Step 7
As this series has unfolded, one respondent pointed out that the seven spiritual
paths are more accurately described as levels or stages of spiritual growth.
That seems fair to me, with this caveat. A person may have little idea of what
spiritual stage he has reached; it is perilously difficult to judge such things
either from the inside or outside. But a path is consciously chosen. Having
chosen it, we may
become confused along the way, change course, or give up for a time.
There is considerable flexibility in these matters, given all the complexities of human nature. But a path nonetheless represents a decision to live a certain way with a certain vision in mind.
Another respondent asks what it means to say that "life is like a dream." Actually, it can mean many things. The dream can be a metaphor or a passing mood. It can be a statement about detachment fro the material world. It can denote that the mind has found a new, creative relationship to physical reality. Finally, it can describe a state of awareness in which the subtle aspects of reality dominate over the physical. Each person may find that experiencing any or all of these things is possible in one lifetime.
Step #7 -- The End of All Seeking, Unity
It has become increasingly clear on Paths #4-6 that the physical world is
projected from consciousness. The source of consciousness feels at first like
"me." I am at the center of my own thoughts. Gradually it becomes
apparent, however, that consciousness has its own source,
which is sometimes referred to as "It." Whether we use the label God
or not becomes less and less important. The state of duality is temporary, because
on Path #7, a person feels no separation between self and source. This is unity
consciousness, the goal of all seeking.
Several things make it the goal . First and foremost is the end of struggle and suffering. As long as life remains a struggle, we experience fear and resistance. This denotes a state of separation, a lack of mastery over the events in one's life. In unity consciousness there is no suffering because one exists entirely in the self. There can still be physical pain, but the mind doesn't interpret this as anguish or fear. Secondly, someone in unity is detached from ego concerns. There is no longer a drive to maximize pleasure, to acquire material goods, or to resist others. Third, the sense of being an isolated individual has departed. In its place, one experiences "being here" as a fulfilled state.
The end of seeking is a huge achievement, but it needs to be remembered
that we all have flashes of "being here," a calm inner state of satisfaction
without restlessness or pain of any kind. Path #7 stabilizes this feeling and
makes it permanent. Life doesn't stop here. The end of seeking is not the same
as the end of experience. What lies ahead is more growth, but instead of being
individual growth, it is more like being part of the expanding universe. One
feels the growth of awareness throughout creation. This begins on a less than
cosmic scale. At the outset of unity, awareness is still identified with human
perspectives, which is why Christ and Buddha, for example, speak so compassionately
about the entire human race. But we also know from more ancient spiritual documents
that the human perspective can expand to the point where a great Vedic seer
is capable of cosmic insights, knowledge about every fiber of creation from
the finest to the grossest. The culmination of spirituality lies here, on the
frontier of the infinite. Words can hardly express the state of unity, yet we
are assured by the traditions of wisdom that such a state exists and is our
birthright.