyss, by becoming more aware of both, and by disclosing the abyss as much as we do the peaks?

Indeed, what you’ll discover in such disclosure will be nothing short of heroic, because facing your own shadow is the epitome of courage. Like Clarissa Pinkola Estés said, “As with any descent into the unconscious, there comes a time when one simply hopes for the best, pinches one’s nose, and jumps into the abyss. If this were not so, we would not have needed to create the words heroine, hero, or courage.”

2) You become more compassionate toward the shadow in others

“By accepting the inevitability of our shadow, we recognize that we are also “what we are not.” This humbling recognition restrains us from the madness of trying to eliminate those we hate and fear in the world.” ~ Loius G Herman

When we attempt to balance self-interest with a holistic perspective, we discover, as Socrates did, that deep self-interest actually involves concern for the altruistic good of the whole.956507a148364a3e384fe8b907a2552f

The same applies to the shadow. When we attempt to balance our shadow with the shadow of others, we discover that embracing our shadow actually involves embracing the shadow of others. This creates compassion for the fallibility of the human condition.

When we can recognize that no human being is perfect, including us, we can further appreciate our imperfections as a species and perhaps even garner a sense of humor about our fallibilities. True empathy is the ability to recognize and learn from the shadow in others and the hope that others can recognize and learn from the shadow in us.

With enough humor and enough learning, we might even reach a point where your shadow becomes my ally, and vice versa, thereby eliminating the parochial preachy programming of good-and-evil and replacing it with an updated platform of healthy-and-unhealthy discussion.

3) It gives you the courage to accept what you can’t change and change what you can’t accept

“Selfishness is not living your life as you wish. It is asking others to live their life as you wish.” ~ Oscar Wilde

know your shadow

One of the most powerful actions you can do to intervene in a stormy world is to stand up and reveal your shadow to the light. Shadow on deck shines like diamonds in dark times.

Think Lieutenant Dan in Forrest Gump railing at the gods during the thunderstorm at sea. Think Maximus in Gladiator tossing swords at the rich, saying, “Are you not entertained?!”

The darkness of the shadow intensifies the light of the soul. It sends up flashes of intensity that brings hope to the courage of the heart. It builds a nest of ashes for a phoenix to burst from. It triggers appropriate matters to catch fire. It gives us the courage to accept what we can’t change and change what we can’t accept.

It gives us the courage to be an interdependent (ecocentric) force of nature first; and an individual (egocentric) person second. To display the shadow of the soul in dark times like these, to be fierce and to show courage to others, is an act of immense bravery in an otherwise cowardly world.

Struggling souls catch light from other courageous souls who are fully lit by both the light and the dark, and who are willing to show it. Like Nietzsche said, “The great epochs in our lives are at the points when we gain the courage to rebaptize our badness into the best in us.”

4) It teaches you the power of a good sense of humor and how not to take yourself too seriously

“Humor must not professedly teach and it must not professedly preach, but it must do both if it would live forever.” ~ Mark Twain

The only way we evolve as a species is to learn from our mistakes. If we can move on with our own journey, with the knowledge of both the successes and the mistakes of our forefathers inside us, then we can discover new ways that make their ways obsolete. It’s a way of recycling the mastery.

Engaging the shadow is a powerful way of recycling the mastery, as it makes conscious the otherwise suppressed and dissociated mistakes of the collective unconscious. Like James Russell Lowell said, “Time makes ancient good uncouth.”

know your shadow

This applies to what we can learn from the mistakes of our forefathers as well as to our own mistakes/successes. If enough time passes by, even the “good” that came from our understanding of things can eventually become uncouth.

This is because the only absolute in the universe is change, the only permanence is impermanence. Truth is a chameleon best recognized by the shadow. So it behooves us to have an unquenchable sense of humor.

Let’s work hard, but let’s play harder. Sincere play is the only way that the highest intelligence of humankind can unfold. Like Nietzsche wrote, “The struggle of maturity is to recover the seriousness of a child at play.” Let your shadow out to play. The playground has become grossly overworked. If we ever needed to go on recess it’s now.

5) It teaches you the power of amoral agency

“Do not be too moral. You may cheat yourself out of much life. So aim above morality. Be not simply good; be good for something.” ~ Henry David Thoreau

The moral is too good. The immoral is too bad. The amoral is just right. The Goody two-shoes fails to see past his own purity and righteousness –probably because he has not engaged with his shadow.

shadow-self

The villain fails to see past his own corruption and wickedness –probably because he has become a puppet to his shadow. The amoral agent sees through it all with a humor of the most high, empowered to pull his own strings in full-frontal engagement with both his shadow-side and his light-side: a walking, talking, laughing-out-loud, flexible yin-yang subsuming all dispositions under his banner of humor.

The amoral agent teaches us how to be fierce with our courage, how to be circumspect with our wisdom, and how to have fun with the sacred play of our inner-child.

The amoral agent realizes that one could just as easily replace “genius” with “shadow” in the following statement by Jesus Christ in the Gospel of Thomas, “If you bring forth the genius within you, it will free you. If you do not bring forth the genius within you, it will destroy you.”

Indeed, liberate yourself by bringing forth the shadow within you. Use it as a tool to awaken the too-moral Goody Two-shoes and the too-immoral villains of the world. Learn to balance your own light with your own shadow, and maybe you’ll earn the right to bring balance to the rest of us.

Image source:

Surreal Self-portrait by Ben Zank
Shadows dancing
You can make a difference
Yin yang face