by Gary 'Z' McGee
March 02,
2022
from
Self-InflictedPhilosophy Website
Gary
Z McGee,
a
former Navy Intelligence Specialist turned philosopher,
is the author of Birthday Suit of God and The Looking
Glass Man.
His
works are inspired by the great philosophers of the ages
and his wide-awake view
of
the modern world. |
Nirguna Brahman
by Miles Toland
"The sage
battles his own ego;
the fool battles
everyone else's."
Sufi Proverb
The trickster sage battles both his ego AND everyone
else's...
He's a double-edged
sword.
He cuts himself even
as he cuts the world.
He cuts his own ego
first but, knowing that he is the world, and the world is him,
he also cuts the world.
He battles against
Certainty to keep Curiosity at the forefront of the human
condition.
The trickster sage
understands that the cure for certainty is curiosity.
The cure for hardened
belief is flexible thought.
The cure for
seriousness is playfulness.
And so, he plays with
archetypes like a kid plays with toys.
Archetypes provide a powerful way to understand the human mind. They
map out the multilayered manifestations of the mindscape. Because
the human mind is anything but singular.
It is multifariously
plural...
A multitude of archetypal characters exist there. Most of which
reside in the unconscious, working behind the scenes but influencing
almost everything we do.
They influence behavior,
trigger emotions, and provide meaning.
"Archetypes," wrote
Jung, "are the living system of reactions and aptitudes that
determine the individual's life in invisible ways."
Archetypes are
unconscious psychosocial symbols representing forms, themes, and
concepts in the world.
Archetypes are ideas that resonate across a wide swathe of the human
experience, despite differing conditions. They are kind of like a
foundational human story, something we intuitively understand.
They instinctively feel
true...
Why is this?
Because the human mind is
a storytelling machine. It's a symbolic generator, inputting symbols
and outputting symbols almost entirely behind the scenes.
Archetypes are just the
mythological personification of these unconscious symbols. They are
cross-cultural. So, when you think of archetypes, think about them
as set patterns of behavior shared by all of humanity.
Here are the three archetypes critical to this article:
-
The Sage: Old
wise man/woman, wizard, magician, monk.
-
The Shadow:
repressed fear, fierceness, darkside, power.
-
The Trickster:
fool, jester, shapeshifter, Will to Humor.
The enlightened sage,
having gained a certain transcendent perspective in his mastery,
uses the archetypes to level-up.
The sage must
strategically trick himself to get out of his own way. Shooting
himself in the foot, the sage keeps "leveling-up," he kicks himself
out of his own comfort zone. Again, and again.
He gains the heightened
awareness that we are God playing peek a boo with itself. We
are the world at play.
It's when we stop "playing" that we run into problems. When
playfulness becomes seriousness, when spirited thought becomes
serious belief, we lose sight of the underlying essence.
So as not to lose sight
of the underlying essence, the sage must integrate his shadow to
activate his inner trickster.
Because only the
shadow has the teeth to rip a hole in the sacred, and only the
trickster has the audacity and the insouciance to get power over
power through his Will to Humor.
Thus, the trickster sage is born, a force of fate, a jagged
arrow, a spiderweb thunderbolt.
He shows by audacious
example how to stay ahead of the curve.
He battles his ego,
wins, puts it on a leash led by his Soul, and then he turns it
on the world.
He teaches how to
lower heaven into hell and how to raise hell into heaven.
He swaps God's heart
with the Devil's.
Challenging the world, he
says,
"Create heaven if you
can. Revel in heavenly power. Just don't get stuck there.
You must create
something powerful enough to take it down a notch. Because power
tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely."
Apropos, as he has shown,
the sage creates a "heaven,"
then he integrates
his shadow so that he has something strong enough to tear a hole
in his mastery, in his certainty, in his power, in his perceived
truth.
Then he integrates
his trickster to gain a sense of humor and to have a laugh.
Then he remains in
that heightened state of humor, filtering all things through a
sieve of wise laughter.
As Robert Greene
said,
"When it comes to the
ideas and opinions (and beliefs) you hold, see them as toys or
building blocks that you are playing with.
Some you will keep,
others you will knock down, but your spirit remains flexible and
playful."
The typical sage will
hole-up in his knowledge, surrounded by the walls of his certainty,
he becomes dogmatic.
His cup becomes so full
of "truth" that it spills over and can no longer be filled. The
trickster sage, on the other hand, consistently empties the cup.
He surrenders his
perception of truth to the muscle memory of his wisdom so that his
cup can continually be filled.
Fill; empty;
surrender; repeat...
This is the trickster
sage's maxim.
Birth; death;
rebirth.
Learn; unlearn;
relearn.
Master; recycle;
remaster.
Condition;
uncondition; recondition.
Thesis; antithesis;
synthesis; meta-synthesis.
As Bruce Lee
powerfully stated,
"Learn the Form,
master the Form, forget the Form."
With each hard reset, the
trickster sage's circle of wisdom expands.
It is precisely because
he knows he knows nothing that he is able to know more.
The trickster element
hidden in Socrates' quote,
"The only thing I
know is that I know nothing," is "I know nothing"...
This is the Eternal
Laughter. This is the Power Over Power...
It's powerful because without this element, the sage merely becomes
a victim of his own mastery.
With this element,
however, he gains the ability to recycle his own mastery.
He trumps mastery
with tomfoolery.
He trumps hard work
with playing even harder.
He burns his mastery
down and spreads the ashes so that the Phoenix of a new idea
might emerge.
As Jordan Peterson
said,
"If you're not
willing to be a fool then you'll never start anything new, and
if you never start anything new then you won't develop.
The fool is the
precursor to the master."
The trickster sage knows
this - balls to bones - and so he integrates it into his trickster
dance.
He integrates it into his
sagacious foxtrot. Fool dances with Master, lockstep in a stutter
step twostep, forever.
"This is the way to
get out of your own way," he says with a pirouette.
The dance never ends
precisely because there is never any stability or lasting order.
Nothing is permanent.
Everything changes. Life is fleeting. And so, the sage integrates
shadow and trickster to become fleetfooted and fancy free. It makes
so much strategic sense that it's laughable.
Fluid and formless as water, the trickster sage swims through the
cosmic overwhelm.
He swims through his
mortal dread.
He swims through his
existential angst.
He swims through his
nihilism.
He even swims through
his own creative annihilation.
And he comes out the
other side of the cosmic ocean anointed, initiated, polished and
honed:
a mighty pearl born
of an even mightier Pathos...
He emerges from the maze
as a walking mythology.
He rises out of loss
and Logos with a locus of control.
His Eros echoes in
the halls of the eternal.
He has become
unconquerable not only because he is willing to be stripped of
everything but, more importantly, because he realizes that he is
only ever stripped of everything.
Being clothed is the
illusion.
Having something is
the illusion.
Owning anything,
including knowledge, is the illusion.
He understands that he is
naked and vulnerable in an indifferent and meaningless universe.
But, like the Big Bang
that came before him, he has the power of a naked singularity within
him. It is within his absolute vulnerability that the trickster sage
tricks himself out of nothingness into somethingness, a spark in
the dark...
Through his laughter
alone, he creates meaning in the meaningless void.
And the Cycle of the
New-layman begins again...
|