Immortality
as a “ State of Mind”.
An exploration of immortality through Taoism, William Blake, Joseph Campbell and Christian perspectives.
William Blake 1804 [1]
Introduction:
In
this essay, I will give evidence to show that immortality is a state of mind or
mystical state founded on a developed level of consciousness. This will be
explored by revealing the methods and techniques used by Taoist adepts for
achieving immortality. Brief
argument will be made against Immortality being only achievable though death.
There will be some discussion that bodily ascension is not necessary to
achieve immortality, nor is the ingestion of poisonous elixirs.
Discussion will centre on the Taoist Canon, the poetry of William Blake,
writings of Joseph Campbell and the Bible. The juxtaposition of such varied
positions will highlight the necessity of using Jesus of Nazareth as a
compulsory step in the quest for Immortality.
Concepts of Immortality:
In
this section I will discuss the concepts of Immortality from a Taoist, William
Blake’s, Joseph Campbell’s and the orthodox Christian perspectives.
Immortality
is the predominant aim in Taoism. The Taoist understanding of immortality is
that the successful practitioner ascends to the heavens and retains
consciousness after death. Thereafter one takes a place in the heavenly
hierarchy of immortals who influence the lives of the mortals below. They have
avoided death and live as long as Heaven and Earth[2].
From the Han era,[3] the Chinese believed
through a modicum of effort that death could be avoided. This involved training
of the body, diet, psyche, dreams and working with Chi in Internal and external
alchemical techniques. These techniques are enumerated repeatedly in the Taoist
Canon[4]. This Canon includes
scriptures from multiple authors and is their
“Holy Bible” equivalent. These
techniques will be expounded upon later in the essay.
There
are current-day masters who teach these Taoist techniques of immortality. A
notable Taoist master is Mantak Chia[5]
who currently resides in Chiang Mai Thailand. His methods of training the mind,
body and spirit are well outside the culture and mindset here in Australia. The
practices open up a new world of experience through “Energy and Chi”. He
teaches that to become immortal one raised the chi levels in their body to form
a spiritual body. The final stage was Ascension whereby the flesh is transformed
up into an energetic or imagined spiritual body[6].
This was the technique of 100’s of immortals documented in the “Taoist
Canon”[7]
and portrayed in the movie “Star Wars” by the Jedi Master Yoda upon his
death. Here in view of others the body evaporates into thin air and leaves the
clothes behind.
Upon
ascension the Ascended master would guide mortals of concern. But more
importantly they themselves would be removed from the sufferings and desires of
the flesh. There consciousness is able to merge with all aspects of the universe
including the elements both forwards and backwards in time.
Yet
while supporting the traditional Taoist tradition, he currently only exposes
students to immortality as a state of mind or mystical experience. This immortal
experience while seemingly only a small part of the path is a life experience in
itself. Guiding practitioners to
this state of mind is a worthy goal in itself and hence the purpose of this
essay. He does not include bodily
ascension and the ingestion of poisonous elixirs in his teachings.
William
Blake was an eighteen-century poet and Christian mystic. His works such as the Four
Zoas, Jerusalem and Milton centered
around the quest for immortality. The underlying theme to his method of
achieving immortality was to identify the energies within the psyche and
outline a path for these energies to harmonise and realise
the eternal worlds. His path also included expanding the imagination to
include the “eternal forms’[8]. The eternal forms came
from the immortal worlds and from
sleep.
Blake’s
eternity fits the criteria of Stace
( Professor of Philosophy Princeton University early 20 century who pioneered
much of the psychology and philosophy of mysticism) [9]
where all sensory and
conceptual content has disappeared so that only a void or empty unity remains.
There is apprehension of life in all things, the senses go beyond time and place
yet still recall the experience as real, emotionally positive and sacred. There
is difficulty describing the content through language so practitioners attempt
to refer to the state through other means, such as metaphorical landscape.[10]
Blake
attempts to not only describe the Immortal worlds through classic Christian
metaphors but also to create further grades of experiences of the Eternal. He
says the land of Eden partakes of Eternity but also partakes of this world[11].
It contained every tree that was beautiful including the Tree of Life
(immortality) and the forbidden Tree of Knowledge. It is the Garden of God [12]
and there are looms on which garments of immortality are woven[13].
Man “pre existed” in Eternity before his creation in Eden, which was
only his materializing, an episode of his fall.[14].
Blake uses the Immortality and Eternity to imply the equivalent states of mind.
The place below Eden is called Beulah, which overlaps with the dream world is
described later on in this essay.
Joseph
Campbell a well renowned expert on Mythology and Comparative Religion, states
that the purpose of each religion is to enter the Garden of Eden[15].
That eternity can be experienced in the here and now. To become immortal one
lives the Hero’s journey or the archetypal myth. One consequently lets go of
self and identifies to that which is transgresses time and place.
To discover ones personal myth one will probably need to open up the
dream world. One may also need to expand ones imagination though art and poetry.
To reach this state of ecstasy one needs to “go past fear and desire, past the
pairs of opposites, into transcendence. He states that Jesus and Buddha are
methods to immortality. One can enter the garden by eating of the fruit of the
immortal tree of life.[16]
Both
Blake and Campbell are discussing Eternity as state of mind in contradiction to
mainstream Christian culture. An orthodox Christian position would be to have
Heaven as the abode of God, his angels, Jesus and the just in the after life.
The goal is to go to heaven after physical death. The individual in Heaven, like
the Taoist concept, is released from the limitations of the physical body. There
is no emotional turmoil and even the lion can sleep with the lamb. For many,
they will have a restful sleep in the arms of Jesus till the end of time.
Bodily ascension of Jesus of Nazareth is also crucial to Christian
fundamentalism. The belief in such a miracle is the cornerstone of their faith.
Finally
there is a historical perspective whereby an immortal is someone who is
remembered , talked about beyond their death. That is their fame is enduring.[17]
These
varied concepts and how they interact will be discussed in the body of the
essay.
Techniques and Methods use to experience Immortality:
The
Taoist orthodox position is that through meditation practice, isolation, care of
the body and the administration of an elixir, one can ascend and become an
immortal. Immortals can then be
classified thereafter as those that continue to live on the Earthly realm and
those who have ascended to Heaven. Those that have ascended to Heaven can be
classified as to whether they ascended in broad daylight, to those who have
delivered themselves from a corpse.[18]
There have been various texts written on the various stages involved in the
ascension process. The least difficult to understand is depicted by the
physician Sun Si Mao’s (died 682 AD) – “ Scripture of Concentration and
Meditation”. The steps he describes include: removal of diseases from the
body, fusion of the elements and emotions, attaining a youthful complexion,
discarding of normal life, extending one’s years to a thousand and refining
one’s energy to pure spirit. The
final stage is uniting the spirit with the world and going beyond all beings
into the “one”.[19]
This description however lacks definition of
the finer details and a better description is given by Kohn in her paper
“Transcending Personality from Ordinary to Immortal Life”[20],
her stages include
transformation of the body, energy, emotions and conscious thinking. There is
culmination in the final realization and then ascension. I will expand on
Kohn’s stages and incorporate information from other sources including
Master Mantak Chia’s works, Eva Wong’s translation of
The Dragon Tiger Classic ( Han Era 206 BC – 220 AD) and Richard
Willhelm’s: The Secret of the Golden Flower ( Tang Era 618 –907 AD).
I
will discuss the Taoist stages involved in attaining immortality. Under each
heading, ideas from Christian, Blake and Campbell perspectives will be
compared and contrasted. The Headings include:
Chi and Alchemy, Self
Sacrifice -the Body, Ego and the
Emotions, Parents and Society and finally Dreams.
Chi and Internal Alchemy:
Taoism,
as opposed to the Christian tradition, prioritizes the earthly vehicle,
especially in the early stages of the mystical training. In the latter part
there is sacrifice of the body, which will be discussed later. The Taoist
literature is full of health improvement approaches, including diet, exercise
and limiting overuse of the senses. There are remedies for healing of both major
and minor diseases. The Taoist tradition overlaps with Traditional Chinese
Medicine and dates back to the Yellow Emperors classic by Huang Di on Internal
Medicine ( 2696- 2591 BC)[21].
The
Taoist approach relies on no distractions to the demanding requirements of
spiritual training. Furthermore, by looking after the body, the practitioner has
a longer life and consequently time to practice.
The practitioner can look forward to his vision of eternity and not be
hampered by disease or illness. To house the intense physical pressures of
intense energies and prolonged meditation, the body needed to be in its finest
form. This may be where the Christian system lets itself down. As the forsaking
of being to love and spirit prematurely can lead to premature disease and aging.
Meditations such as “Kan and Li”[22]
and “Fusion”[23] described later create
intense high intra abdominal and thoracic pressures, which require a high level
of fitness. Physical training including the martial arts, healing and internal
spiritual practice are a triad of practice, which is often the cultural norm
based on prior successful transcendants. The adept is initially trained and
matured through the rigors of martial art training and healing. Then when it
comes to prolonged fasting and sitting, the adept is better prepared. The study
of traditional Chinese medicine prepares the adepts to formulate their elixirs
and successfully treat physical ailments in their journey.
Working
on the body’s “chi[24]”
and emotions is the next stage. The practitioner firstly opens up a world of
“chi or “energy”. This may be equivalent to the stage where the Christians
describe inception of the Holy Spirit. From
here, the world of thoughts and emotions convert to energetic sensations or as
Jung states in his Commentary on The secrets of the Golden Flower, “Every
separate thought takes shape and becomes visible in colour and form”.[25]Negative emotions are
transformed along with sexual energies. The practitioner raises their energy
levels like being blown up like a balloon. A fusion reaction is set up initially
in the lower abdomen, which attracts and transforms energies from the various
sources.
The
various sources are summarised as the five elements – representing the myriad
expression of living phenomenon. The
Chinese divide all phenomena initially into binary opposites of yin and yang and
then subdivide them into the five elements. Each of these five correspondents
has a yin and yang component. Once identified and made conscious, these are
fused in an internal alchemical reaction between water, fire, metal, wood, wind
which creates a reaction which multiplies the internal energy levels to a high
level. [26]
This
high level beyond the realm of mundane daily existence is used for the esoteric
phenomenon of rebirth. In looking at Blake’s System of Mystical understanding
of Immortality we hear:
“All Human Forms identified even Tree Metal Earth and Stone, all
Human
forms identified, living going forth & returning wearied
Into
the planetary lives of Years Months Days and Hours reposing
And
then Awaking into his Bosom in the Life of Immortality.”[27]
Here
Blake, like the Taoists describes a similar phenomenon of identifying the
elemental energies of wood, metal earth and stone as part of the journey to
experiencing immortality. It’s as if prior to the fall of man’s mind there
was a deep inner knowledge of the “one[28]”.
The path to regaining this experience of immortality there needs to be
identification of these separate energies and then fusing them together.
From
the result of the fusion reaction there is energetic or spiritual rebirth. This
is experienced at multiple levels of sensation. These include internal
visualization of a fetus and tactile awareness of its heartbeat.
There is an accompanying sense of emotional cleansing. The
practitioner’s physiological process undergoes change with altered breathing
patterns called embryonic breathing, where the practitioner for all intents and
purposes physically stops breathing.
In
the Christian system, Jesus said to one of the Pharisees, Nicodemus, about
seeing the Kingdom of God. (For many Christians, God is the only phenomenon,
which is immortal [29])
He said this would only occur after he is reborn a second time and that rebirth
is based on interaction of spirit, wind and water. [30]
Again one could interpret this as a statement of internal alchemy much akin to
what I have described above. Changes in the depth of the meditation experience
also reflect changes in the practitioner’s personality and consciousness. The
process of mystical experience is connected with progress of personality along
“the way”[31].
The
next stage in Taoist internal alchemy involves the formation of the spiritual
body. Interestingly enough the practitioner needs to give birth to an imagined
fetus in the abdomen. The fetus is expelled upward along the central canal of
the body out through the crown to form a spiritual body[32].
Blake in To Tirzah[33]
in Songs of Innocence and Experience highlights the formation of a spiritual
body as a step in the quest for immortality.
This
next stage of ascension is where controversy appears between orthodoxy and my
position. In the Taoist system the orthodox belief is that the flesh is raised
up into the spiritual body though the cultivation of so much virtue within that
the body becomes so light and rises up. This view would be consistent with the
Christian Literalists whose faith relies on the bodily ascension of Jesus of
Nazareth.[34]
Yet from an “immortality as state of mind ” perspective, this stage is a
mere movement of consciousness in the heavenly direction. The consciousness
ascends up to the Heavens and the practitioner experiences the transport to the
Heavens, which can be described in a myriad of ways ranging from “Oblivion”,
“God”, the “One”, the” Indescribable”, the “Tao” or just
“Heaven”.
Ascent
of the physical flesh into the spiritual body involves breaking the laws of
nature as we currently see them. Hence this would need to be classified as a
miracle. I personally have not experienced such miracles in my lifetime, so from
my position I can only state they are a possibility. “ Blake agreed with St
Paul that the physical body would not be raised: “ flesh and blood cannot
inherit the kingdom of God” ( I
Cor
XV: 50) but “It is sown a natural body: it is raised a spiritual body” (I
Cor XV: 44 )”[35]
. So it seems that Blake and St Paul do not believe in bodily ascension. Arguing
against this miracle from a scientific viewpoint is beyond the scope of this
essay. Perpetuation of a miracle within a religious system strengthens that
religion, as it portrays that its system allows miracles to happen. This places
the masses in awe. On the other hand if the miracle is a lie, this creates a
blockage for the practitioner to access eternity. The practitioner may falsely
assume, that they can only access the immortal worlds via nothing other than a
miracle. Religions in this case are denying their followers religious
experience.
Returning
to the mystic’s experience of the immortal worlds. Kohn subdivides the eternal
experiences into two groups: the ecstatic and enstatic. The ecstatic imagery of
eternal life is similar to mystical visions by shamans in other traditions.
There is freedom from the limits and natural laws of this world. Kuo Hsiang the
major commentator on the writings of Chuang Tzu said:
He
can ride on the two forces ( ie yin and yang) and control his six energies, he
can join the mass of people and go along with the myriad beings. There are no
beings he does not follow, he even floats along with the clouds. There are no
shapes he does not use, he even flies astride a dragon. He relinquishes his body
and realises spontaneity[36]
Ultimate
freedom and bliss is obtained the
higher one ascends. Imagery and
sensations become lighter and purer.
All phenomenon become replaced by simpler metaphors and symbols, including time
itself.
[37]
Blake’s
visions, such as
The Vegetative universe opens like a flower from the Earths
centre in which is Eternity. It expands in stars to the Mundane Shell and there
it meets Eternity again both within and without.[38]
The
loss of time and permanence of forms is shown by,
“ Every thing exists & not one sigh nor smile nor tear, one hair
nor particle of dust, not one can pass away.[39]
The
enstatic vision is more a journey
inward - into the darkness or
nothingness. It is a deepening, darkening or closing. The intellect is taken
away and there is no knowledge of such things as time. In this pure experience
there may be ontological variations but epistemologically it is one. Kuo Hsiang
states
The
ancients forget heaven and Earth, and neglect all things. Outwardly they have no
conscious observation of the world. Inwardly they have no conscious feeling of
their own body….[40]
This
is an experience of the beginning of the universe of its formlessness before
creation. “Eternity here is a state of being, not of becoming, a linear
permanence, not of cyclical return.”[41]
The Taoists often describe their visions of eternity in terms of that which
cannot be expressed in language. In 2 Corinthians 12:2-4, the Apostle Paul tells
of being lifted up into "the third heaven," where he experienced
"paradise” so astounding" that its description involves
"unspeakable words"[42].
It is both Blake’s and the Christian’s vision before man’s creation
in Eden, which was only his materializing before the Fall.[43] It is also consistent
with Stace’s criteria of a mystical experience.[44]
From here the adept can return to awake consciousness having sent selfhood to
oblivion. In terms of consciousness there is no choice but to be reborn again.
The
above commentary hopefully reveals that eternity can be experienced by Taoist
and Christian practitioners while they live and without the necessity of a
miracle. Nevertheless, the discipline and rigors of internal alchemy
obligate intense devotion. Ascension of consciousness is the key and actual
ascension of the body lies in the territory of the improbable.
Self
sacrifice: The Body
Annihilation
of the self is a prerequisite for obtaining the immortality complex.[45].
This occurs at multiple levels, which include the physical, emotional and
psychological, family and community. Physical sacrifice is a key feature of the
Taoist tradition. Paradoxically it follows a period of rejuvenation and
prioritization of health. Self-sacrifice includes periods of prolonged fasting
or strange diets[46]. There is denial of other
basic needs such as sexuality, safety and gratification of the senses.
Blake
gives his position on the body:
What
is the life of man?…
Is
it meat and drink? Is not the body more than Raiment? What is Mortality but
things related to the body, which Dies What is Immortality but things related to
the spirit, which lives in Eternally! [47]
Both
disciplines saw this self-sacrifice not in punitive terms but more so a
reflection of their love of the spiritual worlds and eternity
over mundane earthly experience.
This
is also taken further with ingestion of an alchemical elixir. This could be seen
as a ritual self-sacrifice as “the elixir was highly poisonous and would be
swallowed upon receiving a summons from the immortals to take up a position in
the heavenly hierarchy above”[48].
Others saw the ingestion as a test of the potential disciples willingness to
follow the path[49] and to be taught “The
Way”. So there seems to have been other reasons beyond efficacy that these
elixirs were ingested. Arguing against the efficacy of ancient formulas from a
scientific viewpoint is beyond the
scope of this essay.. Despite many
Taoist practices being used in contemporary society, the practice of ingesting heavy metal
elixirs has been abandoned. Elixirs have been used by other traditions such as
the Rosicrucians (16C ) and followers of Paracelsus
(16C Doctor ). These traditions also have followers today however again use of
ancient elixirs is extremely rare.
In
Christianity Jesus of Nazareth modeled himself for those who would follow with
the ultimate self-annihilation of self sacrifice through the crucifixion. Too
numerous to mention are the christian martyrs who have forsaken their lives in
Jesus’ name. Death guarantees loss of life, nothing more. Life after death has
been argued since man initially roamed this planet. Again, its detailed
discussion is beyond the scope of this essay. For the moment we can assume that
thought after death is only a possibility. That life after death
in Heaven has been used by religions for political puposes to control or
appease the masses to tolerate a life without heaven on earth. It would be a
pity to miss out on experiencing eternity because of a destructive political
agenda.
The
ego and the emotions.
“
Annihilate the selfhood in me: be thou all my life”,[50] said Blake to his saviour
Jesus Christ. Blake saw Jesus as the centre point in all his writings on the
path to immortality.
Blake in The Four Zoas saw the psyche of man divided
into four parts. These parts were
each portrayed by a mythical character. They
included Los the creative urge, Tharmas represented the body and its
senses, Luvah represented love and finally the character Urizen portrayed
intellect. Each character sought dominion over the other in order to control the
psyche. Each Zoa would cast off
emanations which would further complicate matters to such an extent that there
remained little or no memory of the harmony of eternity from whence they came.
It was only with the appearance of
Jesus that they put aside their own egos and desire for domination. Jesus
would also trigger a memory
of their origin before the “fall”. This final reconciliation reflects the
necessary adjustments for the personality of the mystic in order to seek the
eternals. Each part of the psyche learns to self sacrifice their old ideals for
a purpose beyond the self. Where: “Such are the Laws of Eternity, that each
shall mutually annihilate himself for the common Good”[51]
Campbell
describes a similar path when he states,
You
go past fear and desire, past the pairs of opposites …into transcendence. This
is an essential experience of mystical realization. You die to your flesh and
are born to the spirit of your identity.[52]
Campbell
here, describes transcending opposite emotions, which occur at a level of the
flesh to a higher level of understanding -
that of spiritual cognition.
The
Taoists were also keen on forsaking the ego to move beyond the emotions. Li Rong
from the seventh century states: “As soon as there is a personal identity, the
hundred worries compete to arise and the five desires (of the senses) hurry to
make their claims.”[53]
Parents
and Society:
Maturation
of consciousness and self-reliance of the person goes beyond parents and the
community. Its as if one by one the attachments to the earthly plane are
discarded. Blake declares his relationship to his mother in the poem to Tirzah:
… Though mother of my mortal part
With
Cruelty didst mould my heart
And
with false deceiving tears
Didst
bind my Nostrils, Eyes and Ears
Didst
close my tongue in senseless clay
And
we to Mortal Life Betray
The
Death of Jesus set me Free
Then
what do I have to do with thee!….”[54]
The
experience of immortality occurs with the senses and organs. Blake claims these
are imprisoned by parental upbringing. Here Blake seems to contradict the
Bible’s teaching which is impregnated with instructions such as , “….Honour
thy Father and thy Mother”[55].
Rejection of family and also society was of theme of the Taoist path to
immortality. The following is taken from the Five Numinous Treasures in
the Zhentong period ( 1436 –49)
On
a particular day in the calendrical cycle the adept is to
recline with his head to the west and meditate on him being a dead person. After
doing this for a while, he is then to remove his clothes, leave them on a spot
where he was lying, and proceed directly to the mountains. Once he has reached a
safely distant place, he is to change his surname and byname and is no to return
home. Meanwhile people back home will perceive that he is a dead person where he
had lain; only later will the corpse suddenly disappear.[56]
This
passage reveals a rite of passage in the adept’s life. There is rejection of
all things including one’s name. Of particular interest is the similarities
that could be drawn with the supposed bodily Ascension of Christ. There are some
theories that Jesus did not die but merely
escaped from the tomb. The Taoists
would call this “ escape via the corpse simulacrum”. The only difficult part
to believe is simulating a dead corpse after the adept has absconded -as this
obligates a magical illusion. Certainly however, it could be possible to
simulate a corpse while the practitioner is still on the ground, with the aid of
drugs or advanced meditation techniques.
The
adept now sacrifices, the body, selfhood, parents and society. After
reorganizing the emotions and the various faculties of the psyche such as
intellect, bodily desires, love and creativity, the adept is ready to embrace a
new personality and world. This new personality belongs to Jung’s archetypes
or Campbell’s, “ Mythical Hero”. For the Christians it is Jesus of
Nazareth or the Egyptians it is Horus[57].
It is not Jesus of Nazareth dependant. For the Taoist there are 100’s
of Immortals to live your life by, but the Ba Hsien or 8 Immortals are the best
known.[58]
The individual is replaced by the Archetype. Embarking on a journey of the
“Mythical Hero”, one experiences eternity. “Death of self” here is
symbolic and not to be taken literally.
No
discussion of Immortality as a state of mind, would be complete without
discussion of the subconscious and dreams.
Joseph Campbell states:
Heaven
and hell are within us and the Gods are within us…. They are a magnified dream
and dreams are a manifestation in image form of the energies in conflict with
one another. That is what myth is.[59]
Not
only do we have a description of the territory of dreams but we start to tie in
our Taoist paradigm which relies on energies as the fundamental link between
earthly existence and eternity. Western philosophy relies more so on words,
meditation relies on energies and sleep relies on archetypal images. All play a
part in the experience but each individual may have their preferred modality, as
each individual has there preferred sense faculty to realise the experience of
the immortal worlds.
Campbell[60]
continues further in his eloquent description of the relationship between sleep
eternity and the unconscious with a
Venn diagram[61]. He uses the circle to
describe the soul or total
consciousness available to the individual. A line, or barrier, divides awake
consciousness from the unconscious. To glimpse eternity involves expanding
one’s consciousness or using the diagram – lowering the barrier. Sleep lies
in the unconscious. Blake
depicted a subset of the state of Sleep as “Beulah”. It is a moody, moonlit
repose where immortals visit. Eden is one step above Beulah and closest to
Eternity. In Milton he states:
|
“Like
as a Polypus that vegetates beneath the deep! |
|
They
saw his Shadow vegetated underneath the Couch |
|
Of
death: for when he enterd into his Shadow: Himself: |
|
His
real and immortal Self; was as appeard to those |
|
Who
dwell in immortality, as One sleeping on a couch |
|
Of
gold; and those in immortality gave forth their Emanations |
|
Like
Females of sweet beauty, to guard round him & to feed |
|
His
lips with food of Eden in his cold and dim repose! |
|
But
to himself he seemd a wanderer lost in dreary night.” [62] |
Continuing
with our model, the adept must lower the barrier between awake consciousness and
the dream world, then through Beulah to Eden and finally eternity. Alternatively
one could allow the unconscious worlds to rise up over the barrier. Either way,
we are after a new awake conscious vision, which reveals eternity. It is the
glow, the radiance; it is the loss of solidity or Newtonian Intellectual
outlook. We are after Blake’s fourfold vision:
Now I a
fourfold vision see
And
fourfold vision is given to me
T’is
fourfold in my supreme delight
And
threefold in soft Beulah’s night
And
twofold Always.
May
God us keep
From
single vision & Newton’s Sleep[63]
Here,
single vision is the vision of the intellectual person who sees life obeying
Newtonian laws. It is dry, solid and definitely not poetic. Twofold vision
includes the rising up of human virtues over things. Our surrounds here become
embellished with a glow of man’s positive emotion such as courage, gentleness,
kindness, love and fairness. Threefold incorporates Beulah’s soft delights and
archetypal forms sprinkled with dream dust. Eternity is starting to permeate the
here and now. Fourfold is mystical ecstasy ( Entasy if we also include Taoist
visions), Heaven or immortality.[64]
Therefore
the adept may willingly expose the dream world with various techniques such as
“Lucid Dreaming[65]”.
In the Taoist tradition these sleep exercises were popular since the Song
period (1127 – 1279AD). In “the Sleep of the Perfected “ by Chen Tuan:[66]
An
ordinary person eats to satiation and then takes plenty of rest. He or she is
mainly worried that the food should not be too rich, eating when he feels hungry
and sleeping when he feels tired. His snore is audible all over the place. Yet
then at night, when he should be sound asleep, he wakes up unaccountably. This
is because fame and gain, sounds and sights agitate his spirit and
consciousness; sweet wine and fried mutton muddle his mind and will. This is the
sleep of ordinary folk.
But
I practice the sleep of the perfected…
I
call the Gods of Jia and Ding to adjust time…
Then
my spirit leaves to ascend to the Nine Palaces above,
Frolics
in the sky’s azure ness…
I
float around with the gentle winds
I
inhale the flowery essence of the moon
Superior
beings do not dream
They
sport with the Immortals
The
perfected never sleep
They
float up with the clouds”.
He
we see the world of dreams made conscious. Though not made obvious, lucid
dreamers are aware that they are in the dream and can direct activity through
conscious control. At times the distinction between dreaming and meditation
becomes blurred. The barrier between the conscious and the unconscious has
dissolved. We can take our model
further so that the dreamer connects with others. This could do this by allowing
multiple circles overlapping a larger sea - the collective unconscious, which
generates the archetypal energies.
In
orthodox Christianity there are some references to the use of dreams and
visions. In the Old Testament the Lord says:
“And it shall come to
pass afterward, that I will pour out my spirit upon all flesh. And your sons and
your daughters shall prophecy, your old men shall dream dreams, your young men
shall see visions”.[67]
This
implies that God can be experienced through dreams. Then if we take Aquinas’s
position that only God is immortal then we could argue that orthodox
Christianity is in agreement with this dream model.
And it goes without saying
that many people have visions of Christ in their dreams which by Campbell’s
definition would be an archetypal dream or a dream of the Christ within.[68]
The
successful adept learns to successfully open up the eternal worlds of the
unconscious set on a background of maturation of the personality and growth of
consciousness. The barrier has been lowered and the individual has not become
disorientated or psychotic by the tremendous chaotic energy and knowledge of the
unconscious. We get a glimpse of the disorientation of letting down the barrier
with Chuang Tzu the eminent Taoist philosopher:
Chuang
Chou ( Chuang Tzu’s personal name) dreamed that he was a butterfly, flying
about enjoying itself. It did not know that it was Chuang Chou. Suddenly he
awoke, and veritably was Chuang Chou again. He did not know whether it was
Chuang Chou dreaming that he was a butterfly, or whether it was the butterfly
dreaming that it was Chuang Chou.[69]
This
reveals the disorientation that the adept is exposed to. One gets a sense of the
brittleness of sanity in this case. The dream world overtakes the conscious
world and is so strong that distinction between the two worlds becomes blurred. Yet in the successful practitioner, eventually the mind
stabilises and moves on.
‘
The
adept now is open to the dream world. The practitioner may use their dreams for
prophecy and solution finding. And as far as Society goes, “if your private
myth, your dream, happens to coincide with that of society, you are in good
accord with your group”.[70]If
all levels of consciousness line up the with the immortal Gods, sleep and
ones actions in society, then the individual is in a state of grace.
Harmonious knowledge of Immortality therefore implies a life service to the
community. The individual becomes
famous and often their name is carried on beyond their lifetime. Which brings us
back where we started. We have made a circle where the adept left society only
to find that the knowledge of the eternal worlds has brought him/her back again
to serve. The adept gave up any desire for fame and position and paradoxically
is given it. This alignment gains support of people around him as if there is a
bigger story to be told. That each of these characters is merely playing a part
already predetermined. Schopenhauer states: “Our lives were the
features of one great dream of a single dreamer in which all the dream
characters dream, too. So that everything links.”[71]
Conclusion:
In
conclusion, I have shown a tangible path on how Immortality can be experienced
as a state of mind. That mystical experience of eternity is the key to
immortality. Various descriptions of Blakean, Christian and Taoist states of
immortality were described. These were consistent with Stace’s criteria of a
mystical experience.
I
described a tangible path whereby an adept could experience immortality. This
included physical training, health maintenance, working with chi and
internal alchemy. The adept often needed to let go of attachments to
parents and society. The stages of internal alchemy included fusion, rebirth,
formation of a spiritual body and ascension. The path encompassed growth of
consciousness, which included sacrifice of earthly desires, balancing psychic
drives and letting go to an immortal archetype such as Christ. Finally there was
the opening up of the immortal worlds by lowering the barrier between awake
consciousness and the dream worlds.
Some
arguments against death, bodily ascension and the use of elixirs for immortality
were made. Refuting these with scientific evidence was not discussed.
Use of Jesus of Nazareth alone as the only way to experience immortality
was negated while using the archetypal Christ was supported. Finally there was
some discussion around the alignment of the successful adept who experiences
immortality and his actions within society. Exposure to immortality may obviate
actions worthy of fame beyond death of the individual. These actions may include
sharing of the adept’s realisations with society as a philosopher.
So
it is apt to sing the praises of the accomplished philosopher - the
practitioner who has completed the hero’s journey within - with a passage from
Manly Hall, founder of Philosophical Research Society in Los
Angeles in the 1930’s[72].
While man’s physical body
resides with him and mingles with the heedless throng, it is difficult to
conceive of man as actually inhabiting a world of his own – a world which he
has discovered by lifting himself into communion with the profundities of his
own nature. Man may live two lives. One is a struggle from the womb to the tomb.
Its span is measured by man’s own creation – time. Well may it be called the
unheeding life. The other life is from realisation to infinity. It begins
with understanding, its duration is forever, and upon the plane of eternity it
is consummated. This is called the philosophic life. Philosophers are not
born nor do they die; for once having achieved the realisation of immortality,
they are immortal. Having once communed with Self, they realise that within
there is an immortal foundation that will not pass away. Upon this living,
vibrant base – Self – they erect a civilisation, which will endure after the
sun, the moon and the stars have ceased to be. The fool lives but for today, the
philosopher lives forever.
![]()
[1] Paley, Morton & David Bindman, Eds. William Blake Jerusalem, The Emanation of the Giant Albion, The William Blake Trust/ Princeton University Press, 1991 New Jersey. 71:17
[2] Campany, Robert, Tr. To Live as Long as Heaven and Earth A Translation and Study of Ge Hong’s Tradition of Divine Transcendents, University of California Press, Berkeley, 2002. p 3
[3] 2nd Century BC – 2C AD
[4]
The term "Taoist Canon", originally referred to the collections of
scriptures housed in each Taoist monastery. It later designated
imperially-sponsored collections of Taoist texts kept in the imperial
libraries. The Taoist Canon of the Ming period -- the Zhengtong Daozang
or Taoist Canon of the Zhengtong Era -- is the last of these
collections and the only one that is extant today. There are now multiple Canons that cover motile
topics of longevity, immortality, internal and external alchemy, talismans
and commentaries on classic texts.
Jordan,
David K., Taoist Canon, last modified 20/2/05, http://weber.ucsd.edu/~dkjordan/chin/hbcanondaw-u.html
viewed 22/4/05.
[5]
Master Mantak Chia runs the Universal Tao Centre in Chiang Mai Thailand. He
has over 1000 Instructors and has written
over 20 books. Website: http://www.universal-tao.com/master_chia.html
[6]
see appendix 1
[8] Blakes Eternal forms probably originated from Plato. Damon, S Foster p. 280
[9]Daniels, Michael, Making Sense of Mysticism,(on line), available from www.mdani.demon.co.uk p 1-24, (Sep 2004). p.8.Originally published: 2003 Transpersonal Psychology Review, 7 (1) 39 – 55.
[10] Daniels, Michael.003, Making Sense of Mysticism,(on line), available from www.mdani.demon.co.uk p 1-24, (Sep 2004). p.8. (Originally published: 2003 Transpersonal Psychology Review, 7 (1) 39 – 55.)
[11] Damon, S Foster. 1979, A Blake Dictionary, Thames and Hudson, London. p.114
[12] Blake, Jerusalem 38:25
[13] Blake, Jerusalem 38:53
[14] Damon, S Foster p. 129
[15] Campbell, Joseph & Bill Moyers, The Power of Myth, Broadway Books, New York 2001. p. 10
[16] Campbell, Joseph & Bill Moyers, The Power of Myth, Broadway Books, New York 2001. p. 107
[17] Wyld, Henry The Universal Dictionary of the English Language, Routeledge & Kegan Paul, London 1989 p583
[18] Kohn, Livia, “ Transcending Personality from Ordinary to Immortal Life”, Taoist Resources 2. No. 2 1990 pp 2
[19] Kohn Eternal Life in Taoist Mysticism p. 631
[20] Kohn, Transcending personality from Ordinary to Immortal Life”. amalgamates the following texts from Tao Canon: Sima Chenzhen’s “The Essential Meaning of the Absorption of Chi”, Tianyin Zi ( Transformation of the five stages of purification, seclusion, meditation, trance and liberation ), Discourse on Sitting in Oblivion, Wu Yun’s Spirit Immortality Can be Learned and further works by Sun Si Mao: Visualisation of Spirit and Refinement of Chi and the Nei Guan Jing ( Scripture on Inner Observation ). p. 3-4
[21] Jayasuria, Anton Clinical Acupuncture 11Ed, Chandrakanthi Press, SriLanka 1985.p914
[22] Chia, Mantak, Greatest Kan and Li, Gathering the Cosmic Light Universal Tao Publications, Chiang Mai Thailand, 2002.
[23] Chia, Mantak, Fusion of the Five Elements, Universal Tao Publications, Chiang Mai Thailand, 2002.
[24] Chi is used to describe the sensation of lifeforce in or outside the body. Other terms used in other traditions include energy, pneuma or prana.
[25] Wilhelm, Richard & Carl Jung (Commentary) The Secret of the Golden Flower. A Chinese Book of Life. Routledge & Kegan Paul, London 1975 p. 108
[26] Chia, Mantak, Cosmic Fusion of the Eight Forces, Universal Tao Publications, Chiang Mai Thailand, 2002. p. 13
[27] Blake, Jerusalem 99: 1-4
[28] The one is a term used by mystics to imply the experience of unification of all phenomena.
[29] Larsen, Douglas Christian “the Soul” from www.homestead.com/dclwold/soul.html viewed 24/4/05 p. 2
[30] St. John 3:1-13 Holy
Bible
[31] Taoism is often translated as “The Way” JC Cooper titled his book Taoism The Way of the Mystic. Jesus also said that “I am the way….” John 14:6 Holy Bible
[32] see appendix
[33] Blake, To Tirzah, Songs of Innocence and Experience Plate 52 last line.
[34] Furthermore Taoist fundamentalists believe in consciousness after death. Whereas in Christianity there is mixed ideas. Certainly lay people would believe in spirit consciousness in heaven. Platonists would believe in immortality through memory of the immortal soul. However in Psalm 146 “ His breath (spirit) goeth forth, he returneth to his earth; in that very day his thoughts perish”
[35] Damon p. 300
[36] Kohn,
Eternal life in Taoist Mysticism p629
[37] Kohn, Eternal life in Taoist Mysticism p629
[38] Blake, Jerusalem 13:34
[39] Blake, Jerusalem 14:1
[40]
Fung, Yu lan Chuang Tzu A New Selected Translation with an Exposition of the
Philosophy of Kuo Hsiang, Foreign Language Press, Beijing, 1989. p. 48
[41] Kohn, Eternal life in Taoist Mysticism p. 635
[42] British & Foreign Bible Society, The Holy Bible, Cambridge University Press, London, 1942
[43] Damon, Foster p 129
[44] Daniels, Making Sense of Mysticism p.8
[45] Kohn, Eternal Life in Taoist Mysticism. Kohn uses this term to describe both the personality or consciousness growth as well as the mystic experience in isolation. I will use this term hereafter to imply the same.
[46] In Ge Hongs hagiographies of “Successful Ascendants” diets included total avoidance of grains ( Bo He & Ge Xuan), only dried jujubes ( Dong Feng) and only asparagus root ( Dong Feng). Campany, Robert, Tr. To Live as Long as Heaven and Earth A Translation and Study of Ge Hong’s Tradition of Divine Transcendents, University of California Press, Berkeley, 2002. p. 133
[47] Blake Jerusalem, To the Christians Plate 77
[48] Kohn, Eternal Life in Taoist Mysticism. p. 625
[49] Strickman cited in Kohn, Eternal Life in Taoist Mysticism. p. 625
[50] Blake, Jerusalem
5:22
[51] Blake, Milton 38:55
[52] Campbell, The Power of
Myth p.107
[53] Kohn, Transcending Personality from Ordinary to Immortal Life p. 12
[54] Blake Songs of Innocence and Experience 52
[55] St Luke 18:20
[56] Campany, Robert, Tr. To Live as Long as Heaven and Earth A Translation and Study of Ge Hong’s Tradition of Divine Transcendents, University of California Press, Berkeley, 2002. p. 54
[57] Simpson, Gavin “Another Former Priest Stirs the Religious Pot” Book Review of “The Pagan Christ: Is Blind Faith Killing Christianity, by Tom Harpur (Allen & Unwin)in The Australian Newspaper” Book Reviews March 5th 2005
[58] Li Tie Guai. Chungli Ch'uan, Lan Ts'ai-he, Chang Kuo-lao, Ho Hsien-ku, Lu Dong Bin, Han Hsiang-tzu, Ts'ao Kuo-ch'iu from Dr Ming Pei, China is Beautiful viewed on http://www.chinapage.com/8-immortal.html
[59] Campbell, The Power of Myth p. 39
[60] Campbell, The Power of Myth p 142
[61] see appendix 2
[63] Blake in letter to Butts 22 Nov 1802 p 436 Damon.
[64]
Important
to this essay is this vision achievable by all or just a chosen few?
Certainly Campany in part one states that many believed
successful ascension was predetermined prior to birth and individuals
were forewarned by special birthmarks. Blake became a visionary from
childhood. See : Campany, “To Live as Long as Heaven and
Earth” part one the
Nature of Religion in Ge Hongs Works
[65] Lucid dreaming (also known as dream consciousness or conscious dreaming) is dreaming while being aware that you are dreaming. To actually have a lucid dream you merely have to recognize that you are dreaming. Medbury, Kathy, Jayne Gackenbach Ed. Spiritwatch, A Comparative Study of Nightmares, Lucid dreaming and Archetypal dreams as significant to the dreamers life, viewed 2/4/05. p.1
[66] Kohn, Taoist Experience, An Anthology, p272
[67] Joel 2 verse 28
[68] Campbell, Power of Myth p 42
[69] Fung, Yu lan Chuang Tzu A New Selected Translation with an Exposition of the Philosophy of Kuo Hsiang, Foreign Language Press, Beijing, 1989. p 55
[70] Campbell, Power of Myth p 40
[71] Campbell, Power of Myth p 229 from Schopenhauer’s essay :On an apparent Intention in the Fate of an Individual,
[72] Hall, Manly P. The Secret teachings of All Ages, The Philosophical Research Society, Inc, LA, 1977. p CCIV
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