by
Mateo Sol
September 11, 2015
from
LonerWolf Website
There is one particular state of consciousness that can change your
life forever.
This holy moment can only be described as "ecstatic" in that your
connection to life expands significantly.
In this profound state of being, you feel that life is full of
beauty and sacredness - yet this feeling is not subjective, but is
instead an objective phenomenon that is outside your personal self.
Theologian Rudolf
Otto called this experience "numinosum"...
But in this article,
we'll refer to it as the mystical experience.
All throughout history, the mystical experience has been referred to
as a "religious" or spiritual experience, where the few mystics that
recorded their experiences reported it as a rapturous and
undifferentiated sense of joyful Unity with all of existence.
In a previous article, I wrote about the experience of "Kenosis,"
a word coined by Christian mystics to describe the state of "divine
flowing," and this closely mimics what it is like to have a mystical
experience.
In psychology the closest
term that captures this mysterious state of being is Abraham
Maslow's description of "Peak Experiences," and in
nature-orientated cultures like the Australian Aborigines, mystical
experiences have been called "Dadirri."
What is a
Mystical Experience?
In essence, the mystical experience is a state of being in which the
personal
ego (or mortal sense of self)
merges with the Divine, which is limitless and infinite.
Mystical experiences are
temporary glimpses into our most sacred and ancient home of
Consciousness.
Those who undergo
mystical experiences often describe feelings of,
bliss, ecstasy,
unconditional love, interconnectedness, and Oneness with all
things...
The Candle in
the Dark
Perhaps the best way to elaborate the mystical experience might be
with an allegory.
The ancient Hindu
tradition of
Advaita Vedanta has an
interesting one:
Imagine that you are
in a completely dark room.
You've been told
that in this room lives a very large snake.
As you sit in the
room, you can see its silhouette and you feel great fear as
you contemplate the potential for it to bite you at any
moment.
But one day there
is a flash of light which illuminates the room and you see
that what looked like a snake was, in reality, a rope.
Although the
flash of light was momentary, it gave you a glimpse of the
truth.
All of a sudden your
long-held fear vanished entirely, and your experience of the
room was never the same ever again...
This is what a mystical
experience feels like:
it is like a flash of
truth that releases you from your limited sense of self and
gives you a taste of a reality that somehow feels more real...
Plato recounts
that Socrates had a similar allegory regarding the mystical
experience:
Suppose that you've
been
kept chained in a cave all your
life.
Behind you blazes a
fire, and next to you sit a row of other prisoners.
All that you and the
prisoners know of life is the experience of watching the shadows
dancing on the opposite wall to you, and the shared
interpretations of what you see.
However, by chance
one day, one of the prisoner's chains breaks and he escapes into
the outside world.
At first, he is
confused, overwhelmed, scared, but he also feels an immense
sense of expansion, awe, and bliss. He is aware that he is
experiencing a larger, more complete and absorbing reality than
what he could see within the cave.
His natural instinct
is to return to liberate his fellow men, but after struggling
back into the world of darkness and shadows, his attempt to
enlighten his companions is met with ridicule and incredulity as
they accuse him of being crazy.
To some degree, we are
all prisoners in the cave of our past experiences.
Any worldview becomes a
cave the moment it is taken for reality...
9
Characteristics of the Mystical Experience
Every person's mystical experience varies in length and intensity.
Have you had a
mystical experience...?
Here are a few defining
characteristics:
1. Conscious Unity
The boundaries of where you perceive your individual identity to
begin and end completely vanish (otherwise known as
ego death).
Instead, you're left
with a boundless and infinite union with all that is around you.
2. There Is
No Time or Space
With a lack of a definable identity or spatial recognition, your
sense of time feels infinite.
You go from
perceiving time from moment-to-moment as a static individual, to
perceiving it as a stream of eternal present moments.
Without time, space is endless...
Because your sense of identity is gone, your ability to separate
"your" (now non-existent) surroundings into individual "spatial"
elements also disappears.
3.
Objective Reality
Without a discernible identity comes a sense of greater
"objectivity" as though you're experiencing a much more
intricate and profound reality.
Everything doesn't
just feel perfect, everything is innately perfect.
4.
Gratitude
Most of your ecstatic feelings stem from an immense sense of
gratitude.
This gratitude is an
overwhelming sense of awe at "your" (now non-existent)
insignificance in comparison to the vastness of existence.
5. Life Is
Seen As Sacred
In fact, your sense of gratitude is so vast that you feel almost
undeserving of having the opportunity to experience such a
miracle.
You develop a new
sense of respect for the sacredness of life that allows you to
be here.
6. You
Understand Paradox
Our sense of self or identity creates duality in
our perception of reality ("I" am separate from "That").
However, the moment
this separation disappears, you're left with a non-dual reality
in which your intellect finds paradox after paradox (e.g.,
something is both light/dark, here/absent, human/divine,
limited/eternal).
In truly
understanding paradox, you experience mind-blowing and expansive
realizations.
7. The
Experience Is Indescribable
The overwhelming magnitude of emotions and intuitive
understanding that you embody makes the attempt to even describe
the mystical experience feel limited by language.
To try and put words
to it feels insulting to the depth of the experience.
8. The
Experience Is Temporary
The very nature of a mystical experience is its transience.
Eventually, you end
up returning back to your habitual way of life, but the
experience changes something deep inside...
9. The
Experience Is Life-Changing
After experiencing such a state, suddenly
death isn't as scary as it used
to be, and the beliefs or ambitions that you once held to be so
important immediately lose their meaning.
In fact, the mystical
experience often awakens a thirst to try to bring as much of
that experience back into our regular day-to-day lives as
possible.
And so begins (or
deepens) the spiritual
awakening process...
The Mystical
Experience is Only a Taste
There's a useful term in the christian doctrine known as "Grace."
This word basically
means that we receive mercy and love from the Divine because it
wants us to have it, not because we have done anything to
deserve it.
Many people confuse
having a mystical/spiritual experience with actually cultivating a
spiritual life.
To me, however, these
experiences are brought by grace, and our appreciation of them is
directly proportionate to our development of soulful maturity.
If the grace of a
mystical experience is given to a 10-year-old child, they will
no doubt enjoy the experience.
But the degree in
which they absorb it will be much less compared to someone who
has undergone maturation - or the deep exploration of their
psyche and the ability to live life from the seat of their soul.
For the child, it will be a great experience that will
eventually fade and become a distant memory.
But for the man or
woman who has dedicated his/her life to cultivating soulful
maturity, to tilling the soil of the soul, this experience
becomes the seed that is prepared to blossom.
This might be the very
tipping point that leads to the ultimate spiritual awakening - also
known as Enlightenment or Illumination, or the
permanent shift in consciousness
from the individual ego to the infinite Self.
Inner Work
Experiencing spiritual liberation as the goal of the spiritual path
is precisely why practicing inner work and committing to the journey
of soulful maturity are so crucial.
Without removing the blockages that obscure the Light of our
Souls, mystical experiences have no deep or long-lasting impact
on us.
In other words,
they just become
extravagant experiences with no real substance...
But by learning to
integrate the profound realizations that we've had access to, we can
experience true, long-lasting transformation.
Slowly and steadily, we
begin to taste the essence of eternity...
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