Web of Life 8 - States of Consciousness
Web of Life 8 - States of Consciousness
Web of Life 8 - States of Consciousness
by John Davidson
1. Super-consciousness or mystic experience, above the eye centre. This includes some
near-death and out of the body experiences.
2. Waking consciousness, at the eye centre.
3. Dream consciousness, at the throat centre.
4. Deep sleep, unconsciousness, below the throat centre, operating in the lower centres.
Super-Consciousness
In this condition, the mind is completely withdrawn from the world of the senses and the
physical tattwas, working through the astral and causal bodies in their respective regions, finally
leaving behind all traces of mind when it rises into purely spiritual domains above the causal
realm of the Universal Mind. For this practice, a perfect mystic adept or master is required both
as an instructor on the physical level, to impart the technique and answer practical queries on
how to concentrate and withdraw the mind, and as a guide on the inner planes so that we do not
get lost there or misguided by other well-meaning, but unenlightened souls inhabiting those
regions.
The life energies or pranas continue their link with the body, thus preventing death, while the
soul flies within. This link is mentioned in the Bible as the silver cord. And it is only at death
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that it is broken, when the physical body, no longer maintained by the life-giving pranas and the
presence of the soul within, immediately begins to decay.
This silver cord represents the flow of life-giving, pranic vibration, taking its existence from the
soul and maintaining the body in living condition until the return of consciousness. Glistening
and vibrating, it is said to be visible to inner sight, in the manner of all energetic vibration. Its
colour is sparkling white or silver, carrying within it the full spectrum of the vibrations required
for the maintenance of all unconscious bodily processes.
But during life, the soul is ultimately drawn back to the body from the higher spheres to
continue the play of destiny karma. Waking consciousness thus ensues. Depending upon the
person's spiritual development, these mystic states may last no more than a few minutes and be
purely a grace or a gift from within, not under the control of the individual. Or they may be the
hard-won fruit of years of meditation. In this case, the soul goes within at will and returns only
to continue the play of life in the physical world, according to its individual karmas. At death,
when the energy of the pralabdh or destiny karma is finished, such a soul lays down the
physical body with thankfulness and in full consciousness, more than ready to continue its life
on the inner planes.
While within the astral and causal regions, the soul works through an astral and causal body
and possesses an astral and causal mind, analogous to the physical body and human thought
processes with which we are familiar. But they are comprised of a far finer quality and
vibration of material or energetic substance. From the very threshold of the astral plane, the
soul is illuminated by inner light and enlightened by the inner power of the vibrating Shabda or
creative Word of God. Mystics describe the power of this increasing light as being equal to that
of sixteen of our physical suns by the time the soul lays down its causal garment on leaving the
realm of the Universal Mind and moves into the purely Spiritual regions. At this stage, the soul
knows itself for the first time as soul. This is true self-realization, which has nothing to do with
the psychological realization of facets of our personality which we experience as struggling
human beings.
Beyond the spiritual regions, say the mystics, lies the Supreme Being, the undivided source of
all being, consciousness and substance.
It is clear, therefore, that as humans, when someone experiences some small inner illumination,
their attention is mostly either within the subtle tattvic realms of the body below their eye
centre, or at the most they have risen up to the sky of the body wherein the antashkarans are
located. All these experiences can be infused with intense inner bliss, depending upon the inner
devotion and love of the individual. They can also be accompanied by visions of light and sound
or even of events reflecting the past or the future, derived from the antashkarans where our
destiny is stored in potential form.
From a human point of view, these experiences are wonderful and can change a person's life if
they come upon one spontaneously and without prior understanding of the inner mysteries.
Indeed, even amongst those who have studied such things all their life, but have never had such
an experience, they can be life-changing, as theory becomes the long sought-after reality.
Such inner illumination may come simply as a lucid moment or in a sudden and intense
realization that life is a mystical phenomenon whose source lies deep within and where some
great power vibrates through every atom of our universe and every part of our inner being.
These beautiful moments comprise the religious experiences of the devotees of the many world
religions, where the inner spiritual truth at the base of all religions, behind all the outer rituals
and ceremonies, is momentarily grasped. They also give power to the visions of the great poets,
musicians and artists, whose inspiration is always drawn from within themselves. Even a belief
in religion or God is not a prerequisite for the inner soul within each one of us to make its plea
for recognition. Spiritual moments or experiences have thus visited people of many ways of
thinking and all walks of life.
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The point to be understood, however, is that such experiences are only the tip of the tip of the
iceberg. They are an incentive to us to rise higher and to sharpen up our seeking for the greater
reality. The human tendency can be for our ego to feed on such experiences, feeling that we are
a little superior to our fellow humans and indulging in clairvoyant and psychic glamour, or
feelings of spiritual superiority. Then, we lose what we have and, spreading our energies
horizontally, lose the inner intensity of life which can take us higher and is, ultimately, of
greater value to us.
The full story of the mystic path is not however the subject of this book and reluctantly we must
leave this fascinating and all-absorbing topic.
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The second kind of experience related by those who have been through near-death experiences
is that of passing through a "tunnel". This tunnel is the soul's experience of passing through the
veil which separates us from the lower astral realms. It is also known as the inner "sky" of the
body or the subtle physical akashic gateway. In Indian mystic terminology it is called the Bunk
Nal, usually translated as the crooked tunnel, because it is not "straight".
Doctors who are studying these phenomena could well increase their understanding of what is
going on by studying what the experts at meditation have to say about it. For these adepts have
mastered the art of dying while living, of passing through this narrow gateway or crooked
tunnel as and when they please, and of returning to this world as required.
Finally, a few souls have passed through this tunnel into a bright, self-luminous world, where
they have even met other souls and conversed with them before, often reluctantly, they are
drawn back to their physical body by their destiny karmas which still need to be undergone,
returning to "consciousness" with the nurses and doctors standing around them. The
Brazilian-Portuguese translator of my book, Subtle Energy, Beatriz Sidou, once wrote and told
me that an accident had thrown her into a "dazzling world". Almost without exception, this
experience possesses clarity and often great beauty and is taken by the individual as an
experience whose higher reality is self-evident, unquestionable and life-changing. Much as one
knows that a dream was only a dream as soon as one awakens.
Waking Consciousness
Man, if he is a true man with mystic knowledge, operates from his antashkarans, his thought
centre, working through the sensory and motor indriyas and the tattvic fields for the outworking
of his karmas and his physical life on earth. The rest of us operate partially from this centre and
partly from the attention playing within the body. We are thus emotionally-orientated beings
and suffer a variety of ills. All lucid moments, all mental or intuitive revelations of science and
the things of this world, all human understanding, all the great creations of literature, art and
music - all the highest parts of man's endeavours have arisen from attention rising to its true
human focus in the thinking centre, flavoured by the individual's karmic orientation of national
culture, as well as mental and emotional inclinations.
The mystic, therefore, possesses the greatest capacity not only for enlightened cosmic
understanding, but also for the highest of human comprehension, formulation of ideas, and their
practical manifestation in this world. For he works from a point of real inner knowledge and
experience of how the universe is constructed. Moreover, he appreciates the true and limited
nature of outer knowledge and acts accordingly.
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Dreams, too, may be good dreams, of a spiritual nature, when we awake in a state of bliss or
grace which lasts with us for some while. Sometimes, too, snatches of our pralabdh karma,
already patterned into our antashkarans or thought centre, are filtered into our dreams and we
receive dream-visions of the future. These may, however, be only partially correct, since they
are liable to interact with the hopes, desires and impressions of our subconscious mind, forming
distorted images on our inner mental screen.
This, in fact, is true of all psychic and clairvoyant visions and messages, so that all such
intuitions are liable to be only more or less correct depending upon the experience and inner
ascent of the individual. Mystics do not normally inform people of their destiny, because it
helps them very little and may only engender deeper attachment. They can, however, provide
much inner guidance at every step in life, so that life proceeds in an orderly and relatively easy
fashion. Psychics and clairvoyants, on the other hand, usually work from below the eye centre
and like all of us, are prone to human weakness and error.
Dreaming also appears to be a necessary process in our night-life, without which we become
mentally disturbed. This has been demonstrated by awakening subjects during the dream state,
identified by the brain-wave patterns characteristic of the dreaming condition. Presumably,
dream is required to sort out the multitude of impressions, thought-grooves, emotions and
experience that we receive on a daily basis and in an almost random fashion. Without this
re-processing and organization we become increasingly disturbed, leading to increasingly
emotional behaviour patterns, as our rational mind at the thinking centre loses more and more
of its control.
A similar situation can arise due to the pressures of everyday life. Then, if we cannot remedy
the situation or help is not forthcoming, the energy patterns can become so disturbed that our
attention is caught up in them to the exclusion of outer events and our neuroses or energy
disharmonies become the focus of our identity. A nervous breakdown or even psychosis can be
the result, when extreme care and nourishment at all levels are required to nurse the patient
back to a healthful mental and emotional condition.
The attention of the true mystic, however, never falls below the thinking centre. Therefore,
when he lies down to rest, the body sleeps while his consciousness goes into the higher realms.
The dream function of ironing out the fibrillations and experiences of the previous day is no
longer necessary, for in the waking state, the mystic holds his mind at a higher level than the
rest of us. In consequence, the plethora of subconscious activity is largely eliminated and far
less mental rest is required.
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unconsciousness produced by injury, illness or anaesthesia. For in the latter, the pathway by
which consciousness manifests is biochemically or physiologically ligatured and the person
cannot be simply awoken.
There are, in fact, many different varieties of sleep which vary from person to person just as
much as our waking states differ from day to day and between individuals. For the point at
which the attention hovers within the body and the nature of the subconscious images which
manifest in our dream life, remembered or otherwise, varies continuously, as we observe in the
changing quality of our sleep and the content of our dreams.
Similarly, unconscious states - characterized by our inability to return to a conscious state upon
external stimulation - differ in their nature. Loss of consciousness caused by accident,
anaesthesia, mesmerism or hypnotism all vary in the means by which the pathways of physical
awareness are disrupted. Anaesthesia is due to chemical or electrical disruption of the central
nervous system resulting in an inability to maintain the transformative links between mind
energies and sensory physiology. Many carbon-based gases - chloroform and ether were two of
the earliest ones used - displace oxygen from the blood stream and hence the tissues, the
resulting depression of nerve function leading to unconsciousness. Dr Stone suggests that
oxygen is a conveyor of prana and certainly oxygen presents a life-supporting vibration to the
body, a positive polarity at the level of molecular activity.
Similarly, whenever there is mechanical injury to the head, disruption of brain function and
hence unconsciousness may occur, depending upon the severity. Likewise, various toxins can
cause loss of consciousness through biochemical disturbance to nervous tissues of the brain.
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