___If we feel not our spiritual death, how should we dream of invoking life?
Claude de St.-Martin
_
__As taught and exemplified by Socrates,
philosophic self-study during life is an integral part of a continual
preparation for the moment of death. A fruitful source for study and reflection
is the Bhagavad Gita. Robert Crosbie suggests, in his remarks on the eighth
chapter, that there is a real danger that fruits of effort will not carry over
to the next life. The measure of difficulty in truly availing oneself of the
teaching is identical to that involved in becoming immortal. Those for whom the
teaching becomes a reality are able to reverse the false image given by the
maya of the life process and by the moulds of interaction of men in terms of
the reality they assign to the finite, the ever-fleeting and the false. They
are able to reverse it so completely that they see with the eyes of pity and
participate in the illusions of men with a constant inward awareness of Mahat
and cosmic Eros. Such men display an existential consciousness of immortality
which goes beyond external tokens and marks, beyond forms, words and concepts.
It is that consciousness which ultimately must become the basis by which one
thinks, and therefore by which one lives, and each one must cultivate this
independently. Few individuals will reach that point in life before the moment
of death where they have gained the power to slay their lunar form at will.
After death every human being has to linger in a state in which there is a
purgatorial dissipation of the lunar form made up of illusions, fears and
anxieties engendered during life. All of these constitute the substance of what
people call 'living' and 'the self', and to dissipate them in life means to have
periods where one can see right through oneself. Most human beings are blocked
in this because they have developed the tendency of seeing through others more
than they see through themselves.
__On
the Path, one is not concerned to see through anything in anyone else without
an appropriate compassion that can only be real if based upon knowledge gained
by having broken through comparable illusions in oneself. One must first build
into daily life an awareness that negates illusions, sifting and selecting
between what is quintessential and what is not in every experience. Until this
becomes a steady current, one is not going to be able to dissipate the lunar
form at will before death, but for those who have done this, dying is like the
discarding of clothes. Life in the ordinary sense has no hold over them and
therefore their coming into the world is not involuntary. This is very
difficult for most human beings to understand. As they go through a painful
process of acting in one direction, reacting in another direction, they may
suddenly hope that by some confession or ritual they can wipe out the past, but
since that is impossible, the wheel of life is extraordinarily painful,
monotonous and meaningless for them. They keep being propelled back into life,
repeating the same oscillations of illusion. This is graphically described by
Plato in the Myth of Er. There is a sense in which conventionally good people
choose the life that they envied. If their goodness is caught up in
appearances, they are going to be misled by external trappings. To be above the
realm of appearances is to see to the very core of life, to see the essential
justice of all things, and to be able to handle such insight one will need true
compassion. To exemplify this authentically and continuously is in fact to be
able to ceaselessly negate one's own self and to see that self as being
ultimately linked up with every other being on every plane. At its root it is
no-thing; it is not conditioned, it is not in the process, it is beyond.
__This
is a long and difficult process, but given the mystery of the ego, people do
not really know why they failed in the past when they made such attempts and
they have no right to despair in advance. They do not know, through what seem
to be small steps taken with integrity, that great results might accrue to
them. Sometimes the first earnest steps may be taken very late in life.
Fortunate is the man who begins this very early in life. But whether early or
late, it can be tested in relation to reduction of fears and an elevation of
all encounters with other beings. The Theosophical Movement seeks to maximize
the opportunity for human beings to gain strength, support, inspiration and
instruction in working upon the maintenance of conscious continuity of
awareness. That awareness helps them to develop an eye for essentials in daily
life, enabling them to distinguish the everlasting from the ever-fleeting and
not to mistake the ephemeral for the enduring, not to mistake appearances and
forms for archetypal realities. To do this again and again and to make it
ultimately a line of life's meditation is the only constructive way in which a
person can prepare for the moment of death. This is to put the issue in
psychological terms. It could also be put in terms of the sound that a human
being can utter at the moment of death. That sound can be chosen only in a
limited sense, because the whole of life is going to determine a dominant
thought and feeling, and these will determine what sound is uttered at the
moment of death. The line of life's meditation is reflected in the particular
aperture in the human body through which the life-current withdraws. A very
wise being who looks at a corpse will see straightaway through which orifice
life departed, and hence will know a great deal about the consciousness of the
soul.
__The wisest beings during life gather up all their energies, like the shy
and watchful tortoise, into that which is within and above them. At the moment
of death they will have a sublime gnostic experience which is an affirmation of
immortality, a joyous discarding of all awareness of conditions. Having put
themselves beyond conditions, they are able to experience not only immortal
longings, but through the continuity of unconditioned cosmic Eros and through
the continuity of an unconditional awareness of Mahat, they experience
spiritual freedom. This detachment may look at times austere, but it is
combined with an inexhaustible compassion and immense vitality. If they live
right, without being caught in the process, every burden lies lightly upon
them. They are constantly stripping away even as other men are draining
themselves in the gardens of illusion. They constantly affirm on behalf of all
the Upanishadic invocation: "Lead me from the unreal to the real. Lead me
from darkness into light. Lead me from death to immortality." When one can
make a positive inner affirmation of the Divine within, this becomes a potent
current of thought and feeling, energy and life. Without words, all one's
actions will convey to others a sense that behind the games of life there is a
deeper reality of pure joy in which there is dignity to every individual. As a
preliminary training in making this invocation, every night before going to
sleep one should renounce all identification with the body and the brain, with
form, with all likes and dislikes, with all memories and anticipations. One
should invoke the same affirmation upon rising, as well as at other chosen times
and spontaneously whenever possible. If it is to be meaningful in the context
of a universe governed by the boundless ideation of Mahat and suffused by the
beneficence of cosmic Eros, this invocation must be made not only for oneself,
but for all.