Student: What prevents me from experiencing my innermost self?
Teacher: Nothing.
Student: Then why don’t I experience
it?
Teacher: Fear.
Student: So, then fear prevents me?
Teacher: Nothing prevents you.
Student: But didn’t you just say that
fear is the reason I can’t experience this
state of consciousness?
Teacher: Yes, but it does not prevent
you.
Student: Then what does?
Teacher: Nothing.
Student: Then what role does fear play?
Teacher: If you are in prison, what do
you fear most when you dream of being liberated?
Student: Returning to prison… So, you’re
saying that I fear experiencing my inmost
self because I will return to my ignorance.
Teacher: No. I am saying that your fear
of ignorance holds you in ignorance.
Student: I’m confused. I thought you
were saying that I feared the experience
of my highest self, but now it sounds like
you’re saying that I fear my human self.
Which is it?
Teacher: You fear the return to your
human self after experiencing the God-fragment
within you.
Student: Why?
Teacher: If you are thirsting in the
desert, what is it that you desire above
all else?
Student: Water?
Teacher: So if I gave you a glass of
water, you’d be satisfied?
Student: Yes.
Teacher: For how long?
Student: Okay. I see your point. What
I would desire above all else is to be near
water so I could drink whenever I wanted,
or better yet, I would want to leave the
desert entirely.
Teacher: And if you loved the desert,
wouldn’t you fear to leave it?
Student: You’re saying that I fear the
experience of my inmost self because I would
want to leave this world behind, but how
can I fear this when I have no experience
of it whatsoever?
Teacher: This is not the fear that floods
your body when someone is about to kill
you. It is the fear of a shadow so mysterious,
ancient, and primordial that you know immediately
that it transcends this life and this world,
and its knowing will change you irrevocably.
Student: So it’s really this change that
I fear?
Teacher: It’s the irrevocability of the
change that you fear.
Student: But how do you know? How do
you know I fear this so much that I cannot
experience my inmost self?
Teacher: In order to keep the human instrument
in stable interaction with its world, the
designers of the human instrument created
certain sensory constraints. Because these
were not absolutely effective, there was
also designed into the Genetic Mind of the
human species an instinctual fear of being
displaced from its dominant reality. For
these two reasons, I know.
Student: But this isn’t fair. You’re
saying my capacity to experience my inmost
self has been diminished by the very beings
that designed it. Why? Why should I be continually
frustrated to know I have a God-fragment
inside me, but not be allowed to interact
with it?
Teacher: Do you love this world?
Student: Yes.
Teacher: You are here as a human instrument
to interact with this world and attune to
its dominant reality, and bring your understanding
of your inmost self to this world even if
this understanding is not pure, strong,
or clear.
Student: But if I had this experience
of my inmost self, couldn’t I bring more
of this understanding into this world?
Teacher: This is the fallacy that frustrates
you. Do you think the experience of this
sublime energy and intelligence can be reduced
to human translation?
Student: Yes.
Teacher: Then how?
Student: I can teach others how it feels
to be in rapport with their souls. I can
bring more light to this world and inspire
others to seek this out within themselves.
Isn’t this what you do?
Teacher: Have I taught you how to achieve
this state?
Student: No. But you have inspired me.
Teacher: Are you sure? Haven’t I just
told you that you can’t experience this
state in the human instrument? Is that inspiration
by your definition?
Student: I didn’t mean in this specific
case, but you inspire me to think deeper
into the issues or problems that confront
me.
Teacher: If you want to bring more light
into this world, why will interaction with
your inmost self enable you to do so?
Student: That’s just it. I don’t know
if it will. It just seems logical that it
would. Don’t all good teachers have this
insight? Don’t you?
Teacher: It’s true that there are teachers
who can switch their dominant realities,
and have learned to integrate this in their
life without losing balance or effectiveness
in this world, but they are extremely rare.
Student: I know this. But this is what
I aspire to learn. It is learned isn’t it?
Can’t you teach me?
Teacher: No, it is not learned. It is
not teachable. It is not acquired through
instruction, esoteric technique, or revelatory
process.
Student: Then how do those teachers who
have this ability acquire it?
Teacher: No one acquires this ability.
That’s my point. No teacher within a human
instrument on Earth at this time, or any
previous, has the ability to live as a human
and simultaneously live as a God-fragment.
Nor does any teacher juggle between these
realities with certainty and control.
Student: I’m surprised to hear this.
Why is this so?
Teacher: For the same reasons I told
you earlier. Do you not think this applies
to all humans?
Student: Even Jesus?
Teacher: Even Jesus.
Student: Then why do I have this desire?
Who put this notion into my head that I
should be able to experience this inmost
self or God-fragment?
Teacher: If one experiences the wind,
do they not understand something of a hurricane?
Student: I suppose.
Teacher: And if they experience the rain,
don’t they understand even more about hurricanes?
Student: Yes.
Teacher: If you never experienced a hurricane,
but you experienced wind and rain, might
you be able to imagine a hurricane better
than if you never experienced wind and rain?
Student: I should think so.
Teacher: Such is the case of the God-fragment
within the human instrument. You can experience
unconditional love, supernal beauty, harmony,
reverence, and wholeness, and in so doing,
you can imagine the features and capabilities
of the God-fragment within you. Some teachers
have simply touched more of the edges of
the God-fragment than others, but I assure
you, none have entered into its depths while
living in the human instrument.
Student: But don’t some teachers travel
outside their body?
Teacher: Yes, but they are still living
in a human instrument whilst they travel.
Everything I said still applies.
Student: So what do I do? Give up the
desire to have this experience?
Teacher: There is a fish that can leave
its underwater world upon the equivalent
of wings. While it is only for a short time,
it experiences the realm of the air-breathers.
Do you think this flying fish ever desires
to touch a cloud, climb a tree, or venture
into a forest?
Student: I don’t know… I doubt it.
Teacher: Then why does it fly above the
water?
Student: I suppose it’s an instinct,
something of an evolutionary imperative—
Teacher: Exactly.
Student: So you’re saying this is true
of humans as well. We strive to experience
our God-fragment out of an evolutionary
imperative or compulsion?
Teacher: Yes, and like the flying fish,
when we break from our world it is only
for a short time and we fall beneath the
surface once again. But while we are above
the surface of our world, we momentarily
forget we are just a human with a beginning
and an end. Yet, when we do this, we do
not imagine that we can touch the face of
God within ourselves.
Student: But I do. I feel that I can,
and even should, touch this God-fragment.
Teacher: You think this way because you
have the hopeful exuberance and naïveté
of a person unacquainted with the experience
of First Source.
Student: So you don’t feel this way?
Teacher: Anyone attuned to the highest
vibrations of their innermost self will
feel this and be guided by it. The only
difference is that I am content in knowing
that I will not experience it while I am
embodied in a human instrument.
Student: And what does this contentment
provide you that I don’t have?
Teacher: The ability to channel my energy
into this world rather than to apply it
in the pursuit of another.
Student: But I thought you said it is
an evolutionary imperative? How do I control
this desire or ambition?
Teacher: Live in this world with all
your passion and strength. See the God-fragment
in this world, even if it is only a diminished
beacon or tired light. See it! Nurture it!
Do not be so quick to look for it in the
depths of your heart or mind where you believe
it might be.
Student: It’s hard not to be disheartened
at the sound of these words. It is like
someone telling me that the vision I had
was merely a mirage, or a trick of the light.
Teacher: This is a world of shadows and
echoes. You can chase the source of these
if you desire, but you will likely do so
at the loss of living in this world. You
will diminish your experience of the shadows
and echoes, and this is the very reason
you incarnated upon this planet at this
time.
Student: But it sounds so passive, as
if I should settle for experiencing this
world, and not try to change it. I feel
like I’m here with a mission to improve
it, to change it for the better, and I’m
missing some experience, some capability
to do this. What is it I feel and why?
Teacher: When you experience the warmth
of the sun, do you change the sun?
Student: No.
Teacher: And if you hold a piece of ice
in your hands, do you change it?
Student: Yes. It begins to melt.
Teacher: So there are some things you
can only experience, and there are some
things you can change.
Student: And I should know the difference.
Teacher: It helps.
Student: I know this. It’s elementary.
I’m not sure it helps me feel less disheartened.
Teacher: You know this, I agree, but
you have not necessarily practiced it. It
is a principle of life to practice discretion
and discernment, and while people will think
this concept elementary, it is a critical
difference in living life in a state of
fulfillment or, as you put it, frustration.
Student: So I can’t change the fact that
the God-fragment within me is unknowable
to my human mind, and I need to accept that.
Is that the lesson to be learned here?
Teacher: No.
Student: Then what is?
Teacher: The concept of the God-fragment
within you has power. It can be contemplated,
but it cannot be experienced as a dominant
reality in a human instrument. Through this
contemplative approach you can learn discernment,
and through this discernment you will learn
how to navigate in the world of shadows
and echoes in such a way that you bring
changes that are in accord with the objectives
of First Source. You externalize the will
of the God-fragment, rather than seek its
experience. In so doing, you eliminate the
fear and frustration energies that flow
through your mind.
Student: Thank you. Your teaching just
struck the chord I have been seeking since
I found this path, and I feel its resonance.
Teacher: In resonance you will be guided.
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