Mind Games

We
lengthen our interval of awareness
Perceive new
levels of change
"Walter is growing at the rate of one centimeter per day,"
I announce. Freddy gently holds the kitten so I can measure from the tip of his little
pink nose to the black tuft of hair at the end of his tail. "Incredible."
"You guys up?" Reinhart, from the little Canadian boat
Ganesh, is alongside in his dingy.
"We've been up for hours," I look out of the hatch.
Reinhard struggles aboard, looking bedraggled and hung over.
"You look terrible," Freddy says.
"I am terrible," he groans. "We didn't quit till damn
near midnight." There was a big party on the catamaran last night. We left early
since neither Freddy or I drink and everyone was getting rip snorting plastered.
At the moment, Malaupaina's lagoon has five cruising yachts in it,
including Reinhard & Arlene's Ganesh, a big black ferrocement Junk, a rundown
catamaran, two boats which came in yesterday, and of course, Moira and El Torito.
"Can I bum a cup of coffee from you guys?" Reinhard comes
below. "Arlene is not speaking to me."
"Why not?" Freddy asks.
He sits at the dinette with his head in his hands. The evils of that
devil booze. "Just after you left Terry sang this song. You ever hear it? About a guy
who is up before the judge for uh...necaphillia?"
"Necrophilia? You mean screwing a dead person?" I laugh,
knowing Terry this was going to be good.
"Right. That's it. Anyway, Terry does this song and I mean it's
really funny, OK? But he sings it quiet so we all are real quiet listening to every word.
He goes on for maybe three or four minutes, and ends up with, `I'm sorry your honor, I
didn't know she was dead, I thought she was English."'
Freddy and I laugh but Reinhard just puts his head back in his hands
and looks miserable. "So?" I prompt.
"Well, it was funny, really. Everybody else laughed. So I let
go and roared. You know, I was feelin no pain. I laughed my ass off. OK, so maybe I was
the last one laughing. Big deal."
"I'm missing something." I look at Freddy.
"Arlene is English," she stage whispers to me, setting a
cup of coffee down in front of Reinhard.
"Yeah. She stomped off right then, but I was drunk and laughing
and didn't even know she was going." He shakes his head and sips his coffee. Walter
the Cat appears from nowhere, a little gray blur, he bounces off Reinhard and darts off
again.
"Oh she'll get over it," Freddy giggles.
"That's not all." He groans.
"Oh No! What else?" I ask.
"She jumped down into the dingy to go back to Ganesh."
"And?"
"Well, I tied it up between the hulls when we arrived. You
know, all the other dingys were all around, so the center sort of seemed like a good
place." He frowns into the coffee mug. "Oh my God!" I know what's coming.
"Yeah. Right. Hey, it was dark. OK? I forgot. We all forgot. I
saw you do it too, pissing over the side up there between the hulls." Freddy and I
are in stitches. "Anyway, Arlene steps down and at first she thinks the dingy is
leaking. Then she realizes the water in it is kind of warm. I'm, still laughing my ass off
and roaring `I didn't know she was dead. I thought she was English', when she realizes
she's standing ankle deep in piss. She lets out this blood curdling scream."
"Ho hooo ha ha ha ha," I can hardly stand it.
"And over she goes, piss and all, into the lagoon." Reinhard finishes.
"No, stop, stop," Freddy has tears coming out of her eyes.
"She made me sleep on deck last night," he sighs.
I hear shouting outside and go on deck to see what's happening. The
guy on the black junk is beating up his girlfriend with the silicone tits. They are
ashore, on the edge of the lagoon. He's really punching her out and she's screaming at
him. He lands a powerhouse right and she goes down. Black eye for sure. Must have been a
weird party after we left.
Reinhard finishes his coffee, gathers up his courage, and heads back
to his boat. Out of curiosity, or maybe to see another good fight, I watch as he arrives
there. Arlene is waiting on deck. He gets aboard, she gets off, takes the dingy and rows
ashore leaving him standing there, looking after her.
I pick up my notes.
DO'S AND DON'TS TO SPIRITUAL ADVANCEMENT
1. Every criticism disperses power.
-
Veneration and reverence creates power.
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Venerate truth and knowledge, these are food for the soul.
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Enter lovingly, with devotion, into positive actions.
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Keep going, never be content at any level.
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Seek ideals, shun desire.
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Never infringe on another's free will.
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Review emotions and self action from a higher vantage (i.e. by
another person or spiritual level)
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Thoughts are things in space, real things.
2. Meditate to eliminate random thinking.
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Think carefully before speaking.
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Seek no counsel from others, form no opinion or theories.
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Write down important thoughts and meditate on them.
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Thoughts and feelings are as vital as actions.
A friend of mine, Ron Dario, who lives in Rhode Island, has
(operating according to Walter's law of improbability) sent me a whole stack of books
about Rudolph Steiner. Steiner was a researcher into alternate levels of consciousness
back in the twenties and thirties. As a young man, Steiner had a series of mystical
experiences. He could perceive, directly, levels of awareness others could not see. The
sort of awareness Walter and I were experiencing just four days before the Steiner books
arrived. Steiner figured if others could see these higher levels of consciousness, the
world would be a better place. He dedicated his life to trying to find a bridge between
ordinary levels of awareness and higher levels of awareness. He wrote everything in German
and so I have to work with English translations. Who knows how accurate they are?
The books Ron sent cover most of his work. Unfortunately, they are
stuffy and hard reading, filled with irrelevant verbiage. I've been going through them and
outlining the actual activities he recommends to prepare for higher levels of perception.
Now, I'll do his experiments and see what happens.
Today I'll give the Stage 1 exercises a shot. In this stage, the
student selects different natural objects and spends hours concentrating on them and the
feelings which develop during the process. The student must maintain fully conscious
self-control at all times. During observation, the student must seek the feelings
developing within himself.
"This sounds easy enough." I put down the book and my
notes. "Lets go diving."

"Now?" Freddy looks up from her jewelry work.
"Sure, come on." Freddy and I throw the snorkeling gear
into the Avon and streak over the quiet lagoon to the pass. Steiner's first step is hardly
new to me. I've sat for hours and hours looking at living creatures, thinking about them,
observing without speculation, and I know well the feeling which arises as I reach a
balance of observation of exterior and interior phenomena.
We splash into the water and swim through the corals that thrive in
the currents flowing in and out of the lagoon.
I come across a lovely little Echinothrix. This is a small,
almost spherical sea urchin with thin and brittle maroon and white banded spines. Between
the spines electric blue iridescent lines represent the urchin's light sensitive areas. My
shadow passes over him and he begins waving his spines about in little circles. Thousands
of minuscule translucent tube feet reach out from its ambulacra and sense the sea. The
little guy uses the spines and tube feet to move around, clean itself, and generally make
a living on the coral reef. On top, his anus is surrounded by a white speckled fleshy sac.
I gently turn him over with a finger of dead coral, avoiding the
venomous spines he is now brandishing about with enthusiasm. The spines are shorter on the
bottom, specialized for walking. The mouth is surrounded by a plated membrane. The
five-toothed jaws poke out of the middle of the membrane. Being careful of the venomous
spines, I gently put the little guy down on an open piece of sand, hover in Sea and say
Steiner's mantra (mentally, of course).

"In my own
world of thought and feeling the deepest mysteries lie hidden only hitherto I have been
unable to perceive them."
As I chant, I focus my thoughts on flourishing growth, and switch to
fading and decay. At first I encompass the urchin and the reef around it, and then, after
awhile, I focus on the urchin and its evolution over the millennia. I know quite a lot
about this little guy and although I can't see most of it with my naked eye, I can
perceive - through memory - details visible only with long and complicated dissection and
analysis with an electron microscope. My mind wanders through the layers of the creature's
being as it spines slowly over the sand.
I observe, I repeat the mantra, I become aware of the advance and
ebb of life in everything around me. Even in Sea, itself. Especially in Sea. I surrender
to observation keen and bright.
As Steiner predicted, an inner feeling arises during observation. I
follow instructions and let it take possession of me.
A small, yellow butterfly fish comes over to see what's going on. I
balance the observation of exterior and interior phenomena, watching the delicate almost
transparent fins of the fish move the fish through Sea according to its inner needs. The
fish adjusts its eyes to observe me observing it. In a subtle way the fish's behavior
becomes more transparent, even predictable. This is working.
The fish retreats and I meditate on the urchin again, seeing it
appear as a microscopic larva, looking something like a lunar lander with long red oars. I
see it form into a small sphere, grow, inflate, expand.
I need another prop. I swim around for a few moments, looking under
rocks, in the branches of coral, until I find a dead test of an Echinothrix. I
bring the dead shell back to my observation area, and place it next to the live urchin.
That's better. Easier to visualize death and decay with something dead to look at. I
meditate on the dead shell, looking at it and imagining it slowly dissolving back into
Sea. I look at the live urchin, see it coming together, growing. And death again. Like
Steiner says, a different category of inner feeling forms when the focus is on growth
versus when it is on decay. I allow these new feelings to expand and grow into alternate
perceptions.
Over and over I repeat Steiner's Mantra, "In my own world of
thought and feeling the deepest mysteries lie hidden only hitherto I have been unable to
perceive them."
I perceive the two inner feelings separate and become clear and
distinct. I let them merge and find they are also one feeling. Life and growth is one
inner feeling, death and decay is another inner feeling. The knowledge of the process of
growth and decay as a single cycle is a third - powerful - inner feeling. My mind
perceives them separate, then connected, separate, connected, and I am feeling a pattern
of Moirae's threads of coincidence weaving in a landscape of mind normally invisible to my
conscious mind. I do not speculate about meaning, I just observe the landscape of the mind
slowly weaving itself in Sea..
"Yeahhhhaaaa" I leap out of my skin as Freddy, who has crept up from behind, jumps
on top of me.
"I'm cold," she says. "Let's go."
We have a fair bit to go before
attaining higher levels
of consciousness.
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