by
Aletheia Luna
March 31,
2022
from
LonerWolf Website
Spanish version
I've
always been
something of an outsider,
a lone wolf sniffing out my own path
led by the light of my own inner moon
trying to find a home,
trying to find truth.
Modern spirituality
is a place I
thought I would find it.
But even in this domain,
I haven't found
a solid place
to lay my
head...
The truth is:
I'm profoundly
dissatisfied with 90% of
spirituality out there...
All this talk of
spiritual ascension, enlightenment, self-realization, and
"vibrating
higher" somehow feels lacking, incomplete.
All this focus on other dimensions, planes of existence, astral
beings, and nirvanic bliss feels like avoidance, escapism:
running
away from what is here right now.
Instead of being something that helps us to experience integration,
balance, and wholeness, modern spirituality seems to be tremendously
lopsided:
it has become a place to numb, bypass or gloss over
issues rather than face them.
Whereas
religions were once
the opiate for the masses, now spirituality is.
Of course, there's nothing wrong with using spirituality as a kind
of happy-drug, feel-good hobby or source of hope. This is normal and
(often) healthy.
Not everyone is able to
confront reality, and that is okay. We're all at different stages of
growth.
However, the major issue
arises when the overarching goal of modern spirituality is to bypass
our humanity:
to focus only on the "love and light" without getting
down and dirty, without doing the real
inner work...
Spiritual
Bypassing and the Rejection of Our Humanity
The denial and avoidance of our humanity occur within nearly every
spiritual path:
neo-Vedanta, the New
Age, Buddhism, esotericism, occultism, Hinduism, Taoism, eastern
and western mysticism, even yogic and
shamanic paths...
Everywhere I look it
seems that there is a shunning, rejection,
bypassing or avoidance of our humanity.
Be more "positive" they say.
"Good vibes only"...
"Manifest more
abundance"...
"Vibrate higher"...
"Focus only on happy
thoughts"...
I don't know about you,
but I'm sick of it.
I'm sick and tired of
avoiding the raw and real.
I'm sick of trying to stick myself into the "spiritual person"
box in which everything is love and bliss and nothing hurts.
I'm sick of the faux spirituality which tells us how to talk,
dress, think, feel, and act.
I'm sick of the pressure to be "perfect" and having
"transcended" all my shit in order to fit in with those who are
on a "high vibrational level."
I'm sick of oppressive spiritual labels and ideals which create
shame and insecurity.
I'm sick of the judgment and rejection of those who dare to be
vulnerable and honest about their emotions or weaknesses.
I'm sick of the
spiritual ego which thinks it's "better" or
"more evolved" than others.
I'm sick of the toxic teachings which reinforce dissociation and
the repression of trauma.
I'm sick of the patriarchal philosophies which condemn the
aliveness and passion of the body and senses.
I'm sick of all the fake bullshit that masquerades as
"spiritual," "non-dual," "high vibe," "awakened," "ascended,"
and "enlightened."
I'm sick of spirituality that embraces the sacred but rejects
the wild within us.
And I'm not innocent - I
realize that in many ways, I'm complicit.
I'm imperfect. I'm
flawed. I've had a lot to learn since the beginning of my spiritual
path. I've believed and adopted inauthentic beliefs and roles. I've
been guilty of everything and more.
But that's okay.
It's okay to be
imperfect.
It's okay to keep learning.
It's okay to keep stumbling and falling.
It's okay to be a mess.
It's okay to feel scared.
It's okay to feel lost.
It's okay to be both human AND divine.
You Are a Holy
Paradox
It is hard for us as humans to dwell in ambiguity, in nuance, and in
the in-between spaces.
Our minds are wired to see the world in black or white, good or bad,
this or that.
We struggle to
understand that we can be BOTH one thing AND another.
We struggle to
perceive the entirety of our being.
The tragedy of being
incapable of dwelling in the in-between spaces - the dusk and dawn
of existence - is that we fail to grasp the idea that we are a holy
paradox.
In other words:
We are both broken
and whole.
We are both perfect and imperfect.
We are both light and dark.
We are both mortal and immortal.
We are both human and divine.
One of my favorite poems
ever which perfectly encapsulates this reality is a Gnostic
manuscript called "The
Thunder, Perfect Mind."
It goes like this:
For I am the first
and the last.
I am the honored one and the scorned one.
I am the whore and the holy one.
I am the wife and the virgin.
I am the mother and the daughter.
For I am knowledge and ignorance.
I am shame and boldness.
I am shameless; I am ashamed.
I am strength and I am fear.
I am war and peace.
Give heed to me.
I am the one whom they call Life, and you have called Death.
I am the one whom they call Law, and you have called
Lawlessness.
I am the one whom you have pursued, and I am the one whom you
have seized.
I am the one whom you have scattered, and you have gathered me
together.
The fact that we are a
holy paradox is not some kind of dogma - it is a reality that you
can experience any time you meditate, introspect, reflect, or
practice any kind of deep spiritual inquiry or practice.
"But this is all an
illusion," many people say.
"There is no 'one'
here doing anything" say other Vedantic traditions.
Certainly, on an
objective level,
the ego is an illusion.
Go and practice deep
meditation and you will discover that...
But if everything is an illusion,
why don't you go
stand in front of a truck and test that theory out?
After all, the truck is
an illusion, right? (Yep, didn't think so.)
As the great Indian philosopher and yogi, Sri Aurobindo once
wrote,
The impersonal is a
truth, the personal too is a truth; they are the same truth seen
from two sides.
The reality is that we
live in a 3D consensus reality.
We are both human and
divine.
We are made of flesh, bones, and blood - but we are also
divine, limitless, and eternal.
The problem is that people prefer to worship divinity and shun the
humanity.
This leads to the denial of our innate wholeness and the
avoidance of dealing with our wounds, shadows, and baggage.
Inevitably, spiritual concepts and words can - and will - be twisted
and used by us as ways to escape or avoid reality.
In fact,
spiritual ideas and truths are almost guaranteed to be used as
methods of bypassing the hard work that we need to do.
It's very easy to become intoxicated with promises of love,
light,
and eternal peace - while avoiding
the reality that you have to do
the deep inner work of self-exploration and radical letting go to
evolve to such a level.
The Power of
Down-to-Earth Spirituality
What if enlightenment were less about fireworks and eternal
bliss and more about dissipating the illusions we have about
what life itself is?
About becoming
more authentic, compassionate, and real - and stopping our
pretending?
About letting the
protective layers of our personality structure crumble?
About becoming
progressively more effective agents of transformation and of
the alleviation of suffering the world, beginning with
ourselves?...
I have come to
believe that although different paths have different goals,
an authentic and integrated spiritual path should make us
more real and human, not less.
M.
Caplan
It might not be as
popular as tripping out on rainbows, communicating with angels, or
traveling to other dimensions, but down-to-earth spirituality is
needed by humanity more than ever before.
Without grounding spirituality within the human experience, it
becomes a dissociated and disconnected fluffy cloud into which we
escape from daily life.
Instead of solving our problems, it causes
us to repress, deny, or disown them.
But burying our issues doesn't solve them.
Avoiding our messy
humanity doesn't excuse us from human foibles and flaws. Focusing
only on "ascending" won't help us to face our shadows.
We need to both ascend and descend...
Only once we descend into the
mysterious realms of our psyches and journey through that dark
metaphorical forest can we ascend.
To me, the deepest form of spirituality is one that seeks
integration, balance, and wholeness.
As psychologist Carl Jung
once wrote,
Wholeness is not
achieved by cutting off a portion of one's being, but by
integration of the contraries.
Down-to-earth
spirituality is about integrating ALL aspects of our nature:
This grounded
spirituality is about cultivating and exploring all sides of our
nature:
our logic and
intuition, our mind and soul, and our heart and body.
Down-to-earth
spirituality, in the words of integral philosopher Ken Wilber,
is about,
'waking up and growing up'...
In other words,
it's
about becoming fully human and taking self-responsibility for our
lives as well as learning how to transcend the limited ego self.
True inner peace, wholeness, and love come when we are able to sit
with the entirety of our nature, understand it, accept it, and
embrace it.
True spirituality, in my perspective, is being able to sit in that
twilight space of paradox:
of embodying the sacred and embracing the
wild within us...
How to Embrace
the Sacred and Wild Within You
To honor both the sacredness and wildness within you is like giving
yourself the deepest and most loving embrace you could ever receive.
You're no longer
denying, rejecting, or disowning any part of your nature.
You're no longer putting on spiritual pretenses or carrying
exhausting ideals.
You're no longer shaming or rejecting your imperfect humanity in
favor of a polished spiritual facade.
You're no longer trying to be something or someone you're not.
Instead, you're striving
to embrace ALL that you are - nothing excluded, rejected or
disowned.
This is the essence of
authenticity and non-duality...
To embrace the sacred and wild within you requires integrating
spiritual practice with psychological growth and healing.
You must seek to explore your core beliefs, unconscious mindsets,
toxic habits, defense mechanisms, shadows, and unhealed wounds - or
everything hidden within the contents of your mind - and seek to
cultivate clarity, balance, and healing.
Parallel to this psychological growth and maturing comes spiritual
growth and maturing.
Spiritual practice
entails anything that helps you to transcend the ego and experience
your eternal ever-present nature.
Examples could include,
mindfulness, meditation, shamanic journeying, yoga, and nature
immersion.
Here again, there is a
paradox:
we must seek to both mature and
dismantle the ego.
Maturing the ego (as in developing a clear and
healthy sense of self) is needed in order to prevent unhealed
wounds, neuroses, and shadows from rearing their heads and taking
over our lives.
In the words of John Bradshaw,
Paradoxical as it may
seem, your ego needs to be strong enough to let go of its
limited defensiveness and control.
You need a strong ego to
transcend ego...
Failing to
psychologically mature alongside your spiritual growth can be
tremendously limiting and dangerous.
For example, the vast majority of scandals out there involving
spiritual teachers, think,
-
Zen Buddhist leader Eido Tai Shimano
-
Buddhist teacher Sogyal Rinpoche
-
Yoga leader Bikram Choudhury
-
American spiritual teacher Andrew Cohen, etc.,
...who used their
students for money, sex, or power happened due to an imbalance in
psychological development.
As yoga teacher and psychologist Mariana Caplan writes,
We cannot assume that
simply because we have had profound experiences of spiritual
illumination or enduring insights, all aspects of our psychology
have been touched by our awareness...
Rarely does
heightened awareness take the place of the necessary and
humbling task of learning to feel and digest our own
psychological pain, or of the gritty challenges of dealing with
human relationship, self-hatred, shame, sexuality, and intimacy
with others.
Spiritual insight
can, but often does not, penetrate psychological conditioning.
We need to strive for
balance.
In order to practice embodied and down-to-earth
spirituality, we must psychologically and spiritually mature.
Exploration of our body,
mind, heart, and soul - the unification of all parts of our nature -
is imperative.
But how can we
psychologically and spiritually mature?
Here is a simple map that
Mateo (Sol) and I have developed and crystallized over the course
of many years.
These steps also form
our
core principles - or that which is at the center of everything we
strive to do here and in our lives:
1. Walk your own
path
Embrace being different. Honor your inner wolf.
Permit yourself to be
an outsider. Go the path less traveled. Find your meaning in
life. Challenge the status quo. Dare to be unorthodox.
Celebrate
non-conformity.
1.1 Be true to
yourself
Practice radical authenticity. Don't try to be someone
you're not. Do what feels true and honest to you. Defend
your integrity.
Listen to your
calling.
1.2 Be a rebel
Question everything. Be a free spirit. Rebel against the
norm. Embrace your inner misfit. Celebrate your wild and
untamable Self.
Don't accept
anything unless it makes sense.
Ask, "Is this true?"
1.3 Be passionate and sincere
Practice deep sincerity. Be fervent about the pursuit of
truth, depth, and understanding. Be open, receptive, and
humble.
Be genuine and
serious about the spiritual path. Be wholehearted (not
lukewarm).
2. Fiercely seek
truth
See through the veil of deception. Unmask falsehood and
hypocrisy both within yourself and others compassionately.
Illuminate the
darkness. Explore what is reality versus illusion. Be discerning
and clear-minded.
Ask, "How am I/others
being dishonest?"
3. Know and accept
yourself
Strive to be self-aware and understand who you are at your core.
Explore your strengths and weaknesses. Investigate your body,
mind, heart, and soul. Practice inner work.
Ask "Who am I?"
Love
yourself. Be attentive to all of your needs. Become your own
best friend. Practice self-compassion and self-acceptance. Trust
and honor yourself.
Learn to love all the beautiful and ugly
parts of yourself unconditionally.
4. Find balance
Permit yourself to be both human and divine.
Practice embodied
and down-to-earth spirituality. Integrate spiritual practice
with psychological growth and healing. Strive to wake up and
grow up. Use logic and intuition. Ground spirituality in daily
life.
Seek to unify all parts of your nature.
5. Reconnect with
your Soul
Dive deep. Go within.
Practice inner work. Remove the blockages
obscuring your Soul. Listen to the small, still voice inside.
Seek integration, balance, and Wholeness. Honor your wild nature
and eternal Soul.
Compassionately embody
your True Nature.
That's it.
I'm not claiming this is the path. There are many paths up the
mountain.
This map is simply what I have found to be true and what I respect
and stand for. Also, the process of growth, awakening, and
integration isn't linear either.
The path through that forest is
often a spiral:
when you reach the end, you have only just found the
beginning and vice versa...
To give you a place to start on your journey of embracing both
your
sacred and wild nature (if that calls to you), I'll pose a few
questions.
You're free to record
your answers in a journal or ruminate over them in your own time:
-
What wild part of
me am I rejecting?
-
What do I value
the most about my humanity?
-
What does
authenticity mean to me?
-
When I picture
wholeness, what does it look, sound, or feel like?
-
How can I
spiritually mature?
-
What path does my
soul feel called towards?
-
What shadows are
lurking within me?
-
In what ways am I
disowning my light?
Answering these questions
will likely give you some illuminating responses and reveal some
potent inner truths which you can begin to work with.
(If journaling is intimidating to you, learn more about how to
journal.)
Love All That
You Are
Honoring both your humanity and divinity comes back to love.
To love and embrace all that you are is
your birthright...
When most people think of love they picture the warm-and-fuzzy kind.
But love is so much more than that.
Love is also ruthless
self-honesty and authenticity.
Love is being able to
sit in the storms of your ugliness and burning shame and say to
yourself,
"It's okay, I understand, I forgive you."
Love is being able to gently cradle yourself through your
darkest night of the soul and deepest pits of despair.
Love is being able to pick yourself up out of the filth and grit
of daily life and still see your divine worth.
Love is being able to cut through the shit and live your own
truth.
Love is believing that you are lovable and worthy, despite how
others treat you.
Love is reclaiming the power you have projected and taking
responsibility for your life.
Love is all these things, and so much more...
So, dear sacred wild one,
may you give yourself permission to be both human and divine.
May you honor your
wild nature and eternal soul.
May you embrace the wild wolf within.
May you come to truly experience - and embody - fierce and
unconditional love...
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