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Posted by Charles:
I see your book excerpt is from a practitioner of Ziji Rinpoche and her Short Moments teaching. I love her teachings since Alan Neachell posted them on YouTube when she was Candace OâDenver. I will happily read this pdf.
There has been a new thread Iâve been following with interest. Have you read Jed McKenna (a pseudonym, I believe)? There is a trilogy but you can skip Book 2, which has little of interest. He espouses waking up, which he describes in uncomforting terms. One of his ideas is about the near zero success rate of all spiritual teachers, because we donât want to wake up we just want to be more comfortable. I read this excerpt yesterday, Iâd be curious to see what you think, especially regarding the satsang we share. Ignore his personality, focus on the ideas:
âHow can it be that weâre essentially the same now as we were at the most distant reaches of recorded history? Why does our outer environment change while our inner landscape stays the same? Because thatâs the first rule of this club: Always Outward. Never Inward.
So it follows as a matter of certainty that anyone who espouses any teaching or doctrine or philosophy is necessarily a member of the club. Any spiritual teacher who allows students to ask questions and gives them answers is a member of the Outward Only club; an unwittingâand thereby all the more insidiousâagent of ignorance.
The world is full of respected and beloved spiritual and religious teachers. People ask them questions and they provide answers; question and answer, question and answer, on and on, talk and more talk, more like spiritual therapy than spiritual warfare, but all questions, no matter how sincere or heart-felt, are really the same question, Outward?, and all answers, no matter how profound or wise, are really the same answer, Yes. The subtext of every question is, Am I making progress by asking questions and trying to understand the answers? And the subtext of every answer is, Yes, you are going somewhere while sitting here talking or reading. This is progress. Be at peace. You are progressing and well-progressed.
Thatâs the obvious lie we want to hear and those who tell it most convincingly are the most respected and revered and sought after. A shining example of this is the much-beloved Ramana Maharshi. His core teaching, if you ask Bob or any of Ramanaâs many fans, is, âAsk yourself, Who am I?â
So whatâs the problems with that? There is none. In fact, itâs perfect; a complete spiritual teaching in five words. So perfect, in fact, that anyone who actually does it will actually awaken. Ask yourself, Who am I? If you do it, you will become enlightened. There is no possible alternative.
The only way self-inquiry can fail to work is if you fail to do it. Thatâs a pretty important point so Iâll say it again: The only way self-inquiryâAsk yourself, Who am I?âcan fail to result in enlightenment is if you fail to do it.
âSo,â I ask Bob, whose book is dedicated to Ramana, âwhy arenât Ramanaâs many thousands of adoring students and devotees awake? That seems like a pretty fair question, doesnât it?â âI donât think itâs fair to assumeââ he begins. âNo need to be defensive,â I say, âIâm agreeing with Ramana. Iâm saying self-inquiry is the bomb. Iâm completely on board.â âBut youâre also saying⌠what are you saying?â âThat Ramanaâs failure to produce awakened beings was nearly total.â âOh, well, thatâs hardlyââ âWhen, on the face of it, his success rate should be total. Shouldnât it?â âI donât know, I supposeââ âSo what are we missing? Why isnât this adding up? What arenât we understanding about this?â
I glance over at Bob as he chews on the problem. He is visibly agitated; experiencing a bit of Spiritual Dissonance, itâs safe to assume. Heâs sure Ramana was a great man, a great teacher, a saint, a sage, whatever he thinks all that means. Thatâs the inner belief. But even after trying to quibble about Ramanaâs success rate for fifteen deleted paragraphs, he has to agree that itâs abysmal at best. Thatâs the outer reality. Eventually, he can no longer help but see the obvious. âTheyâre not doing it?â he says, making it a question. âWhoâs not doing what?â
âFollowers of Ramana; theyâre not doing the self-inquiry practice.â âYes,â I agree, âif we stated the situation correctlyâself-inquiry leads to awakening and Ramanaâs followers donât awakenâthen thatâs the only conclusion we can come to. So then, if thatâs his teaching, then why donât his students practice it?â âI just donât thinkââ he starts and stops, then starts again. âI donât agree that, I mean, Iâve done it myself, you know. Iâve practiced self-inquiryââ âThe sincere practice of self-inquiry would require a year or two of excruciatingly intense processing to go all the way through,â I say, cutting off his attempt to scurry out a back door.
âItâs not like a question to be answered or an epiphany to be realized or a thought to be pondered, itâs more like a mountain of ignorance that has to be pulverized into particulate, stone by stone. Do you understand that?â He sees that door slam shut. âYeah, okay. Yes.â âSo you didnât actually do it?â He sits quietly for awhile. âWell, I thought I did, I suppose. I kind of thought I was doing it, by following Ramanaâs teachings, by reading and trying to understand the dialogues and the books written about him, I guess I thought the whole thing was this sort of process of self-inquiry.
I thought that if you were into Ramana Maharshi, thatâs what it meant, that you were doing self-inquiry just by learning what he taught.â The inner twelve year-old is thus revealed. Hereâs this intelligent, accomplished, distinguished-looking guy seeing his fabrications dismantled, like a kid caught cheating by the teacher. âAs opposed to a specific process?â I ask. âNo, there was kind of a process too. I did this thing where Iâd go into a sort of introspective mode, well, once in a while. Like, Iâd ask myself, who is experiencing this? Who is having this conversation with Jed right now?
Who is out sunning himself on this beautiful day?â Iâm not too surprised to hear about Bobâs weak and ineffectual method of self-inquiry; witnessing in its mildest and least disruptive form. I donât assume that if I had this conversation with a random sampling of a thousand Ramana devotees that Iâd get these same responses, but I do assume that none of them would be awake. And though I donât think that many would claim to be awake, I do think that most or all would claim to be making real progress in that direction.
Looking at Ramana Maharshi and self-inquiry affords us a very clear view of this phenomenon, but now that we know what weâre looking for, we can increase our altitude and broaden our perspective and take a random sampling of all spiritual seekers. Why isnât anyone going anywhere? Because theyâve convinced themselves that they are going somewhere. Why? Because their spiritual masters and advisors tell them they are.
Why are their spiritual masters and advisors telling them theyâre going somewhere? To get the gig. We pick our teachers. We get what we wish for. We want cozy, uninterrupted slumber and the dream of spiritual progress, and thatâs what we get. If all Ramana had ever said was, Ask yourself, Who am I?, if that had been his answer to every single question put to him, then heâd have been the perfect teacher with the perfect teaching, but no one would have ever heard of him and we wouldnât be discussing him now.
We know about him because of all the thousands of questions people asked him and all the thousands of answers he gave, but every single one of those questions was the exact same question: Outward? And every single answer he ever gave was the exact same answer: Yes! Self-inquiry was not Ramanaâs core teaching. Thatâs Mayaâs shell game and weâre the suckers lining up, eager to get fleeced. But as every swindler and con-man knows, you canât cheat an honest man.
Ramanaâs true core teaching, if you care to pull back the curtain and look, was Outward. In real progress, there are no questions or answers, there is no knowledge or teaching, there is only going and not going. Inward.â
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Created: June 20, 2024
Last modified: June 20, 2024
I understood that Ramana Maharshi’s “Who Am I” was only a concession for his Western visitors.
I read the text, but wasn’t very excited.
“Practicing self-inquiry” is a funny phrase.
What are the core misconceptions, the basic wisdoms?
– You are not the one you think you are.
– Thoughts and feelings are always from the past.
– Happiness is not in the circumstances.
– The sense of separation/lack is 10% faulty thinking and 90% muscle-memory.
– Our true nature is always whole and complete, but veiled by the me-belief.
– “Beyond doubt, I am; but what I don’t know what I am.”
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