Philip Mistlberger
26th May 2005, 04:25 PM
The Left Eye of Horus
Psychological and Spiritual Purification
by P.T. Mistlberger
Feeling and Emotion
The goal of human feeling is love…a love which gives equally to all without demanding anything whatever in return, a love which is its own eternity.
— J. Krishnamurti
The Emotional Body
What role do feelings and emotions have in spiritual realization? I find that they are not considered very much in some of the Eastern teachings, which is hard for me because I have a strong feeling side.
In the area of spiritual enlightenment, there is a kind of final frontier faced by most spiritual seekers. This final frontier is sometimes referred to as the Emotional Body. It is the entire domain of feeling and emotion, and especially how they play out in the quality of our relating with others and the world around us.
All feelings are themselves created by specific thoughts, and in particular, the effect of these thoughts upon the body. The inner sense of this effect of particular thoughts upon the body is experienced as a feeling. The outer expression of such feelings (crying, expressing anger, etc.) is an emotion. For example, we can feel “I love you” toward someone. Then if we express this feeling via words or action, the energy will be experienced as an emotion. Likewise, on the negative side of the ledger, if we feel “I am angry at you” and then act it out, this feeling then becomes an emotion and may then express through angry behavior, hostile acts, and so on.
Feelings are by nature very simple. It is the thinking mind that complicates matters. So, as we identify with thoughts, it is typical to over-complicate and confuse the entire area of feelings. For example, it is common for a person when describing their feeling state to report that they are feeling “confused.” However, confusion is not a feeling, it is a mental state. Equally so, statements such as “I feel like you don’t love me” are also not truly feelings, they are projected thoughts.
The simplest way to recognize a feeling is by the corresponding sensation it will carry in the body. In the beginning, it may take time to learn to identify the corresponding bodily sensations that go with feelings, but in time it will be seen that all true feelings will also register in the body as a sensation―usually in the chest, solar plexus, or pelvic regions, but they may also be felt in practically any area of the body.
How does working with feelings and emotions relate to enlightenment?
What happens in the enlightenment process is that the realization of our true nature—the shifting from identification with thinking to resting in consciousness in the here and now—precedes the actual embodiment of it. In other words, we first
1) see the truth (that consciousness is the vast field in which thoughts, feelings, and sensations arise and fall away)
and then
2) we understand the truth (that who we are is the field of consciousness, not the ever-changing thoughts, feelings, or sensations)
and then
3) we spend the rest of our lives integrating this essential understanding. Along with this integration, we constantly refine and deepen our realization and understanding of the nature of consciousness.
The process of integration involves bringing it all together, embodying it in our lives— living it—in our actions, deeds, behavior, personal endeavors, and so on. The importance of integration, and the development of the Emotional Body, is underscored in the challenges faced by all spiritual seekers—including spiritual teachers—in the area of relationship and community. This is why the realization of the emptiness of the ego and the direct experience of the Natural State, do not in themselves guarantee immaculate behavior or perfectly harmonious relationships with other people or the world around us. Realizing the enlightened condition is the first step, living it fully in the “small” details of life, and most especially in our relationships, is the second. This second phase is life-long, and unavoidable, as long as we are in a physical body.
The Lightening, Thunder and Rain of our Inner Landscape
How do I work with my emotions?
Emotions are events in consciousness that appear and disappear, like the ebb and flow of a wave upon the ocean. In terms of working with them, a key is to be able to maintain awareness of the natural spaciousness of consciousness itself. Buddha once made an analogy like this—if you have too many cows in your pasture (where the cows in this case represent emotions), then the solution is not to start killing the cows. The solution is to simply make the pasture bigger. Give the cows more space to move.
So it is with emotions. As we more and more identify who we really are with the spacious field of consciousness that is our Natural State, then we gradually learn not to identify with emotions. We feel them, accept them, experience them, all the while knowing that they are just movements inside of us, but they are not who we actually are. They are the lightening, thunder and rain of our inner landscape. But who we really are is the entire space, the entire landscape, that is containing the lightening, thunder, rain, and endless other kinds of weather.
In the case of years of denial and repression of feelings, which is common in modern societies, the healing process often begins with learning to get to know these emotions, to befriend them, to accept them. Someone with great anger needs to be able to directly experience the heat of this anger as it manifests through the body. They then need to directly experience the more vulnerable feelings that the anger is (almost always) disguising. Further, they need to be aware of the thoughts and belief systems that are generating the feelings. The final step is simply bearing witness to these thoughts and belief systems, and recognizing oneself as the consciousness that it witnessing the thoughts and belief systems.
The Failure of Drama and Repression
What’s to be done with anger? I’ve found that denying it doesn’t work, but neither does dumping it on others.
Yes, exactly. In the past I used to do a lot of “anger-management” work with people, and spent years “working” on my own anger. But all so-called work on anger (or any other negative emotion) is destined to fail if the root of the issue is not addressed. The root of the issue is the assumption that the very ego that the anger is attempting to defend or vindicate is itself actual and real in a solid, consistent, definable way.
A common tendency in much transformational therapy is to work with anger by outwardly dramatizing it (sometimes known as “catharsis,” or “release”). While this sort of work can be useful to lower the emotional voltage carried in the body, and thus provide a relief from stress and the buildup of repression, it is ineffective in terms of releasing the patterns creating the anger in the first place if the very root illusion—the solidity and so-called reality of the ego—is not finally seen through.
Anger is a secondary emotion, a guardian, a dragon that protects the “pearl” of our more vulnerable feelings. Most anger is a defense against a perceived threat. It arises out of that place of believing that some situation or occurrence has in some way undermined you or failed to recognize you as the apparent separate person you think you are.
Denial of feelings (repression) doesn’t work either. Depression, which is almost epidemic in modern times, is not just chemical imbalance or predisposition. It is also often directly related to the denial of anger, and the turning of such anger (and other emotions) inward. Again, as long as the basic source of ignorance remains intact—the apparent solidity of the separate ego-identity—such negative tendencies can appear at any time.
The Negative Emotions: Anger, Jealousy, Grief, Fear
Is anger ever truly appropriate?
Appropriateness or inappropriateness is not really the issue. What is really the point is understanding the direct link between the ego’s drive to consolidate its hold and the arising of anger as a guardian emotion protecting vulnerable feelings like fear, shame, hurt, grief, and such.
Occasionally, anger can express as a kind of pure active power, a manifestation of clarity in a very passionate and fiery form. You could call this “conscious anger,” and you could think of this activity as being behind the actions of Jesus when he chased the money-changers out of the temple, or behind the stubborn fierceness of a Bodhidharma or a Mahatma Gandhi or a Gurdjieff. It is an anger that arises from a place of stable clarity, and although passionate, is ultimately sourcing from compassion. But this kind of anger is never based on any agenda designed to control others or to enforce one’s personal agendas on them.
This is all interesting but how do I apply these ideas when fighting with my boyfriend?
The name of the game is to be present with your anger as it is arising. Being clearly aware of the feelings opens up the possibility of being less mechanically reactive. Just one extra second of awareness, prior to lashing out at your boyfriend, can be enough to alter the entire course of events. The extra moment slows things down so that you can become more directly aware of your body, and the anger moving through it. This in turn opens up the possibility of becoming directly aware of how the whole drama is arising from within your own mind, and is always related to some vulnerable feeling you want to defend. This vulnerable feeling is there because the ego—the belief that you are a separate somebody—has been in some way disturbed or threatened.
Jealousy is a problem for me.
Jealousy is sourced in the mind’s habit of comparing everything. The mind is always ranking things, and ranking itself amongst them all. This comparing is simply a natural extension of the ego’s belief that it is separate and isolated in a body. To reinforce this belief it compares itself to apparently separate others. When it perceives that another bodymind has something that it doesn’t, in such a way as to bring awareness of a perceived lack within itself, then jealousy is experienced.
What are the roots of grief? Sometimes I find a good cry to be very purifying.
Grief when allowed and embraced can indeed be purifying, because what it is generally releasing is a sense of the past. Most sadness is related to the passing of the dream—the letting go of some fairy tale or cherished fiction that one has held on to for a long time. We experience sadness when realizing, often in a sobering fashion, that what we have been holding on to was in fact a passing dream. That does not mean that the dream was without value or meaning, but only that it somehow seems to have been taken away from us. In truth, sadness is always potentially wonderful in that it can show us directly what is ultimately real (our true nature), and what is ultimately not (fictions created by the mind).
So when my mother died and I felt sadness, are you suggesting that my mother was only a passing dream?
No, but what the sadness is helping you let go of is the particular form of relationship—in this case, mother-son—that you lived with for all of your life. The sadness is simply a condition resulting from inwardly resisting a natural transition, a natural change of seasons. What is ultimately true about the relationship between you and your mother remains (the love), but what was transitory does not remain (the physical experience of being born from the body you knew as your “mother,” and relating to that body as “mother” your whole life).
Everything that comes and goes is part of the dream-world of separation. Resisting this reality results in the feeling of sadness. Surrendering to the sadness and letting go of resistance to the passing away of things results in a calm peaceful acceptance of what is, and very often joyfulness as well—joyfulness being the direct recognition of what is truly real and eternal.
Much of my life seems to have been controlled by fear.
Fear is absence of love. It arises from being caught up in the mind. Fear can take endless forms, and all negative emotions derive finally from fear, but the actual condition of fear is simple—identification with thought, and a loss of awareness of our true nature.
But what about when we’re being directly threatened? Isn’t fear essential then?
There is a functional aspect to fear, as in extreme circumstances that involve a threat to one’s physical well-being. However, even there, it is possible to be aware of the fear, and while undertaking whatever physical actions necessary for self-preservation, to still make contact with the center of peace and safety at the core of the intense storm of energy provoked by more extreme forms of fear. This is more properly an act of natural, spontaneous, functional intelligence that is attuned to the present moment. A car is coming straight at us; we get out of the way.
Where do negative feelings and emotions come from?
All fear is of the future, and all guilt, grief and anger are of the past. In truth, negative emotions (deriving from fear-based thoughts and belief systems) do not exist in the present moment. Thought itself creates time, which the ego-system then uses in the service of separation. Within time, negative thoughts and their corresponding negative feelings/emotions arise―all based on the concept of limitation (not enough, not good enough, not safe, etc.). So, the process of understanding feelings and emotions is really one of being more mindful of the present moment, which is basic to the realization of our true nature.
The Inner Blocks
But why even bother with addressing negative emotions or feelings, if our Natural State is pure freedom, love, well-being, and so on?
If it were all so simple, we could just redirect our attention inwardly and rest in our Natural State. Unfortunately, such a simple redirection of attention inwardly will often not yield any particularly noticeable sense of sudden wisdom, unconditional love, or well-being. This is largely because we have the ability to develop inner blocks that prevent us from experiencing our natural condition of happiness and peace. These blocks develop over a period of time, and once in place, can be formidable deterrents to our ability to visit, let alone remain in, the Natural State.
We are made aware of the existence of the blocks via the process of experiencing negative feelings, and their outward expression as negative emotions. When we experience a negative feeling and emotion, it is a sure signpost that we have strayed far from our Natural State, and as such, the feeling also becomes a call to directly realize the way in which we have wandered away from our true nature.
What is the purpose of feeling pain?
If, for example, we experience anger, then awareness of the underlying causes of the anger will almost always reveal that this feeling/emotion is a protection for a more vulnerable, tender feeling within, usually hurt or fear of some sort. Further understanding will reveal that this hurt or fear is based on the deep conditioning and belief that our source of happiness lies outside of us―either in some person, event, object, or situation, or perhaps even in the notion of some external God. The hurt or fear has arisen because this all-important person, event, object, situation or God has appeared to withdraw its love, energy, or attention from us.
This apparent withdrawal by the object of our concern activates the corresponding false belief system and thoughts, which in turn activate the negative, painful feelings. The intensity of the feelings will show us directly to what degree we have made the error of investing this object with the power of being able to make us happy. The pain we then experience is the universe’s way of showing us just how far we have strayed from our Natural State. As such, this pain is equally an invitation to return Home, to our Natural State.
This latter point is very important, because it indicates that difficult life experiences can be an even greater motivation for waking up than extended periods of spiritual seeking or avoidance of relationships and the world. A difficult, painful love relationship that seemingly ends in failure can be a greater incentive for attaining inner, spiritual realization than years of intellectual study or contemplative practice. A domestic responsibility such as raising a child or caring for an elderly relative can be a greater motivator to search for true understanding and meaning than an equal period of time spent insulating ourselves from life by avoiding challenging, difficult or painful experiences. Owing to all this, negative feelings and emotions can be important barometers for evoking the inner call to wake-up.
Are some feelings more real than others?
There is only one primary feeling that is ultimately real, and that is love—but this kind of love is identical to pure consciousness. It is who and what you really are, ultimately. It is more properly a state of being. It does not exist in duality and thus has no opposite.
Many apparently “positive” feelings are not truly positive, they are more a reaction to a temporary sense that our ego strategies for manipulating others into giving us personal energy and/or apparent well-being have “succeeded.”
Negative feelings are often, in a sense, more authentic, because they are experienced as a result of a failure of our ego strategies to secure energy, love, or well-being from others. This is why life failures are often blessings in disguise, because the very suffering can bring us closer to reality, and the understanding of the essential flaw of believing that happiness comes from something outside of us. This is also why the intention for enlightenment is often provoked by profound disappointment about something.
The Source of Happiness
You just said happiness doesn’t come from outside of us. Does it come from within? I’ve looked there but to be honest, I haven’t found it there either.
You haven’t found it there because ultimately it’s not there either! Happiness, peace, love, and so on, do not come from “within” anymore than they come from “without.”
The whole notion of “within” and “without” is faulty, based on a conception of reality that is deriving from identification with the body. We think of “within” as under the skin of the body, and “outside” as outside of the skin. But on both sides of the skin is just matter, in different forms.
Consciousness, or pure Being, is the Ground in which all things arise—including the body, and everything that appears to be around you. Consciousness understands Reality to be one continuous Whole. The direct realization of your true nature as not separate from this one continuous Whole is happiness, peace, and love. It is the realization that Reality is non-dual, or Singular, and that separation or isolation—the source of all unhappiness and fear—is finally impossible.
Guilt and Innocence
Two other important inner states that should be mentioned, though which are not technically feelings, are guilt and innocence. Guilt is the mental state that accompanies fear, and by “guilt” we are clearly differentiating this from “shame.” Guilt in this sense refers more to self-limitation or self-rejection, and the general feeling of actually being a mistake, as opposed to merely believing that we have committed a mistake and will or should be punished for it (which is shame/embarrassment).
In the sense in which we have described it, guilt can be seen to be the mental foundation of the root of the ego, with fear being the feeling foundation. Guilt is the awareness of the root of our ego and its fabricated belief in isolation and separation from everything. Innocence is the awareness of our true condition of freedom and natural connection to everything.
Suggested exercise: The next time you experience a strong negative feeling (anger, sadness, etc.), allow yourself to fully experience the sensations connected to this feeling in your body. Just be mindful of these sensations, bringing as much consciousness as you can to them. Do not try to change them in any way, nor try to repress them or express them. Just remain present with the feeling for as long as you can, gently accepting it into your awareness.
The next time you experience a strong positive feeling (happiness, excitement, personal love, etc.) allow yourself to fully experience it while at the same time being aware of what external events appear to be causing it. Simply note the conditional nature of the feeling, while allowing yourself to enjoy it at the same time. When the feeling appears to be ebbing, allow it to go.
Psychological and Spiritual Purification
by P.T. Mistlberger
Feeling and Emotion
The goal of human feeling is love…a love which gives equally to all without demanding anything whatever in return, a love which is its own eternity.
— J. Krishnamurti
The Emotional Body
What role do feelings and emotions have in spiritual realization? I find that they are not considered very much in some of the Eastern teachings, which is hard for me because I have a strong feeling side.
In the area of spiritual enlightenment, there is a kind of final frontier faced by most spiritual seekers. This final frontier is sometimes referred to as the Emotional Body. It is the entire domain of feeling and emotion, and especially how they play out in the quality of our relating with others and the world around us.
All feelings are themselves created by specific thoughts, and in particular, the effect of these thoughts upon the body. The inner sense of this effect of particular thoughts upon the body is experienced as a feeling. The outer expression of such feelings (crying, expressing anger, etc.) is an emotion. For example, we can feel “I love you” toward someone. Then if we express this feeling via words or action, the energy will be experienced as an emotion. Likewise, on the negative side of the ledger, if we feel “I am angry at you” and then act it out, this feeling then becomes an emotion and may then express through angry behavior, hostile acts, and so on.
Feelings are by nature very simple. It is the thinking mind that complicates matters. So, as we identify with thoughts, it is typical to over-complicate and confuse the entire area of feelings. For example, it is common for a person when describing their feeling state to report that they are feeling “confused.” However, confusion is not a feeling, it is a mental state. Equally so, statements such as “I feel like you don’t love me” are also not truly feelings, they are projected thoughts.
The simplest way to recognize a feeling is by the corresponding sensation it will carry in the body. In the beginning, it may take time to learn to identify the corresponding bodily sensations that go with feelings, but in time it will be seen that all true feelings will also register in the body as a sensation―usually in the chest, solar plexus, or pelvic regions, but they may also be felt in practically any area of the body.
How does working with feelings and emotions relate to enlightenment?
What happens in the enlightenment process is that the realization of our true nature—the shifting from identification with thinking to resting in consciousness in the here and now—precedes the actual embodiment of it. In other words, we first
1) see the truth (that consciousness is the vast field in which thoughts, feelings, and sensations arise and fall away)
and then
2) we understand the truth (that who we are is the field of consciousness, not the ever-changing thoughts, feelings, or sensations)
and then
3) we spend the rest of our lives integrating this essential understanding. Along with this integration, we constantly refine and deepen our realization and understanding of the nature of consciousness.
The process of integration involves bringing it all together, embodying it in our lives— living it—in our actions, deeds, behavior, personal endeavors, and so on. The importance of integration, and the development of the Emotional Body, is underscored in the challenges faced by all spiritual seekers—including spiritual teachers—in the area of relationship and community. This is why the realization of the emptiness of the ego and the direct experience of the Natural State, do not in themselves guarantee immaculate behavior or perfectly harmonious relationships with other people or the world around us. Realizing the enlightened condition is the first step, living it fully in the “small” details of life, and most especially in our relationships, is the second. This second phase is life-long, and unavoidable, as long as we are in a physical body.
The Lightening, Thunder and Rain of our Inner Landscape
How do I work with my emotions?
Emotions are events in consciousness that appear and disappear, like the ebb and flow of a wave upon the ocean. In terms of working with them, a key is to be able to maintain awareness of the natural spaciousness of consciousness itself. Buddha once made an analogy like this—if you have too many cows in your pasture (where the cows in this case represent emotions), then the solution is not to start killing the cows. The solution is to simply make the pasture bigger. Give the cows more space to move.
So it is with emotions. As we more and more identify who we really are with the spacious field of consciousness that is our Natural State, then we gradually learn not to identify with emotions. We feel them, accept them, experience them, all the while knowing that they are just movements inside of us, but they are not who we actually are. They are the lightening, thunder and rain of our inner landscape. But who we really are is the entire space, the entire landscape, that is containing the lightening, thunder, rain, and endless other kinds of weather.
In the case of years of denial and repression of feelings, which is common in modern societies, the healing process often begins with learning to get to know these emotions, to befriend them, to accept them. Someone with great anger needs to be able to directly experience the heat of this anger as it manifests through the body. They then need to directly experience the more vulnerable feelings that the anger is (almost always) disguising. Further, they need to be aware of the thoughts and belief systems that are generating the feelings. The final step is simply bearing witness to these thoughts and belief systems, and recognizing oneself as the consciousness that it witnessing the thoughts and belief systems.
The Failure of Drama and Repression
What’s to be done with anger? I’ve found that denying it doesn’t work, but neither does dumping it on others.
Yes, exactly. In the past I used to do a lot of “anger-management” work with people, and spent years “working” on my own anger. But all so-called work on anger (or any other negative emotion) is destined to fail if the root of the issue is not addressed. The root of the issue is the assumption that the very ego that the anger is attempting to defend or vindicate is itself actual and real in a solid, consistent, definable way.
A common tendency in much transformational therapy is to work with anger by outwardly dramatizing it (sometimes known as “catharsis,” or “release”). While this sort of work can be useful to lower the emotional voltage carried in the body, and thus provide a relief from stress and the buildup of repression, it is ineffective in terms of releasing the patterns creating the anger in the first place if the very root illusion—the solidity and so-called reality of the ego—is not finally seen through.
Anger is a secondary emotion, a guardian, a dragon that protects the “pearl” of our more vulnerable feelings. Most anger is a defense against a perceived threat. It arises out of that place of believing that some situation or occurrence has in some way undermined you or failed to recognize you as the apparent separate person you think you are.
Denial of feelings (repression) doesn’t work either. Depression, which is almost epidemic in modern times, is not just chemical imbalance or predisposition. It is also often directly related to the denial of anger, and the turning of such anger (and other emotions) inward. Again, as long as the basic source of ignorance remains intact—the apparent solidity of the separate ego-identity—such negative tendencies can appear at any time.
The Negative Emotions: Anger, Jealousy, Grief, Fear
Is anger ever truly appropriate?
Appropriateness or inappropriateness is not really the issue. What is really the point is understanding the direct link between the ego’s drive to consolidate its hold and the arising of anger as a guardian emotion protecting vulnerable feelings like fear, shame, hurt, grief, and such.
Occasionally, anger can express as a kind of pure active power, a manifestation of clarity in a very passionate and fiery form. You could call this “conscious anger,” and you could think of this activity as being behind the actions of Jesus when he chased the money-changers out of the temple, or behind the stubborn fierceness of a Bodhidharma or a Mahatma Gandhi or a Gurdjieff. It is an anger that arises from a place of stable clarity, and although passionate, is ultimately sourcing from compassion. But this kind of anger is never based on any agenda designed to control others or to enforce one’s personal agendas on them.
This is all interesting but how do I apply these ideas when fighting with my boyfriend?
The name of the game is to be present with your anger as it is arising. Being clearly aware of the feelings opens up the possibility of being less mechanically reactive. Just one extra second of awareness, prior to lashing out at your boyfriend, can be enough to alter the entire course of events. The extra moment slows things down so that you can become more directly aware of your body, and the anger moving through it. This in turn opens up the possibility of becoming directly aware of how the whole drama is arising from within your own mind, and is always related to some vulnerable feeling you want to defend. This vulnerable feeling is there because the ego—the belief that you are a separate somebody—has been in some way disturbed or threatened.
Jealousy is a problem for me.
Jealousy is sourced in the mind’s habit of comparing everything. The mind is always ranking things, and ranking itself amongst them all. This comparing is simply a natural extension of the ego’s belief that it is separate and isolated in a body. To reinforce this belief it compares itself to apparently separate others. When it perceives that another bodymind has something that it doesn’t, in such a way as to bring awareness of a perceived lack within itself, then jealousy is experienced.
What are the roots of grief? Sometimes I find a good cry to be very purifying.
Grief when allowed and embraced can indeed be purifying, because what it is generally releasing is a sense of the past. Most sadness is related to the passing of the dream—the letting go of some fairy tale or cherished fiction that one has held on to for a long time. We experience sadness when realizing, often in a sobering fashion, that what we have been holding on to was in fact a passing dream. That does not mean that the dream was without value or meaning, but only that it somehow seems to have been taken away from us. In truth, sadness is always potentially wonderful in that it can show us directly what is ultimately real (our true nature), and what is ultimately not (fictions created by the mind).
So when my mother died and I felt sadness, are you suggesting that my mother was only a passing dream?
No, but what the sadness is helping you let go of is the particular form of relationship—in this case, mother-son—that you lived with for all of your life. The sadness is simply a condition resulting from inwardly resisting a natural transition, a natural change of seasons. What is ultimately true about the relationship between you and your mother remains (the love), but what was transitory does not remain (the physical experience of being born from the body you knew as your “mother,” and relating to that body as “mother” your whole life).
Everything that comes and goes is part of the dream-world of separation. Resisting this reality results in the feeling of sadness. Surrendering to the sadness and letting go of resistance to the passing away of things results in a calm peaceful acceptance of what is, and very often joyfulness as well—joyfulness being the direct recognition of what is truly real and eternal.
Much of my life seems to have been controlled by fear.
Fear is absence of love. It arises from being caught up in the mind. Fear can take endless forms, and all negative emotions derive finally from fear, but the actual condition of fear is simple—identification with thought, and a loss of awareness of our true nature.
But what about when we’re being directly threatened? Isn’t fear essential then?
There is a functional aspect to fear, as in extreme circumstances that involve a threat to one’s physical well-being. However, even there, it is possible to be aware of the fear, and while undertaking whatever physical actions necessary for self-preservation, to still make contact with the center of peace and safety at the core of the intense storm of energy provoked by more extreme forms of fear. This is more properly an act of natural, spontaneous, functional intelligence that is attuned to the present moment. A car is coming straight at us; we get out of the way.
Where do negative feelings and emotions come from?
All fear is of the future, and all guilt, grief and anger are of the past. In truth, negative emotions (deriving from fear-based thoughts and belief systems) do not exist in the present moment. Thought itself creates time, which the ego-system then uses in the service of separation. Within time, negative thoughts and their corresponding negative feelings/emotions arise―all based on the concept of limitation (not enough, not good enough, not safe, etc.). So, the process of understanding feelings and emotions is really one of being more mindful of the present moment, which is basic to the realization of our true nature.
The Inner Blocks
But why even bother with addressing negative emotions or feelings, if our Natural State is pure freedom, love, well-being, and so on?
If it were all so simple, we could just redirect our attention inwardly and rest in our Natural State. Unfortunately, such a simple redirection of attention inwardly will often not yield any particularly noticeable sense of sudden wisdom, unconditional love, or well-being. This is largely because we have the ability to develop inner blocks that prevent us from experiencing our natural condition of happiness and peace. These blocks develop over a period of time, and once in place, can be formidable deterrents to our ability to visit, let alone remain in, the Natural State.
We are made aware of the existence of the blocks via the process of experiencing negative feelings, and their outward expression as negative emotions. When we experience a negative feeling and emotion, it is a sure signpost that we have strayed far from our Natural State, and as such, the feeling also becomes a call to directly realize the way in which we have wandered away from our true nature.
What is the purpose of feeling pain?
If, for example, we experience anger, then awareness of the underlying causes of the anger will almost always reveal that this feeling/emotion is a protection for a more vulnerable, tender feeling within, usually hurt or fear of some sort. Further understanding will reveal that this hurt or fear is based on the deep conditioning and belief that our source of happiness lies outside of us―either in some person, event, object, or situation, or perhaps even in the notion of some external God. The hurt or fear has arisen because this all-important person, event, object, situation or God has appeared to withdraw its love, energy, or attention from us.
This apparent withdrawal by the object of our concern activates the corresponding false belief system and thoughts, which in turn activate the negative, painful feelings. The intensity of the feelings will show us directly to what degree we have made the error of investing this object with the power of being able to make us happy. The pain we then experience is the universe’s way of showing us just how far we have strayed from our Natural State. As such, this pain is equally an invitation to return Home, to our Natural State.
This latter point is very important, because it indicates that difficult life experiences can be an even greater motivation for waking up than extended periods of spiritual seeking or avoidance of relationships and the world. A difficult, painful love relationship that seemingly ends in failure can be a greater incentive for attaining inner, spiritual realization than years of intellectual study or contemplative practice. A domestic responsibility such as raising a child or caring for an elderly relative can be a greater motivator to search for true understanding and meaning than an equal period of time spent insulating ourselves from life by avoiding challenging, difficult or painful experiences. Owing to all this, negative feelings and emotions can be important barometers for evoking the inner call to wake-up.
Are some feelings more real than others?
There is only one primary feeling that is ultimately real, and that is love—but this kind of love is identical to pure consciousness. It is who and what you really are, ultimately. It is more properly a state of being. It does not exist in duality and thus has no opposite.
Many apparently “positive” feelings are not truly positive, they are more a reaction to a temporary sense that our ego strategies for manipulating others into giving us personal energy and/or apparent well-being have “succeeded.”
Negative feelings are often, in a sense, more authentic, because they are experienced as a result of a failure of our ego strategies to secure energy, love, or well-being from others. This is why life failures are often blessings in disguise, because the very suffering can bring us closer to reality, and the understanding of the essential flaw of believing that happiness comes from something outside of us. This is also why the intention for enlightenment is often provoked by profound disappointment about something.
The Source of Happiness
You just said happiness doesn’t come from outside of us. Does it come from within? I’ve looked there but to be honest, I haven’t found it there either.
You haven’t found it there because ultimately it’s not there either! Happiness, peace, love, and so on, do not come from “within” anymore than they come from “without.”
The whole notion of “within” and “without” is faulty, based on a conception of reality that is deriving from identification with the body. We think of “within” as under the skin of the body, and “outside” as outside of the skin. But on both sides of the skin is just matter, in different forms.
Consciousness, or pure Being, is the Ground in which all things arise—including the body, and everything that appears to be around you. Consciousness understands Reality to be one continuous Whole. The direct realization of your true nature as not separate from this one continuous Whole is happiness, peace, and love. It is the realization that Reality is non-dual, or Singular, and that separation or isolation—the source of all unhappiness and fear—is finally impossible.
Guilt and Innocence
Two other important inner states that should be mentioned, though which are not technically feelings, are guilt and innocence. Guilt is the mental state that accompanies fear, and by “guilt” we are clearly differentiating this from “shame.” Guilt in this sense refers more to self-limitation or self-rejection, and the general feeling of actually being a mistake, as opposed to merely believing that we have committed a mistake and will or should be punished for it (which is shame/embarrassment).
In the sense in which we have described it, guilt can be seen to be the mental foundation of the root of the ego, with fear being the feeling foundation. Guilt is the awareness of the root of our ego and its fabricated belief in isolation and separation from everything. Innocence is the awareness of our true condition of freedom and natural connection to everything.
Suggested exercise: The next time you experience a strong negative feeling (anger, sadness, etc.), allow yourself to fully experience the sensations connected to this feeling in your body. Just be mindful of these sensations, bringing as much consciousness as you can to them. Do not try to change them in any way, nor try to repress them or express them. Just remain present with the feeling for as long as you can, gently accepting it into your awareness.
The next time you experience a strong positive feeling (happiness, excitement, personal love, etc.) allow yourself to fully experience it while at the same time being aware of what external events appear to be causing it. Simply note the conditional nature of the feeling, while allowing yourself to enjoy it at the same time. When the feeling appears to be ebbing, allow it to go.