It’s hard not to think of the many ways you can be taken in and taken out nowadays. It’s a weird world where anything can happen. No wonder so many feel the need to connect with the more soulful part of themselves. There’s more to us than we might normally suppose. We’re riveted to what’s obvious, the immediate surface of life. We need to unrivet ourselves, create an open mental space, if we’re curious about our unrecognized potentials.
Down the ages, humans have discovered ways to tap into these potentials. What follows is a short list of some examples. Not the details, just the main idea.
Fasting, for example, a world-old practice where you choose not to be tyrannized by your appetites. There is no question that fasting can alter your consciousness, even as it benefits your body.
Periods of solitude, which heighten self-observation and self-awareness. In our busy lives, we often lose track of our real goals and interests. We’re distracted and divided by all manner of interruptions. Solitude means freedom from all the gadgets and the people.
Sublimation of sexual energy is a challenging route to higher consciousness. The more Saint Joseph of Copertino had to fight to resist his sexual fantasies the more spectacular his levitations! There are, however, less combative ways to sublimate our unruly sexual energies.
These examples, strategies for stepping beyond mundane consciousness, all abstain from paying attention to the world. They disallow consciousness from being scattered in all directions.
As for inducing glimpses of greater realities, there is one procedure that can propel you instantly into another universe—the near-death experience. And it can happen in a flash. Another universe, just around the psychic corner, so to speak!
We’re talking about the universe of consciousness and ways to enter more deeply into it. We said something about physical maneuvers. Let’s look at some mental maneuvers. In
meditation, we focus the stream of our awareness on one thing, thus withdrawing our consciousness from everything, except what we’re meditating on. It’s good to know there are numerous ways to meditate. Each of us is free to choose a way, or several, suited to our personality.
One way to meditate (focus the stream of awareness) is in partnership with others. For example, in prayer groups, in healing circles, in ritual song and dance. And in seances where you try to connect with spirits of the dead. The Dionysian rites of ancient Greece and the dance epidemics of Europe were popular. At Eleusis was a nine-day ritual of fasting and dancing, which came to a climax with drinking the kukeon, a psychedelic brew. This was followed by a vision of Persephone, Goddess of the Underworld. This rite lasted for thousands of years in ancient Greece, serving to moderate the fear of death.
The challenge today is to devise group dynamic situations that work for a wide range of functions, ranging from healings to creative interaction with spirits. For example, the Native Indian vision quest. Here you stay by yourself on some isolated corner of nature, and stay there, without food or drink, attuning yourself to the Great Spirit, until you encounter your healing vision, the sign, symbol, icon that seals your entry into the spirit world.
Sleep and Dreams are a way. Most of us spend about a third of our lives sleeping and dreaming, dead to the waking world, but reborn in another world, the dream world. We leave our bodies and enter other realms of experience. We leave our physical bodies, become dream bodies, and enter dream space where the impossible comes to life. Dreaming qualifies as otherworldly. It seems like a metaphysical halfway house to the more far out realms of consciousness. The first step beyond us is inside us. You don’t have to travel far to perform a metaphysical somersault.
Spiritual movements are possible and do happen. – Breaking out of our mundane consciousness is a perennial need. Throughout history movements have arisen that create new forms consciousness. Some movements try to fuse spiritual quest with factual truth such as Mesmerism, Spiritualism, the 20th century New Age, the current worldwide UAP movement, and so on,
The latter I suspect will grow in interest. Finally, I offer a little pneumonic for those open to the idea of psychophysical experimentation. And here it is—get SET, Spontaneity, Ecstasy, Trust. Spontaneity, openness and fluidity of spirit; ecstasy, beside yourself with joy; trust, self-reliance with love. These three variables are virtues conducive to opening the gates of consciousness. In every case, the step beyond has its own quirky story.
I intend to pursue this line of exploration into the hyperpossible. Why not? For as the poet Auden wrote: We who are about to die demand a miracle.