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Mission

The Path of Power

Jim Belderis
"The Path of Power" by Jim Belderis (theosociety.org)

Visualization is an ordinary human faculty. Yet there are those who can visualize in an extraordinary way, transforming themselves as well as their surroundings. Their ability is sometimes called paranormal power. The process of learning how to use this power has been described by sages throughout all times. It requires wisdom, understanding, and a great deal of discretion, which students develop through years of training under the guidance of a master. The emphasis is not on the use of power, but on the philosophical principles behind it.

Ironically, some of the same principles have been popularized into an "easy-to-learn" method advertised in modern culture. Ads tell us that learning this method will allow us to create anything we want in life, to succeed in everything we do, and to solve all of our problems. As incredible as this may sound, the principles being taught are based on ancient wisdom.

The way the method is described makes it seem like any of us could learn it. If our goal is personal transformation, we start by deciding exactly how we want to change. From this we form an elaborate mental image of our "new self," which we hold in our minds, visualizing it in increasing detail, getting more and more deeply involved. When we become completely absorbed in this vision, we no longer regard it as who we want to be — it is who we are. Our mind "sees" it as reality. This totally changes our attitude, our opinions, and the way we experience life. Such a radical inner transformation is powerful enough to affect us outwardly, changing our behavior and even our appearance. In this scenario, what started in the mind has now materialized in the flesh.

If our goal is the transformation of our surroundings, we begin in much the same way. We create a mental image of what we want to happen, investing it with all the realistic details we can imagine. To be effective, the image needs to come to life in our minds, to be inwardly regarded as real, without any doubt or hesitation. But since it has to affect what is going on around us, we also need to project our vision onto our surroundings. We have to see it outwardly. This kind of mental projection attracts astral energies, elemental forces that prefigure the formation of matter and are instrumental in producing physical phenomena. Since we are dealing with extremely subtle and unpredictable forms of energy, we have to trust that the elementals we are attracting will do what we want. In the easy-to-learn method, we are told that our trust will be rewarded. With enough faith and determination, what we project with our minds can actually manifest in the physical world.

Popular descriptions give the impression that we have easy access to this kind of power. All we need is confidence and a single-minded purpose. Examples are given of very successful people who seem thoroughly self-confident, who have a vision of what they want and make this the focus of their lives. Then we are told that we too can develop this same power, transform our nature, and produce phenomenal results. As attractive as all this sounds, we may yet have the sense that we are not being told the whole story. There is no mention of wisdom or understanding. What good is this power to change whatever we choose — if we cannot choose wisely? Suppose we learned how to use this faculty and found it very powerful. Consider the wide-ranging effects of a foolish course of action and how it would affect the balance of nature. Would we really understand the consequences? And imagine being so focused on something that it becomes an obsession that shatters our stability.

Addressing these concerns requires a comprehensive system of knowledge. Our paranormal powers have to be considered within the context of our entire being. The effect such powers have on our surroundings cannot be understood without a holistic view of life, and in the face of all these multifaceted, precarious relationships we need a way to find harmony within ourselves and with nature as a whole.

This is just the kind of understanding that students of the esoteric tradition learn to develop. One of the basic teachings is that the essential reality within every form of life is pure consciousness. It is the formless and unconditioned essence of all existence. Emanating from this Source, the energy of pure consciousness is stepped down through graduated levels of expression. In the process, the highest, most refined energies emanate forms that are less and less ethereal. And these become increasingly conditioned by the material world, which limits their awareness.

Take our own nature, for example. Our highest principle is our link with pure consciousness. Its awareness is stepped down to inform the higher levels of the mind, our intuition and spiritual understanding. Their awareness is stepped down to inform the intellect, which is reduced even further in the lower mind. This part of our mentality is preoccupied with the objects of desire which distract our attention and make us even less aware. When desires move us to act, the lower levels of being all work together — our vital, astral, and physical principles respond as a whole. But if this response is our only focus, we are no longer informed by understanding. We lose this higher faculty that gives us insight into causes and effects. And without it, we do not know what we're doing.

This also applies to our so-called paranormal powers. It is misleading to think of them as being above our normal faculties. They are actually part of our lower nature. They are generated by vital-astral-physical energy and concentrated by desire, and the concentration they require can easily make us oblivious to what is going on around us. How powerful would we be if we ended up weakening our understanding? Imagine having no concern for consequences — just focusing on power and success. Think how much suffering we could cause.

These issues lead directly to the way to free ourselves from suffering. The essential wisdom and understanding of our higher self endure from one life to the next. For these qualities to develop, they need to be expressed through our lower nature — in our thinking, aspirations, and actions. So all our faculties have to work together in balance to allow our higher principles to inform the lower ones. But a life spent in the pursuit of personal desire painfully upsets this balance because our lower self cannot choose wisely, and foolish choices cause suffering. It is especially unwise to be obsessed with power, for this is how the ego forms its strongest attachments — which are all impermanent. In fact, the stronger they are, the more we suffer the loss. So the path of power is actually a path of suffering.

Yet there is an aspect of ourselves that we cannot lose: the spiritual intelligence that informs our higher self. It is the only real power we have, for it alone can strengthen our true nature. All we have to do to develop this power is to follow the path of virtue. This is not a code of ethical rules devised by human thought. It is based on the oneness of life, how all living things and all levels of being are completely interdependent. When we support this unity, we are following the path of virtue. And we can do this simply by deeply caring for the welfare of the whole.

Here we discover our true power — in our concern for the well- being of others. By holding this goal in heart and mind, we develop the most awesome ability. It transforms our understanding with a vision of the whole. It turns our common desires into aspirations for humanity. It informs us with the wisdom to choose our words and actions wisely. It makes us mindful of the needs of those around us. And it allows us to concentrate on life as a total experience, to be completely absorbed in everything that happens. This is how we find harmony within ourselves: we deepen our concern for all of life. The deeper we care, the more we recognize this infinite power at the core of our being — it is the one essential reality within each of us.

(From Sunrise magazine, August/September 2006. Copyright © 2006 by Theosophical University Press)

Vision

Human and Cosmic Cycles: The Rounds and Races within Us

Human and Cosmic Cycles: The Rounds and Races within Us (theosociety.org)

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James T. Belderis

One of the most fundamental propositions of the perennial philosophy is the universality of cyclic growth. This means that the cycles of the cosmos are reflected within us: we are all sparks of eternity, periodically coming into being, evolving more of our potential, and then returning to our parent star. Of course many would find this hard to believe. Cosmic cycles have to do with the development of the universe, with the movements of the stars and planets; how could their evolution be reflected in ours?

As we look more closely at the process of growth itself, we find a common denominator of universal proportions. From the planets and the stars to every kind of life on Earth every one goes through progressive stages of development from lower forms of organization to higher forms. But what is it that guides this growth from one stage to the next? The potential for more highly organized levels of development must be contained in the lower levels that precede them, but this potential cannot be found on the physical plane. Matter cannot organize its own transformation. Something else must guide the process, something beyond matter. This in its turn must also be organized by something higher, and that by something even higher. So all manifested evolution begins with the lowest forms — but it is organized by the highest levels of being.

For example, it is commonly thought that we begin life as a single cell, which then divides and multiplies itself into a cluster of identical units. But as we make our way to the womb, our cells begin to differentiate, to specialize in order to perform different functions. There is nothing in our physical body to guide this kind of growth. All our cells have exactly the same genetic material, and yet they continue to specialize in more and more intricate ways. These patterns of growth cannot be found on the physical plane because they exist on higher non-material levels, and it is here that each human life has its true origin.

Emanating from the oneness of the all-embracing Source, we first come into being as a spiritual ray. This ray knows the essential outline of the unborn child to come — in fact it overshadows the way we grow from the time of our conception. It impresses the elemental forces that shape our first germinal sphere of life, and it guides us through a series of outer and inner transformations. Each stage in our external formation provides a vehicle for the development of our inner nature, which in turn prefigures the next transformation of our outer nature. These stages are actually miniature reflections of nature's formative evolution, in which all of us took part. These archaic cycles are reflected within us because we build our very being on their foundation. We need to remanifest embryonic vehicles from every kingdom that we helped to form, so they can help to build our composite nature.

When we exist as a single cell, and then divide into a cluster, we are retracing the structural molecular consciousness that predominates in the mineral world — which is needed by our material body. When we implant ourselves in the lining of the womb, sending down a network of roots to take in nourishment, we are reliving the experience of vegetative vitality that prevails in the plant kingdom — which is needed by our bodily functions. As our implanted embryo becomes firmly rooted in its matrix, it is enclosed by a thick capsule of tissue, and within this shell we undergo a radical and accelerated metamorphosis. A brain begins to form, together with a spinal cord enclosed by a long and tapered projection — the same structure in an animal embryo would become a tail. Folds of tissue grow at the base of the head — the same kind of folds are seen in embryonic fish and develop into gills. We are passing through the prenatal changes that animals undergo because an animal nature is an essential part of our constitution: it gives us the instinctive desire to satisfy our physical needs.

As we take on the form of a human child, our outward metamorphosis slows down and our inner growth accelerates. This involves much more than our internal organs — we are rapidly increasing our potential to work through vehicles of the mind. We are filling in the outlines laid down through many ages of evolution, building the capacity to identify with our perceptions and create a sense of self. This is the mental identity we use to think about ourselves. It is the vehicle in which we live as human beings. And it will grow more and more inclusive as we are driven by the primal urge to regain our essential oneness.

What do we perceive as we round out this formative cycle as an unborn child? Since we are still very close to the unity of the spirit overshadowing our growth, unity colors our first perceptions. We are largely at one with our physical world, for the womb is naturally devoted to our comfort and safety. Yet our world also includes the nonphysical nature of the mother, who has a hierarchy of principles we are intimately in tune with. Her vitality is more important to our sense of oneness than her material being. Her emotions, which act on her vitality, are even more significant. And the thoughts that arouse her emotions are more important still.

There are painful aspects on all these levels that can instantly endanger our sense of oneness. By excluding these aspects from our identity, we begin to build an illusory sense of unity around the limited forms we feel at home with, which become increasingly limited as we descend into matter. As this occurs in ever smaller realms of our unfolding nature, it foreshadows the vehicles we will work through in the next round of our development.

We are born with the prototype of our material identity: our first sphere of physical consciousness. This shadowy prototype is built up by the unfolding levels of our composite nature as we gradually equate our self more and more with our material body. Having manifested all we can of our material identity, we go through a round of vitality: the energy that underlies our own activity becomes our focus. When our focus shifts again, we enter the round of our desires and the emotions that go with them. This is the lowpoint of our descent into matter, for nothing surpasses the power of desire in creating the illusion that our existence depends on the outward forms of life. It is in fact so powerful that it helps us to manifest all the higher spheres of awareness in this cycle. We are soon thinking of our self as the things we desire, having intuitions about them, and even feeling at one with them. Yet these higher spheres bring us ever closer to the next round of development — and it is here that our parents, teachers, and those who show a thoughtful concern for our growth can actually raise our consciousness by making the intimate bond that inspires us to identify with them. Their examples lead us to form our first conceptual identity much sooner than we would without their inspiration.

This begins a remarkable phase in our evolution. Our sense of self is modeled after those we bond with in our thoughts. Evolving along the same lines, our role-identity allows us to put ourselves in the situation of others' physical appearance, their vital energy, their desires and emotions. We can develop understanding for the way other people think, appreciate their vision of the truth, and actually be one with them in thought. But we can also stay attached to certain models to the exclusion of all others. The rules by which they live may be used to condemn all those who have a different point of view. We may even sever our bonds of identity with others and identify with our own exclusive thinking.

These more complex vehicles of the mind are so diverse because we choose the ones that suit our purposes. Without a single unifying purpose, our sense of self can work through a wide variety of vehicles, including those developed in other stages of our growth. We never lose any of our previous spheres of awareness, for each of them is incorporated into the next more inclusive sphere to serve as its foundation. But exclusive thoughts can suddenly bring them to the surface and let them dominate our behavior. How quickly we forget ourselves as mature adults and act like immature children! What we really need at this present stage of our development are role models with a unified vision, a worldview that allows us to stop identifying with limited outward forms so we can sense the fundamental inner unity of all life.

Such a view may seem beyond the scope of what we see in our daily existence. But in trying to understand a unified worldview, we might do well to consider ourselves essential parts of an evolving world. Looking to science for an explanation of the origin of our planet, we find theories that are all based on a materialistic view of life, and so cannot explain what has guided Earth to develop a living environment. There is no physical model for the creation process, and such a matter-based model will never be found — because creation is a process of emanation through a hierarchy of non-material levels.

Earth begins by manifesting as a planetary spirit, the first ethereal veil that emanates from the all-embracing unmanifested Source. Working through this emanation are the highest spiritual beings. They have a memory of the more material spheres: they know the fundamental outline of the planet yet to come. This outline is impressed upon the elemental forces as the most essential patterns of energy which shape the natural world. Following these patterns Earth evolves a continuous succession of less ethereal vehicles until it reaches the cyclic limits of its material manifestation, when it evolves another series of increasingly spiritual vehicles.

These are the evolving globes or states of being of Earth's manifestation. Each one builds on the foundations laid by those that have gone before. The first shadowy prototype is built up by a series of lower energies following the outline impressed upon them by the planetary spirit. After each succeeding wave of life helps to fill in the lower levels of the outline, each in its turn begins to fill in the prototype of the world that is to follow.

The elemental kingdoms are the first to be outlined. Then come the kingdoms of the mineral world, the plants, the animals, humanity, and the spiritual world. These kingdoms will be the vehicles of the entire family of Earth, and every vehicle-kingdom is built up by all the life-waves passing through it. The outlining itself is began by the highest spiritual beings, who trace the spiritual qualities on every level of each composite nature. They are followed by the human centers of awareness focused on creative intelligence, who build the potential to organize individual expressions of consciousness. The animal life-wave energizes the force of desire which concentrates awareness. These prototypes are completed by beings whose energies shape material forms and those that crystallize the lowest forces into matter itself.

Having manifested to the full extent of our potential in this ethereal and embryonic stage, all of us that make up the family of Earth come full cycle to pass beyond both matter and spirit. We leave the realm of form in time and space and are reabsorbed within the unmanifested Source. Here we can assimilate the divine aspects of our first planetary round of life, until we are attracted back into another cycle of evolution.

We may wonder at the staggering complexity in this view of Earth's formation. What could possibly coordinate it all? The hierarchical unity of nature — the same unity that coordinates our amazing metamorphosis in the womb. Like every living being, Earth is made up of hierarchies of lesser beings. Yet its inner-most essence is an individual spark of eternity — its essential self. This is what holds all its hierarchies together, for it emanates through every one and finds expression through them. We are among the hosts of lives inseparably linked with this great planetary spirit. As individuals we have cycles of our own, but as essential parts of one evolving Earth, we are like wheels within wheels: we all evolve together.

We are now ready for a second turn within the "great wheel" of life. The force that brings us back is our attraction to the karmic seeds we sowed, especially the individual attachments that were part of our identity. Waiting for us are the subtle vehicles created in Earth's first round of development. But now the process of reimbodying begins with the least evolved centers of life which feel the strongest pull of matter. The first to be drawn into this second planetary round are the elemental forces, directly followed by those entities that inform the mineral world. Since they feel at home in the most physical realms of nature, they evolve at an accelerated pace. This acceleration declines with each succeeding wave of life, as they reimbody in the plant kingdom, the animal kingdom, and humanity. The last to manifest are the beings who inhabit the spiritual world. They are attracted only to the highest levels of each globe as it undergoes the process of materialization. They descend more and more slowly into matter, until the lowest sphere in this cycle exhausts its potential to develop outward forms. At this point the whole Earth begins to evolve more spiritual states of being as the life centers informing its kingdoms develop their inner nature.

On this spiritual arc the order of evolution is reversed in the unfolding of inner unity. It is here that the highest beings accelerate into each new realm of the spirit, while the less evolved are held back by the limitations of their consciousness. Those who continue on this spiritual ascent must learn to be at home with ever larger realms of nature, each one more inclusive than the one before. When the highest sphere in this cycle unfolds all its spiritual potential, then once again the entire Earth is absorbed within the all-embracing Source.

These patterns are repeated in the cycles that follow, and are reflections of the grand cycle of Earth's entire chain of development. Just as one state of being sets up karmic forces that prefigure the next, the members of an entire life-wave who seek their level in one kingdom will gradually unfold their potential to reimbody in the next higher kingdom. Our stages of growth in this life — from spirit to matter and then back again to spirit — are also reflections of greater cycles. In every planetary round there is a descending arc in which outward forms are increasingly developed, followed by an ascending arc in which the inner nature is developed. Likewise as the rounds progress, there is an overall descent into greater materiality and then an overall ascent toward greater spirituality.

The first round is an embryonic period in which the material vehicles of every kingdom are fashioned. As we and the other life-waves reimbody in these vehicles in the second round, we are ready to develop the subtle energies that shape these forms. During the third round our principles unfold their vitality. And completing our descent into matter, we find ourselves in the fourth round with our focus on desire: the force that impels us to seek attachments to the outward forms of life.

The force of desire is especially powerful in this phase of evolution because of the simultaneous influence of descending arcs at every cyclic level. The fourth round is Earth's most material stage of life. The fourth globe — the physical globe we inhabit — is its most material state of being in this stage. Of all the life-waves evolving on this globe, humanity has become the one most willfully attached to matter. And it has done this while going through four of its root-races or evolutionary cycles, becoming more and more attached to the matter side of life.

At this point we still have the intrinsic urge to find our true self, the formless Spirit beyond all material forms. Yet this urge is crippled by the exclusiveness of our attachments, and many of us are kept from developing our creative mental and spiritual faculties. We still need much more experience at this level in order to discover how inadequate desires are in defining our identity. Such experience is necessary before any center of consciousness can evolve through the ever more inclusive realms of the spiritual arc. Those who cannot develop this spiritual potential are left behind by the evolutionary stream. So they are taken into the matrix of creation in a dormant and unmanifested state, to wait for the time when that cycle comes again. Yet there are some who unfold their inner spiritual potential well before the rest and actually belong in a following planetary round. Since they do not need the experience of evolving up the ascending arc with the rest of their life-wave, they can choose to extinguish all connection with manifested life on Earth — to be absorbed in the pure consciousness of cosmic being. Or they can choose to remain in the world — as servants of evolution itself.

Here are the role models with a unified vision: the ones who make the choice to serve the whole. We find them in every human race, on every globe, and in every cosmic cycle. Whenever they have seen us crippled on the evolutionary path, they have made the intimate bond that put us back into the stream of life. They have given us bodies, vitality, and instinct. They have given us themselves as the light within our mind. They have inspired our humanity, our spirituality, and our divinity. But most of all they have imbodied the ideal of fellow feeling that has moved us to identify with them. By reflecting on their thoughts and actions and seeing how these work in our own lives, we are actually prefiguring our growth in the great cycles to come. We are shaping the vehicle of our most creative thinking, the capacity to see relations between everything and synthesize them into an integrated whole. We are outlining our greatest intuitive sense, which sees our Self in all things. And we are nurturing our own embryonic divinity, caring for it in the womb of our most thoughtful state of mind: our concern for the entire family of Earth.

Suggested Reading:
  • Lennart Nilsson & Lars Hamberger, A Child is Born, 1990.

  • Thomas Verny & John Kelly, The Secret Life of the Unborn Child, 1981..

  • G. de Purucker, "Planetary Chains and Principles" and "Development of Man's Principles in the Rounds," Studies in Occult Philosophy, 1973.

© Saiyra Akbar & Shahir A Aslam Institute of Metaphysical Sciences Proudly created with Wix.com

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