What Good Is Prayer, Really?

What good is prayer? Does it have place in our lives today? What do we really mean by prayer? These are interesting questions.

Of course prayer is not the province solely of Christians, though I suspect that that’s they way many of them see it. But Muslims pray, just as devoutly. Many other religions have either prayers or the equivalent of prayer.

In fact prayer or its recognizable equivalent has a cherished place in all societies on the globe and at almost all times in history. Prayer was around long before the Church.

It is a universal human yearning to reach out and be listened to by forces which are bigger, wiser, more knowing and guiding our lives. This is especially true at times of great duress. But is by no means confined to these events.

Only modern sophisticated man has talked himself out this time-honoured method of summoning up the deep moving forces of life when they are needed most.

The Essence of Prayer

Taken on the world stage, prayer-equivalent has always enjoyed huge respect and popularity. The minor drop off of prayer in the West caused by the Church’s troubles holding its flock together has little relevance to the vast majority of persons who make up the human race. Prayer is with us, alive and well. Always was and (probably) always will be.

Part of the purpose of this website is to seek new meanings for prayer; to find out what the real essence of prayer is; and isolate it from the distractions and trimmings of religious cant and hypocrisy. I believe if we can succeed in doing this, then prayer will have a renewed vigour and appeal.

This does not mean that religion is unimportant. It does mean that prayer is, and should be, independent of any particular credo or formalized structure, such as churches and temples.

Prayer fulfils a certain requirement and it is hard to see how it could be replaced, speaking as a doctor and psychologist. Continue reading

Rumi Eyegazing Part 1

Guru, him say: Any two lovers know the power of gazing into each others’ eyes. It carries one deeply inside and creates a harmonious whole which is bigger than either of the pair; a oneness identification; a union. It can be erotically thrilling at times but more typically it goes beyond body thrill into the realms of delight and surrender.

 

In Transformational PsychologyTM, we use “eye gazing” to enhance perceptions and connectivity with others. It is absolutely vital (and little practiced in most psychotherapies, I observe) that you process the person in front of you, not some imagined trial case. You can’t do that without actually looking at the person in front of you.

So often the practitioner is trying to force the client to fit their preconceived notions, he or she fails to observe the individual in front of them. Often the practitioner has only a narrow range of skills and wants the client to align with these—or has some crank pet theory—so he or she pretends the case fits into these prejudices and misses the real signals from the client. How else could mischief like false memory syndrome get started?

But there is much more to eye gazing than just learning the skill of quiet contemplative listening; it can lead us to see the soul of another and, as if by magic, our own soul too. In fact eye gazing can take us to extraordinary mind spaces and I highly commend it as an exercise, leading to better communication skills and deeper insights.

History Of Eye Gazing?

It’s a practice which has a long and honorable tradition. Will Rogers in his book The Spiritual Practices of Rumi (originally titled Rumi: Gazing At The Beloved) gives us a few examples:

Darshan is a Hindu concept. It comes from a Sanskrit word meaning “Seeing and being seen by God”. Well, most traditions declare we are made in the image of God, so why not? If you look deep into another’s soul or Being, you should be able to see God there. And  by the way, what you see is just a reflection of yourself too…

It may have a formal setting, where the Master or Teacher sits in front of the class and encourages them to share darshan with him. He pours out his gaze; students return it and learn the mysteries of God. Ramana Maharshi, a great twentieth century teacher and one of the great givers of darshan, said “When the eyes of the student meet the gaze of the teacher, words of instruction are no longer necessary.”

It can be further said that something takes place between the two, which almost defies words. Love, in my experience, is a word that doesn’t really cover it. Or if it does, than normal measures of love are seriously lacking.

According to Johnson, the Cowichan Indian tribe of Vancouver Island have a concept of “disease of the eye”. This refers to the tendency to pass another human and averting one’s gaze as one does so. To them, it’s a kind of affront of God, to deny or try to sidestep another’s presence or Being.

Well, there’s a lot of eye disease on the streets of modern cities. Maybe that’s part of the problem of urban craziness?

Oscar Ichazo, the Chilean shaman, has developed a practice called traspasso, in which students sit across from each other and hold each other’s gaze. It means, roughly, giving up oneself.

The late Charlotte Joko Beck (1917-2011), modern US Zen teacher, author and founder of the Ordinary Mind Zen School, included eye gazing in the meditation routines she taught. For her it was a pathway to the intense here and now, no clutter, just being “here”.

The willingness to accept and hold another’s gaze, without being uncomfortable or confrontational, is something of a skill. It is, in a sense, a measure of our spiritual maturity.

Rumi’s True Love

Jalaluddin Rumi is one of the most read poets of our age and one of the most admired love poets of all time, along with Ovid, Sappho, John Dunne and, perhaps, Elizabeth Barrett Browning.

It comes as a surprise to many of his devotees, that Rumi’s love poems were entirely directed towards a man called Shams of Tabriz. Continue reading

Motivation, Purpose and Rewards

What we think about motivation and rewards may be totally wrong!

I don’t know about you but I was brought up on the rewards and penalties thing: reward what’s good and punish what’s bad, you’ll propel it towards good stuff. O yeah! Well that turns out to be total hocus pocus. Another of what I call “Hoaxes” (“Everybody knows that…” sort of thing).

To find out the truth, revealed by repeated scientific studies, not opinion, get a gander at this video.

Gaia Meditations for 2012

Gaia Meditations

New Moon Message From Buryl Payne

I met Buryl some years ago and I must say I was impressed with his magnificent spirit. Despite body wreckage, he continues as if he had the health and voice of a 20-year old! His heart is solid and pure. But he has also done some really cool experiments, like having remote viewers all over the world successfully spin a freely suspended mobile.

I quoted from his lovely booklet “The Quantum Theory of Love” in my part 1 series from New Thought Horizons.

I’m always pleased to pass on messages from Buryl, knowing that the people who need it will find it!

The Renegade Guru

As a scientist and active meditator I am eager to spread the word about a new project. Meditation works, my recent experimental data suggest that people can influence nature with thought power. And if you join the work we do, the effect will be greater for everyone’s benefit.

I have completed (with the help of my assistants) compiling a list of several thousand meditation groups around the world. This has taken many hours of labor and I am in debt to pay them for the help that they have contributed.

It was very satisfying to discover that there were so many meditation groups. Each group has 10 to 20 or more meditators. Compared to the Earth’s total population that isn’t many, but mind power is a real, definite force: have observed time after time that a reduction in solar activity accompanies times of meditation.

And it has been known for many years that high sunspot activity can trigger more crimes, accidents, human upsets, psychotic episodes, ailments, and especially outbreaks of international battles.

Edgar Cayce, America’s greatest psychic, said many years ago that solar activity was in response to human thought and that meditations on a global scale would help calm the Sun and ease the stresses of Earth’s transition that was coming up. Continue reading

Perfect and Eternal Memory

Would total recall be a curse or a boon? I ask because a recent book “Total Recall: How the eMemory revolution will change everything” started me thinking.

100% memory, in the form of digital files and images, perhaps enhanced by newer as-yet-undiscovered sensors, will be with us soon. This is a given part of the techno-revolution we are living through.

The book has a glowing introduction by Bill Gates and it all seems to take the point of view this is a good thing. But is it?

Even if we wished to, we may not be able to forget. Because you get the stuff beaten out of you at school for forgetting doesn’t mean all forgetting is bad! We have to filter some of our impressions, otherwise we would go into overload.

In fact, as I have written elsewhere, we have to selectively (and wisely) UN-remember certain things just to function at all. We have naturally in-built mechanisms to do this for us. Who can foresee what will happen if we forecefully override these mechanisms?

Anyway, who cares about out past, except us? Isn’t it just vanity; to believe that our little lives, of all those in history, are the ones that really matter? That we should be preserved, when greats such as St. Thomas Aquinas, Buddha and Beethoven have no “substance” of their selves and lives left behind?

Why would our kids and grandkids want to know all our stuff? They should be getting on with their own lives and living fully in the stream of progress of the human condition.

By chance, another review from the same writer looked at the opposite book. It’s title is “Delete: The virtue of forgetting in the digital age”. Continue reading

Philosopher’s Notes a Mind Feast

One of the most exciting discoveries you can make on the Net is just how much good stuff is out there! The trick is finding it!

I’ve been on the Net for hours a day, most days, for years (working, of course) and never seen this guy before!

Brian Johnson has amassed a wealth of knowledge that is surpassed by only one other digital library I know and – thing is – this one is way quicker. It’s all chunked into bites just for you!

I’m talking about Brian Johnson’s “Philosopher’s Notes” and if I seem a little bright and dazzled, it’s because I am. Today I had one of those wish-I-had_thought-of-that moments and I’m gonna share it with you. Continue reading