Post by Frater G on Feb 23, 2014 11:07:08 GMT -5
Surfing the alchemy sites I found this article which languages this vast concept nicely and concisely. To understand the spiritual language of alchemy one must first understand that anything languaged must have experiential relevance of personal significance. You have to live in order to understand. Symbolic correlations become societal egregore. (Magick's vibratory canvas) It is an eternal vibrational self feeding group mindset. It is what defines an archetype. Like an eternal toroidal smoke ring in which time space is intrinsically manifest. Everything is connected in this primordial time space vibrational geometric field. When one finds the "Lost Chord" one becomes by will a tuning fork and knowledge channels by allowance through the Divine Monad. The deistic connection of all sentience. Another way to look at it is alchemy is like the language of stars. When one looks through a telescope much information is "lensed" to the EYE. Vibratory language canvased into the heavens correlated by lensing back to the eye to decipher personally. The language itself intrinsically is the teaching. It is Jacob's Ladder inward and upward.
What is Hermetic Alchemy or the Alchemy of the Philosophers? It is the transmutation, or transformation of the common man into the divine man. The common man is the person we know from our every day lives. He grew up in our society as an ordinary person, unaware of who he really is. The transmutation consists of becoming aware of the different aspects of his being: the physical body and its energies, emotions, thoughts and his divine center, and of purifying body, emotions and thoughts. This purification process will allow his divine center to shine through all these layers and become fully manifest in physical reality. It is the realization of our divine essence. Common man is like being asleep, the realized man is like being fully awake. It is all about clarity of awareness. The alchemists called it the Great Work.
This is the entire secret of the Great Work. It is very simple. The uninitiated, who is unaware of the different aspects of the human being, might have difficulty to understand this transformational process, and thus the alchemists gave us explanations in symbolical language. Chemical terms were not the only way they tried to explain what is about. Some concepts are more easily transferred by means of images, and thus the student of alchemy has to study the drawings and paintings by not only deciphering their symbolic interpretations, but also by feeling them. One could say that the student makes a psychic connection with the archetypes of these images. The alchemists also made use of allegoric scenes derived from Greek mythology. Therefore one must know the mythological stories in order to understand their meaning for the inner transformational processes.
The essence of the Great Work is plain and simple: the purification of your awareness. The alchemical images show that the Great Work is a personal and spiritual process, and not laboratory chemistry. Elsewhere in this website you can find another article of mine about a psychological interpretation of alchemy. It gives you a good idea about the psychological aspects of the Great Work. In this article I am going to explain you the spiritual practice of alchemy. As I mentioned earlier there are many spiritual practices around, and you can choose one that you feel comfortable with. But the basis of purification of yourself always remains the same. The basis of all spiritual practices is the elimination of unwanted emotions and thoughts. Without this any practice will fail. The more you practice, the clearer your mind becomes, the sharper your awareness, the more the light of your divine self will shine through.
I started meditating when I was about 20 years old. I had read a book by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, the founder of transcendental yoga. In it he recommended a meditation technique in which you focus on visualizing an object like a match, in order to become aware of thoughts, how thoughts arise and disappear, and to be eventually without thoughts. I tried to visualize a match but discovered I just couldn't do it. It was frustrating. So I decided to drop this visualization and just eliminate my thoughts. That is of course easier said than done. I chose the forceful way, that is, every time a thought would come up, I immediately made a big effort to stop it. Many years later I learned from studying Buddhist meditation techniques that this is actually the most difficult way in thought-less meditation. Usually they advise to go at it in a much more gently way. But it worked for me. Let me also that that aside from that one book of the Maharishi I did not know anything about meditation techniques or Buddhist teachings. I did it all by intuition. Much later I learned that what I was doing was actually called Dzogchen.
Thus I became aware of my inner world of thoughts. I discovered that thoughts are constantly running through the mind, every second of the day. They just ramble on, about anything possible. During meditation, when you direct attention inwards, you really become aware of all these thought-trains. They usually work by association, jumping from one subject to another. The trick is to stop their flow. I did it by stopping every upcoming thought in its tracks. Usually Buddhists will advise you to just observe the thoughts indifferently and let them pass by, not putting any energy in it, not jumping on the train by way of speaking. But I wanted to stop them right away. First I discovered that as soon as I eliminated one thought, another popped up right away. Often my attention would weaken, and I would not be aware that I was going along with a thought-train, that is actively thinking about a certain subject. Then I would become aware again, and stop this thought-train too. You can't imagine how many thoughts arise in a half hour of meditation! But with the days and weeks you get better at it. I found out that there are different layers of thoughts. At the surface are thoughts about anything that happened to you in the recent past, things that you said to someone, and things that want to say to someone. They are basically all just ramblings. When you are able to eliminate these, you see thoughts about more profound subjects, more serious things about your life. The more you eliminate thoughts the more basic they become. The whole process is about becoming aware of them and eliminating them, or observing them in an unattached way.
All this demands one thing that is indispensable: absolute clear awareness. The more you think, that is, the random thoughts, the more unaware you are of your self. In meditation you have to make an effort to be aware, to be conscious, of your thoughts, and to keep this awareness going. That is not easy because we all have the tendency to slip back in our every day dreamy state of consciousness. The biggest obstacle in any kind of meditation is this slipping back in dreamy consciousness, and even falling asleep. It helps to use deep breathing to maintain the clarity of your mind and to prevent the sliding off in unawareness. All those random thoughts we don't really need, and they are an obstacle for our true divine essence. The purpose of meditation is not so much to be without thoughts, but to become clear aware of our Self. It is something that is not easily put in words. When you direct your attention inwards, you will discover that you have an inner world, where emotions and thoughts reside. But these are just energies of your present personality. You will also become aware of your real self. That is vague at the beginning but it becomes clearer the more you can purify your awareness.
So I was eliminating my thoughts. After about two years of daily meditation, I was able to have about only ten thoughts in half an hour. I was using a rope with ten knots to keep track of them. It is really invigorating when your energy is not used up by a constant thinking process. I was also trying to have at least thoughts as possible during the day during periods when I was by myself. I generated so much energy that I sometimes had to stop with it because it was difficult to handle.
Then one day, after half or an hour of meditation, I was in a state without any thoughts. It is not easy to put in words, but here we go. I was absolutely in the here and now, wherever that is, because there was no awareness of the body. I was completely in my self. Being my self. Pure being me. It was a state that felt very good, very pleasant, but not inn an emotional way. There was no darkness, as when you close your eyes and you start to meditate. There is also no shining light as some people might expect, but it is like a light state of being, if that makes any sense to you. Some people say that when you are aware that you have no thoughts, that this also a thought, claiming that we cannot be completely without thoughts. I disagree. The state I was in was in was absolutely "above" thoughts. There was no awareness that I was not thinking anymore. Even that was gone. It is just pure being my self. There is not much you can say about it in words.
It was many years later that I found out that this is half-way the ultimate goal of what is called enlightenment. Let me clarify here that enlightenment is just becoming aware of your true divine self that is always there but is obscured by our thoughts, emotions, our physical body. It not some out-there, wow, amazing experience. What you truly are, your divine self, is just plain and simple pure awareness of your being. Nothing extraordinary. Attaining your pure state of being, in pure awareness, is not enough. One has to be able to maintain it. First, longer and longer during the meditation session, and then ultimately one must keep this pure awareness when one comes out of the meditation and back into everyday life. And longer and longer too in every day life. Until the pure awareness of your divine self will be constant. That is true enlightenment.
I was only able to maintain the pure awareness for a couple of minutes. At that of my life, I had no idea what this state of being really was about. So, after a while I abandoned my meditation practice. Many years later I started reading Buddhist literature and found out more about it. Now I also see the parallel with alchemical symbolism. There are many spiritual practices but they all have the same basic outline. In general terms: the first stage is Nigredo or blackness, when one becomes initially aware of one's tumultuous emotions and random thoughts. Albedo Whiteness, which is the state of pure awareness of oneself, and Rubedo of redness, when this pure awareness has become permanent. In alchemical terms I had reached the stage of Albedo. Unfortunately, at that point in my life, I didn't quite understand what I have reached. I was able to reach the same state of being several times, I eventually stopped with meditation for a while, and since then I haven't been able to reach it again. Life has taken me on other paths and other responsibilities. It really takes discipline in order to get results, and living in a society does not make that easy. I can easily see why monasteries and caves are ideal places for meditation practices, but solitude is not necessarily a requirement either.
If you keep this all in mind, the following alchemical images and symbols becomes so much more understandable. The purpose of showing you alchemical images here is twofold. First, a basic interpretation of the symbols and allegories is necessary to gain an understanding of the alchemical process. Second, look and meditate on the image itself and try to get a feel of what it is communicating. Images allow you to come into contact with the energy of what it represents. When humans form an image, be it in the mind, or on paper, or engage in a practice, a morphogenetic field is formed that carries information about that particular subject or practice. The more people who are engaged in that practice, or have used those images to form their concepts or understanding, the more that energy field gets charged and laden with information. Because everything in the universe is alive, from rocks, minerals, to plants, animals humans and other beings, these particular morphogenetic fields are also alive and continue to exist. by focusing on images one connects with these energy fields, and their information will flow into your mind. It can be very subtle or very clear depending on your sensitivity, but this way you can gain understanding in a very direct way. it is like intuition and inspiration. It flows into you, you suddenly know and understand, without words, although your mind might translate it into thoughts. Thus, really pay attention to the images and let them speak to you too.
Some advice if you want to practice spiritual alchemy. It is a life style. It is a transformation of your entire being. It is not only about that half hour of meditation. You have to change your attitude, your action, your emotions, your diet, the company your in, your environment, because all this will affect the efficacy of your meditation. It is not the place here to explain all the different things you have to change in your life, you can find that well described in the Buddhist teachings, but also study other teachings like Gnosticism, mystical Christian teachings, theosophy, Rosicrucianism etc. You can also the many articles I have put up in the section of The House of the Sun of our web site. Choose a meditation practice that suits you. Buddhism explains several kinds of meditation techniques. The basis all all Buddhist techniques is Dzogchen. Without the understanding of Dzogchen no meditation technique will bear fruit. Dzogchen explains how to reduce unwanted thoughts or eliminate them all together. There are now several books of Dzogchen on the market. The best one, in my opinion is The Crystal and the Way of Light: Sutra, Tantra and Dzogchen by Chogyal Namkhai Norbu. It is not necessary to eliminate all thoughts, but to arrive at that state of clear awareness where there are no random thoughts, where if you want to think, you can initiate thoughts when you really want to. In other words, you control the thoughts, instead of the thoughts controlling you.
Just when I had finished this article, I found a nice link between alchemy and the eastern practices of meditation in lama Anagarika Govinda's book Foundations of Tibetan Mysticism: "The Buddha alludes to the same state (the state of Enlightenment (or sambodhi), when saying in Udana VIII: 'Verily there is a realm, where there is neither the solid nor the fluid, neither heat nor motion, neither this world nor any other world, neither sun nor moon... There is o, monks, an Unborn, Unoriginated, Uncreated, Unformed. If there were not this Unborn, this Unoriginated, this Uncreated, this Unformed, escape from the world of the born, the originated, the created, the formed, would not be possible..'
"He who has realized this, has truly found the Philosopher's Stone/ the precious jewel (mani), the prima materia of the human mind, nay, of the very faculty of consciousness in whatever form of life it might appear. This was the real aim of all great alchemists, who knew that 'mercury' stood for the creative forces of higher consciousness, which had to be freed from the gross elements of matter in order to attain the state of perfect purity and radiance, the state of enlightenment."
The Essential Key of the Great Work
The site has good references for further study. Any thoughts on the article?
What is Hermetic Alchemy or the Alchemy of the Philosophers? It is the transmutation, or transformation of the common man into the divine man. The common man is the person we know from our every day lives. He grew up in our society as an ordinary person, unaware of who he really is. The transmutation consists of becoming aware of the different aspects of his being: the physical body and its energies, emotions, thoughts and his divine center, and of purifying body, emotions and thoughts. This purification process will allow his divine center to shine through all these layers and become fully manifest in physical reality. It is the realization of our divine essence. Common man is like being asleep, the realized man is like being fully awake. It is all about clarity of awareness. The alchemists called it the Great Work.
This is the entire secret of the Great Work. It is very simple. The uninitiated, who is unaware of the different aspects of the human being, might have difficulty to understand this transformational process, and thus the alchemists gave us explanations in symbolical language. Chemical terms were not the only way they tried to explain what is about. Some concepts are more easily transferred by means of images, and thus the student of alchemy has to study the drawings and paintings by not only deciphering their symbolic interpretations, but also by feeling them. One could say that the student makes a psychic connection with the archetypes of these images. The alchemists also made use of allegoric scenes derived from Greek mythology. Therefore one must know the mythological stories in order to understand their meaning for the inner transformational processes.
The essence of the Great Work is plain and simple: the purification of your awareness. The alchemical images show that the Great Work is a personal and spiritual process, and not laboratory chemistry. Elsewhere in this website you can find another article of mine about a psychological interpretation of alchemy. It gives you a good idea about the psychological aspects of the Great Work. In this article I am going to explain you the spiritual practice of alchemy. As I mentioned earlier there are many spiritual practices around, and you can choose one that you feel comfortable with. But the basis of purification of yourself always remains the same. The basis of all spiritual practices is the elimination of unwanted emotions and thoughts. Without this any practice will fail. The more you practice, the clearer your mind becomes, the sharper your awareness, the more the light of your divine self will shine through.
I started meditating when I was about 20 years old. I had read a book by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, the founder of transcendental yoga. In it he recommended a meditation technique in which you focus on visualizing an object like a match, in order to become aware of thoughts, how thoughts arise and disappear, and to be eventually without thoughts. I tried to visualize a match but discovered I just couldn't do it. It was frustrating. So I decided to drop this visualization and just eliminate my thoughts. That is of course easier said than done. I chose the forceful way, that is, every time a thought would come up, I immediately made a big effort to stop it. Many years later I learned from studying Buddhist meditation techniques that this is actually the most difficult way in thought-less meditation. Usually they advise to go at it in a much more gently way. But it worked for me. Let me also that that aside from that one book of the Maharishi I did not know anything about meditation techniques or Buddhist teachings. I did it all by intuition. Much later I learned that what I was doing was actually called Dzogchen.
Thus I became aware of my inner world of thoughts. I discovered that thoughts are constantly running through the mind, every second of the day. They just ramble on, about anything possible. During meditation, when you direct attention inwards, you really become aware of all these thought-trains. They usually work by association, jumping from one subject to another. The trick is to stop their flow. I did it by stopping every upcoming thought in its tracks. Usually Buddhists will advise you to just observe the thoughts indifferently and let them pass by, not putting any energy in it, not jumping on the train by way of speaking. But I wanted to stop them right away. First I discovered that as soon as I eliminated one thought, another popped up right away. Often my attention would weaken, and I would not be aware that I was going along with a thought-train, that is actively thinking about a certain subject. Then I would become aware again, and stop this thought-train too. You can't imagine how many thoughts arise in a half hour of meditation! But with the days and weeks you get better at it. I found out that there are different layers of thoughts. At the surface are thoughts about anything that happened to you in the recent past, things that you said to someone, and things that want to say to someone. They are basically all just ramblings. When you are able to eliminate these, you see thoughts about more profound subjects, more serious things about your life. The more you eliminate thoughts the more basic they become. The whole process is about becoming aware of them and eliminating them, or observing them in an unattached way.
All this demands one thing that is indispensable: absolute clear awareness. The more you think, that is, the random thoughts, the more unaware you are of your self. In meditation you have to make an effort to be aware, to be conscious, of your thoughts, and to keep this awareness going. That is not easy because we all have the tendency to slip back in our every day dreamy state of consciousness. The biggest obstacle in any kind of meditation is this slipping back in dreamy consciousness, and even falling asleep. It helps to use deep breathing to maintain the clarity of your mind and to prevent the sliding off in unawareness. All those random thoughts we don't really need, and they are an obstacle for our true divine essence. The purpose of meditation is not so much to be without thoughts, but to become clear aware of our Self. It is something that is not easily put in words. When you direct your attention inwards, you will discover that you have an inner world, where emotions and thoughts reside. But these are just energies of your present personality. You will also become aware of your real self. That is vague at the beginning but it becomes clearer the more you can purify your awareness.
So I was eliminating my thoughts. After about two years of daily meditation, I was able to have about only ten thoughts in half an hour. I was using a rope with ten knots to keep track of them. It is really invigorating when your energy is not used up by a constant thinking process. I was also trying to have at least thoughts as possible during the day during periods when I was by myself. I generated so much energy that I sometimes had to stop with it because it was difficult to handle.
Then one day, after half or an hour of meditation, I was in a state without any thoughts. It is not easy to put in words, but here we go. I was absolutely in the here and now, wherever that is, because there was no awareness of the body. I was completely in my self. Being my self. Pure being me. It was a state that felt very good, very pleasant, but not inn an emotional way. There was no darkness, as when you close your eyes and you start to meditate. There is also no shining light as some people might expect, but it is like a light state of being, if that makes any sense to you. Some people say that when you are aware that you have no thoughts, that this also a thought, claiming that we cannot be completely without thoughts. I disagree. The state I was in was in was absolutely "above" thoughts. There was no awareness that I was not thinking anymore. Even that was gone. It is just pure being my self. There is not much you can say about it in words.
It was many years later that I found out that this is half-way the ultimate goal of what is called enlightenment. Let me clarify here that enlightenment is just becoming aware of your true divine self that is always there but is obscured by our thoughts, emotions, our physical body. It not some out-there, wow, amazing experience. What you truly are, your divine self, is just plain and simple pure awareness of your being. Nothing extraordinary. Attaining your pure state of being, in pure awareness, is not enough. One has to be able to maintain it. First, longer and longer during the meditation session, and then ultimately one must keep this pure awareness when one comes out of the meditation and back into everyday life. And longer and longer too in every day life. Until the pure awareness of your divine self will be constant. That is true enlightenment.
I was only able to maintain the pure awareness for a couple of minutes. At that of my life, I had no idea what this state of being really was about. So, after a while I abandoned my meditation practice. Many years later I started reading Buddhist literature and found out more about it. Now I also see the parallel with alchemical symbolism. There are many spiritual practices but they all have the same basic outline. In general terms: the first stage is Nigredo or blackness, when one becomes initially aware of one's tumultuous emotions and random thoughts. Albedo Whiteness, which is the state of pure awareness of oneself, and Rubedo of redness, when this pure awareness has become permanent. In alchemical terms I had reached the stage of Albedo. Unfortunately, at that point in my life, I didn't quite understand what I have reached. I was able to reach the same state of being several times, I eventually stopped with meditation for a while, and since then I haven't been able to reach it again. Life has taken me on other paths and other responsibilities. It really takes discipline in order to get results, and living in a society does not make that easy. I can easily see why monasteries and caves are ideal places for meditation practices, but solitude is not necessarily a requirement either.
If you keep this all in mind, the following alchemical images and symbols becomes so much more understandable. The purpose of showing you alchemical images here is twofold. First, a basic interpretation of the symbols and allegories is necessary to gain an understanding of the alchemical process. Second, look and meditate on the image itself and try to get a feel of what it is communicating. Images allow you to come into contact with the energy of what it represents. When humans form an image, be it in the mind, or on paper, or engage in a practice, a morphogenetic field is formed that carries information about that particular subject or practice. The more people who are engaged in that practice, or have used those images to form their concepts or understanding, the more that energy field gets charged and laden with information. Because everything in the universe is alive, from rocks, minerals, to plants, animals humans and other beings, these particular morphogenetic fields are also alive and continue to exist. by focusing on images one connects with these energy fields, and their information will flow into your mind. It can be very subtle or very clear depending on your sensitivity, but this way you can gain understanding in a very direct way. it is like intuition and inspiration. It flows into you, you suddenly know and understand, without words, although your mind might translate it into thoughts. Thus, really pay attention to the images and let them speak to you too.
Some advice if you want to practice spiritual alchemy. It is a life style. It is a transformation of your entire being. It is not only about that half hour of meditation. You have to change your attitude, your action, your emotions, your diet, the company your in, your environment, because all this will affect the efficacy of your meditation. It is not the place here to explain all the different things you have to change in your life, you can find that well described in the Buddhist teachings, but also study other teachings like Gnosticism, mystical Christian teachings, theosophy, Rosicrucianism etc. You can also the many articles I have put up in the section of The House of the Sun of our web site. Choose a meditation practice that suits you. Buddhism explains several kinds of meditation techniques. The basis all all Buddhist techniques is Dzogchen. Without the understanding of Dzogchen no meditation technique will bear fruit. Dzogchen explains how to reduce unwanted thoughts or eliminate them all together. There are now several books of Dzogchen on the market. The best one, in my opinion is The Crystal and the Way of Light: Sutra, Tantra and Dzogchen by Chogyal Namkhai Norbu. It is not necessary to eliminate all thoughts, but to arrive at that state of clear awareness where there are no random thoughts, where if you want to think, you can initiate thoughts when you really want to. In other words, you control the thoughts, instead of the thoughts controlling you.
Just when I had finished this article, I found a nice link between alchemy and the eastern practices of meditation in lama Anagarika Govinda's book Foundations of Tibetan Mysticism: "The Buddha alludes to the same state (the state of Enlightenment (or sambodhi), when saying in Udana VIII: 'Verily there is a realm, where there is neither the solid nor the fluid, neither heat nor motion, neither this world nor any other world, neither sun nor moon... There is o, monks, an Unborn, Unoriginated, Uncreated, Unformed. If there were not this Unborn, this Unoriginated, this Uncreated, this Unformed, escape from the world of the born, the originated, the created, the formed, would not be possible..'
"He who has realized this, has truly found the Philosopher's Stone/ the precious jewel (mani), the prima materia of the human mind, nay, of the very faculty of consciousness in whatever form of life it might appear. This was the real aim of all great alchemists, who knew that 'mercury' stood for the creative forces of higher consciousness, which had to be freed from the gross elements of matter in order to attain the state of perfect purity and radiance, the state of enlightenment."
The Essential Key of the Great Work
The site has good references for further study. Any thoughts on the article?