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The Power of Now Part 5 of 5: Listening to the Inner Body

January 30, 2009 by · Leave a Comment 

eternity

The inner body defines your inner self, what you feel when you are at peace.  Yes, it is a feeling and not a thought.  It is related to the outer body, but it is different.  When we are in tune with our inner body, we enter the present moment fully; we enter the now.

We can start by closing our eyes, then concentrating on our breathing and feeling the breath enter our body without resistance.  We feel the breath transform our inner body and how our body reacts to it.  We are attuned to the present moment and live fully within it.  Our senses are heightened and we are alert to our own self.  

Our inner body is essentially immutable during our lifespan.  We just need to be in tune with it.  As our outer body fails us and ages, our inner body remains a constant.  However, the inner and outer bodies are related.  When we listen to our inner body fully and surrender to it rather than resist it, we actually slow down the aging process and increase our immune system.  When we are at peace with ourselves and we feel it, we are in tune with the present moment and our outer body benefits from this deep surrender.

Surrender is the opposite of resistance.  Resistance is a manifestation of the mind, i.e., when our mind controls our thoughts and our behavior.  Acceptance of our condition is a requisite step.  That does not mean we should permit an unfavorable situation to continue.  However, if we accept it as a fact then we can free ourselves of any labels of negativity or positivity.  We surrender ourselves without resistance and listen to our inner body that gives us true peace.  We find inner joy when we are at peace and not in a state of drama, or fevered anxiety.  Drama comes from being enslaved to the egoic mind.  Surrendering to our inner body and being attuned fully to the present moment frees us and gives us focus and alertness to true consciousness.  Don’t believe me?Try it.  Get into the moment.  Get in tune with yourself.

I really got a lot out of this book and it helped me truly try to enter the moment of now and to relinquish the egoic fears of the future or to be miserable with any past transgressions.  Instead, living in the moment and being in tune with my inner body I achieve a deep sense of peace.

The Power of Now Part 2 of 5: Escape Your Pain

January 27, 2009 by · 4 Comments 

pain

After understanding that our egoic minds that rule our every moment is the source of our problems, we must then understand the effect that manifests through what Tolle calls the “pain-body”.  He conceives of emotions as being a bodily response to our egoic mind (sounds a bit like Ruiz, huh?).  When our mind thinks a certain thought, our emotion is a bodily response to that thought.  For example, anger is a consequence of our egoic mind thinking that we have been hurt or how we can then return the favor.  Our bodily literally shakes when we allow the mind to transform into the body.  If we are not associated with our mind but leave our mind and our related ego, then we enter a deep consciousness that we discussed yesterday that permits us to then separate us from emotions that may ruin us.  In short, our egoic mind drives our pain-body.

The reason that Tolle talks specifically about one emotion, pain, is that he would like us to escape the deepest negativity which is intimately tied with mind and body.  He says that in Buddhist thought, enlightenment is simply defined as “the end of suffering”.  Understanding that the further that we enter a deep state of consciousness, i.e., by entering deeply into the now and by not engaging in fruitless mind activity, we begin to relinquish the pain-body.

Our egoic minds drive us by fear.  Ultimately, the fear is of our own self-destruction, the most unstated fear is our own death.  For example, we insist on winning an argument and to defeat the other person.  We fear failure.  We do not allow us to be vanquished. Our egoic mind drives all of this emotion and compels us into a state of constant fear.  By living fully in the moment and experiencing the now, we can begin to let go of the fears of the past and the future that drive us.  Jesus said, “Love your enemies.”  What he was essentially saying is when you let go of hate and your own ego, you have no enemies.  You no longer see enemies all around you because you cannot be hurt in that you have freed yourself from the ego and thereby extinguished the pain-body.

Tomorrow we will talk more specifically of how to understand “now” in terms of a universal concept, time.  That is my favorite idea that Tolle has presented.

The Power of Now Part 1 of 5: You are Not Your Mind

January 26, 2009 by · 9 Comments 

tpon-cover

I really enjoyed Eckhart Tolle’s The Power of Now:  A Guide to Spiritual Enlightenment.  I envision the book as a refinement to many of the ideas that I have been covering over the past few weeks to months, and I have achieved a much more profound self-awareness after reading it.  As a reminder to my faithful readers, I am not interested in recounting the entire book but just select passages that have had personal resonance for me and for my own personal journey toward a more enlightened and pain-free existence.

His first chapter, “You are Not Your Mind”, addresses many of the concepts that were discussed by Ruiz in his books on Toltec wisdom, which I did not cover as explicitly in the past two weeks so this should be a great addition to some of the overall concepts from Ruiz but in my opinion even better articulated.  Tolle says that our egoic mind is in a state of constant buzz.  We are always focused on thinking in an incessant manner so that we drown out our own experience of the present, the only time that in fact we can enjoy and the only time that really matters.  We look at our past and configure ourselves in relationship to it, thinking that we are a product of our past.  In essence, we make the past alive and fail to live in the moment.  Or, we are so perturbed with the future and the anxiety over what may or may not be, that we are not truly alive, or conscious.

We must let go of our mind, the constant buzzing noise that goes off in our mind and experience our present moment.  He talks about “watching the thinker” meaning to disengage ourselves from our constant thinking, our application of our egoic state.  By putting ourselves almost as a third person looking at ourselves in the thinking mode, we start to achieve a level of deep consciousness that we would not otherwise have in the spiraling rattle of thoughts that plague our very existence.  

He also talks about truly feeling the moment.  Get into the feeling of one’s own breath, the typing that I am doing right now on my computer, my sense of the operatic music that envelops me as I write.  We live so far in the past or the future that we cannot even begin to enjoy and relish the now, the only time that we can truly experience and enjoy.  We must divorce ourselves from always thinking and thinking and thinking and worrying and worrying about the future and reflecting on our past.  We must live in the rich tapestry of the moment that is right in front of us.  We must feel the moment, the only time that truly matters in many ways.

By doing so, we achieve a profound inner peace and calm, an enlightened state of consciousness that is devoid of the travails of over analysis and a hyper state of the cycling mind.  Instead, we become hyper acute of our surroundings and where we are currently and by doing so achieve a much happier and profoundly peaceful condition.  Stop for a moment and ask yourself as you’re reading this are you aware of your surroundings?  Do you hear everything around you?  Feel it?  Sense it?  Try this and do you sense a much more profound equanimity and tranquility?  Tomorrow we talk about ridding ourselves of pain.