If say, 144 million humans by 2012 were engaged in a common meditation on a daily basis, humanity would begin to experience a spiritual mastery greater in its cumulative effect than all the atomic bombs in the world. There have been great epochs of human creativity in which a spiritually inspired mass lifted the level of civilization to new heights – Sung dynasty China, Islamic civilization at its peak in the thirteenth century, or the great era of the cathedral building in Medieval Europe, to name but a few. But consider the inspired effect of a unified global spiritual force responding to the noospheric emergency, creating a network of unified mental energy – a luminous noospheric sheathe thrown around the planet for its own protection?
To be effective, everyone participating in this meditation must agree on practicing the same method, with the same intention, and the same understanding. The method is to enter into a thought-free state where the ego is transcended altogether. The point is to remain in that state, and whenever a thought arises to just dissolve it, giving it no power. In this way experience the condition of dhikr’ullah – the Remembrance of God, or the nirvakalapa samadhi or the state of rigpa, the unconditioned, self-existing non-dual empty state of primordial awareness which is the nature of the true self.
In this primordially pure state one should have the underlying intention of creating a mental network with all the others practicing this meditation – for how can there be other than the single state of mind that knows without knowing? One must imagine this network covering the planet as a sheathe of non-conceptual light suffused with a profound and wordless compassion for all beings without exception, knowing that the suffering of humanity is due to its having fallen out of this sublime state.
Further, there should be the knowledge that this state of ego-free mind has always existed, that it is the deathless state of the immortal great ones. As such it extends throughout the galaxy, dispersing itself through the entire cosmos. In its galactic interconnectedness this state of mind is participating with other intelligences on this plane of reality as well as in other dimensions of existence. It is the universal cosmic consciousness, experienced by numerous beings, simultaneously synchronized by the perception of the coming of the Hour, December 21, 2012.
We shall not say what creative acts will stem from the cumulative effects of such an endeavor, acts unpredictable from our present vantage point. But if one devotes an hour each day to this practice, anonymously and without seeking any personal benefit on behalf of the betterment of the whole and the salvation of the Earth, there is no question that the arrival of the Hour in 2012 will be but one of total illumination and a rebirth of imaginal wonder. Let us begin now, and proceed, one day at a time, until the arrival of the exalted moment – that the world may begin anew.
www.lawoftime.org/archives/mastery.html
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Unsu...
No time like
Mon, November 13, 2006 - 7:31 AMN
O
W
Count me in, starry sister!
Only 143,999,998 to go :P
(I thought it was just 144,000--dang!)
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Unsu...
Re: IF..........
Mon, December 25, 2006 - 5:49 PMThank you for the great post. I, too, have experienced that meditation not only affects me but also affects all that is in my life from people to things to space. Meditation is such a wonderful act of focusing our consciousness or our God-hood and affecting the world with that powerful energy. I wish more people meditated so that the change that is about to come happens gently rather than in a destructive manner. Somehow, I feel that at the present time, meditation is more a human responsibility, a responsibility of consiousness rather than an act of self-fullfilment. The world needs our meditations. All life, Mother Earth, Gaia.... all need humanity's meditations... so that the Whole may go through the change smoothly rather than have all life go through intense chaos and suffering. Meditate away my friends... =) -
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Meditation
Tue, January 9, 2007 - 2:40 AMDon't you find it incredible that something as simple, and quite obviously beneficial, as meditation - is not encouraged, or even taught as part of a (inter)national syllabus with the educational system?
Religious studies, although present, seem to focus on acedemic facts and figures rather than any kind of spiritual practice . . .
I guess I'm not surprised . . when I think about it . . .
D
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