About Death

Someone who recently lost a loved one has asked me to talk about death. For now, what I say may be only a notion. However, as the cobwebs in consciousness clear, leaving you free of any programmed way of thinking, what I have to say becomes self-evident. Knowledge is not outside of you; nor is it far away.

Death is only of the physical body. ‘You’ will never die. Only the physical body dies. The physical body is, of course, very important. It is a precious vehicle that carries you through this life and with which you can evolve most rapidly.

The sadness around death is usually about the pain of missing the one who has died. You may wonder, “When will I see them again?’ and ‘Will I ever see them again?’ ‘Are they still ‘alive’ somewhere else?’

The answer to these questions is most assuredly ‘yes.’ However, missing them is very real and acute, and compounded by the uncertainly of these ‘whats’ and ‘whens.’  The knowing of what I am saying comes from within you, not from outside of you.  And though that knowing offers some comfort, your missing of them remains.

It is important to know it is best to let them go.  They are now on a new and different journey and holding on only holds them back. The bittersweet nature of life is sublime. Understanding the spiritual truths regarding life and death does not blunt your emotions around its nature, but can somehow unite the range of emotions you may feel, thereby heightening your wisdom about what you are feeling.

Wisdom is understanding. Understanding is humble. Humility is the gateway to true love. Love holds everything, the full range of human emotions, in a most gentle embrace.

© Michael Mamas. All rights reserved.

How do you Know if Your Meditation is Working?

statueI recall the days when I gave public lectures back in the ’70s.  A common question was “What is enlightenment like?”  Back then it was surprisingly common to have audience members using recreational drugs respond by saying, “Oh yeah, I know exactly what you are talking about!  That is exactly what happens to me when I get high!” Try as I might, I only met with extreme resistance when I tried to explain that I was talking about something different.

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At first glance this may sound like nothing more than a humorous recollection.  Actually, it has a very profound point:  We are all centered in the same one thing…. the Transcendent.  All our lives revolve around that…  are based in that… if we know it or not.  As a result, every experience is an echo of that, just as when a pebble is tossed into a pond, every ripple expands out from the point of entry paralleling the other ripples.  Similarly, every experience in life parallels something deeper.  If we are not careful, we decide they are the exact same thing.  I call this the I-get-it Syndrome.

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This simple principle is responsible for the profoundly elusive mysteries of life.  Everything is an echo of something deeper.  Unless we are attentive, we equate the echo with the real thing.  Many well-intended teachers provide meditation techniques that provide students with an echo.  Echoes of truth, perceived as truth, hold truth at bay.  This exists eternally in all of life.  It is why true spiritual growth is likened to traversing a razors edge or passing through the eye of the needle.

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So how do you take this and decide if you are doing a proper meditation that is actually working?  Well, there are a few fundamental qualities…  the meditation must be natural…  easy… simple… etc.  However, you can say that about many things.  So the ultimate answer boils down to the cultivation of discernment.  You must become discerning in your evaluation of all things…  including the choice of the meditation technique you use.

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Keep in mind that we do not meditate to attain a particular experience during meditation.  We meditate for the benefits meditation provides…  the purification of the nervous system and physiology.  The actual experience of meditation can vary, based upon the way each individual’s physiology is purifying at a particular time.

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I know this can be unsatisfying, but it is the truth.  We all would like to have a signpost along the way, confirming we are moving in the right direction.  However, the only genuine signpost is accessible deep within you.  As you cultivate and employ wise discernment, it becomes more accessible to you.

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Listen carefully in life and choose wisely.  Admittedly, it is enjoyable and encouraging to have a meditation that feels deep and profound, but let the path of discernment be your guiding light.

© Michael Mamas. All rights reserved.

The Unknown

Because existence is a field of such infinite, multiple dimensionality, we can never know it completely or define it precisely. When we attempt to define it, we limit it. In limiting it, we no longer fully understand it. We no longer know it.

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If we try to pinpoint exactly where an electron is, we grab onto that electron and limit it as being in a specific spatial location. However, when we grab onto it and say “There’s the electron,” its grandeur collapses down to a point. Prior to our defining it, it was something different.

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Our attempt to know, to grab onto, to define, is exactly what limits. This leads us to a paradox.

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The only real way to understand something is if we don’t try to know.

© Michael Mamas. All rights reserved.

A Healthy Society

No society can become healthy through the imposition of laws.

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Societies become healthy only as the individuals within the society awaken to their true nature—divinity.

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This is a physiological process.

© Michael Mamas. All rights reserved.

“How To” Think and Feel

Growth as an individual is not about what to think and feel as much as how to think and feel.  At first, this may not make much sense.  After all, everyone thinks and feels all day long.  Is there even a “how to” to it?  The answer is, of course, yes, there is indeed.

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This involves becoming more and more deeply established within yourself. On the surface, thoughts and emotions can churn wildly. Thinking and feeling on that level is more about conditioning and distortion than inner wisdom.

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The proper “how to” involves culturing your being so that you can come from deeper places within.  Note that “deeper” does not mean more intense. Highly intense thoughts and emotions are oftentimes rooted in superficial distortions and wounds –  which, incidentally, are cloaked in the façade of alleged inner truths.

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There is a long and short term approach in going about “how to” think and feel.

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Long term is obvious: meditate and evolve though the years.

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Short term involves settling down and being as honest as you possibly can with yourself.  The whole arena of personal process techniques and concepts that I have provided assist the short term process, ie. First and Second Response, Identity With Beliefs, 5 Divine Currents,  etc.

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Working with one approach assists the other.  They both, however, can be a slippery slope.

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The slippery slope of the Long Term Approach involves 1) proper meditation (there are so many meditations out there that do not assist in the long-term process) and 2) meditating regularly.

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The slippery slope of the Short Term Approach includes 1) The challenge of really being honest with yourself (no small task) and 2) Improper personal process.  I have spent years purifying the entire arena of personal process.  Subtle distinctions make all the difference here.  Improper personal process may appear beneficial but, in fact, undermine your growth.  There have been a few times when people have taken what I teach and attempted to improve upon or add to it, only to compromise it. When embarking upon personal process I implore you to adhere very carefully to what I have said.

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Please know I speak from my heart.

© Michael Mamas. All rights reserved.