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Massage Your Mind!: Are You Living In A Cave?
Author: Maya Talisman Frost
When I was three years old, I had an experience I’ll never forget. My mother had just prepared lunch for my brother and me, and a neighbor lady came running over, breathless, telling my mother some news. Mom went right to the television and turned it on. This was unusual—she rarely watched TV. She set up the ironing board in the living room(!) so that she could iron while watching. Stranger still, she seemed to have forgotten all about naptime. My brother and I sat on the couch quietly, hoping that if we didn’t draw attention to ourselves she wouldn’t put us to bed. We needn’t have worried—Mom was completely caught up in what was on the television.
From the couch, we watched the TV as a scene was played over and over…a man in a car with his wife, and then sudden pandemonium. I couldn’t make much sense of it. When the man on the TV was talking, there was a big photo of the man in the car behind him. In fact, whenever anyone was talking, there was that same photo of the man with the thick hair and toothy smile. My mother kept ironing, steam rising from my father’s shirts as she said, over and over, “Oh, God….oh, my GOD!”
And that is how, for the next ten years of my life, I had an image of God as John F. Kennedy in a long white robe. Even when I realized what I was picturing, and remembered why I had that association, I couldn’t shake the image. Even now, forty years later, I still find that mental picture popping up when I least expect it!
It’s fascinating to look at how we learn and what our minds store as knowledge. Do you have a JFK story? We all have stories in our heads of the way things happened or how details fit together. The interesting thing is that they are, indeed, simply stories.
Fortunately, there’s nothing harmful about my childhood image of God. I didn’t start worshipping the Kennedy family or anything like that. The entire fields of psychology and psychiatry are based on our early associations and the stories we tell ourselves about the way things are. And what stories! We create our own histories in our heads, and sometimes it takes a great deal of counseling (or our own application of philosophy) to remodel our stories so that they help us see the world in a more realistic way.
“People can die of mere imagination.” --Chaucer
Plato had an interesting way of thinking about false beliefs and illusions. He developed an elaborate image of a cave in which all people are chained to the floor and watching shadows on the wall. He described a man who, escaping his chains, becomes the first to venture outside the cave. He comes to realize that the shadows cast upon the cave walls from the light of the fire bear little resemblance to the outside world. He sees for the first time that cave life is an illusion, and he races back to free his cavemates and show them the real world.
Plato goes on to say that this is exactly what a philosopher does. When he tells his cavemates his strange tale, he is cheered by some and rejected by others. Some cave folks are just fine in that cave, thank you very much. They don’t need any other reality. Others are intrigued but hesitant, breaking free of their chains and stepping cautiously into the sunlight. The philosopher’s role is to continue in the difficult but necessary work of freeing fellow captives and introducing them to a brighter world. His task is to help us wake up and recognize the limitations we’ve constructed for ourselves.
We tend to like our illusions. It’s a pain to question them. It takes too much time, and then it messes up our carefully crafted ideas about life. Better to just sit there with our chains, staring at the cave wall. We don’t think it’s so bad…some of those shadows are kind of nice. That fire feels pretty good. These chains, once you get used to them, are barely noticeable. And so it is in modern life.
Actually, we’ve been putting ourselves in chains since the beginning of human existence. In Hindu philosophy (and many would agree that Hinduism and Buddhism are more like philosophies than religions), there are many allusions to illusion. My favorite is the story of Narada and maya, or “illusion” (although I personally prefer the alternate definition of maya as “creative power”).
Narada was a great sage who came to Vishnu. In Hinduism, there are three aspects of Brahma, or godhead: Brahma is the creator, Vishnu is the preserver, and Shiva is the destroyer of evil. So, one day, Narada asks Vishnu, “What is the secret of your maya?” Vishnu promptly throws him in a pool. As soon as he enters the water, Narada becomes a princess born to a wealthy family, and as such, he experiences the entire life of the little girl. She ends up marrying a prince and going to live with him in his kingdom. They become fabulously wealthy, but then their kingdom is attacked and everything is destroyed. The prince is killed, and the princess, as a dutiful mourning wife, throws herself on the funeral pyre of her cremated husband. This is considered the ultimate act of self-sacrifice. Suddenly, Narada wakes up to find that he is being pulled out of the pool by Vishnu. At that moment, Vishnu asks him, “For whom are you weeping?”
This is the whole concept of illusion in a nutshell. We are caught up in a story that seems so skillful and perfect that we can’t help but believe that it is real. This is the Hindu dramatic idea of the cosmos as an endless game of hide-and-seek. Now you see it, now you don’t. It’s here, and it’s gone, and it’s all a big game, anyway.
Babies have an intuitive, instinctual understanding of this. Every baby knows the peek-a-boo game….hide your face behind a book and peek around it…BOO! Giggles galore. The here-and-gone concept is universal, whether it’s realizing that solid materials are actually composed of different elements with spaces between molecules or seeing clearly that a rotating ceiling fan appears solid even though we understand that there is a moving blade creating the illusion of solid form. Hide-and-seek, peek-a-boo, it’s all pretty profound when you think about it.
“Understanding the atom is a childish game in comparison with the understanding of the childish game.” --Albert Einstein
But let’s go back further. The Hindu philosophy of consciousness is very close to what Freud called “oceanic consciousness.” A baby comes into the world having spent months floating in the ocean of the womb. She does not distinguish between her own experiences and that of the external world. (I have four daughters, so I figure I’ve earned the right to stick with the female pronoun here!) To a baby, it is all one—the universe as one single organism.
As a baby gets older, she learns the concept of being separate from the world. We are quick to hasten this process. We begin to focus on naming objects and directing attention to details instead of the whole. Young children start asking questions about things like the color of the sky or the shapes between branches, and we direct their attention to whatever we feel is more significant. They quickly learn what is expected, what is important, what is common in our understanding of the world. After a while, we each forget the perspective we’d had when everything was a wonder. And before we know it, we’ve got a life full of ideas, habits, beliefs and stories that we share with countless others.
Of course, then we wake up one morning around age 40 and start questioning everything. Well, there’s no sense sticking to that time-honored schedule. You can start questioning anytime! In fact, your best bet is to recognize right off that this whole thing is one big fantastic charade. Recognize it, laugh at it, celebrate it, and keep an eye on the exit. Better yet, sneak out there whenever you get a chance!
You can always come back inside and hang out with your cavemates and watch those shadows on the cave walls. It's safe. It'll always be there.
Prepare now to tiptoe outside. Break your chains. Shake your head enough times to loosen some of those stories that have been filling your mind for most of your life. And head for the light outside the cave.
What's out there? Plenty of philosophers just like you--those who have broken free and see the world and reality in a whole new way. Life is rich, full, and more meaningful. Come join the thinkers. There are plenty of us waiting to greet you!
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Maya Talisman Frost is a gifted teacher, facilitator and mediator. She has been massaging minds since 1983. Her seminars are offered in a number of cities in the Northwest as well as California, British Columbia and Mexico. This article is an excerpt from her free 12-week "Massage Your Mind!" online course. To sign up, visit www.massageyourmind.com and start celebrating your cerebrum!
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