How to Find What Isn't Lost: A Short, Pro-Intellectual, Pro-Desire Guide to Enlightenment
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Enlightenment
Self-Realization
Metaphorization
Spirituality
Quiet Mind
Self-Discovery
Inner Peace
Mentor
Hero's Journey
Chosen One
Mentorship
Wise Mentor
Journey
Spiritual Journey
Inner Struggle
About this ebook
That there is a source of permanent and pure happiness that is accessible to us all: that is the eternal promise of spiritual enlightenment. This book offers an innovative, rational, and realistic approach to enlightenment that explains why it is possible and how to achieve it. Its findings are based on a successful 20-year spiritual search and a study of eastern mysticism as it relates to many other disciplines. It argues that enlightenment involves both the mystical search and, crucially, the intellectual and emotional preparation for it. As a result, it offers an approach to spiritual truth that is comprehensive and unique. Unlike many other spiritual systems, it encourages critical thinking and explains enlightenment within a persuasive philosophical framework. It suggests the necessity of being honest about our own desires and finding the messages inherent in negative emotions, and it offers powerful new methods to accomplish this. Finally, it gives excellent, concise explanations of the self-inquiry techniques of Hindu mystics that are the royal road to enlightenment. Together, these form a powerful and unusual instrument for seeking the truth.
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Book preview
How to Find What Isn't Lost - Akilesh Ayyar
Preface
This book has a simple, single purpose: to help you awaken to your true nature. I provide the spiritual system that I developed to help myself. It is itself based on the Hindu mystical school of Vedanta, along with other ideas from both literature, psychoanalysis, and philosophy.
Most importantly, I have drawn from experience.
The world is unsatisfactory. You can’t control it, and at best, even if you attain what you want, it is always tainted by the specter of losing it, and of your death and the death of those you love. Ultimate meaning seems incomprehensible. Why are we here and what is the point?
The idea of enlightenment is that there is a way to perfect, lasting happiness and meaning beyond the seeming constraints of this world. In fact, it contends that this happiness and meaning is nothing other than what you already are.
You have mistaken yourself for a body and a mind — this sounds bizarre, even crazy, I know, but it is the truth — and as a result suffer from their limitations. This mistake can be corrected. We experience dualistically, through the division between me
and everything that’s not me,
but the truth is non-dual.
The theory section of this book will in large part be devoted to working out how and why this is a plausible picture of reality. Both philosophical considerations and the experiences of the wise over history and in various cultures support it.
The Self (that is, our true one, as opposed to the normal, everyday person we think we are) is pure, uninterrupted being, awareness, and bliss, and it is beyond all limitations. It is not any particular awareness or consciousness. It is that out of which all particular consciousness arises.
Enlightenment means to realize this fact not as an abstract set of words but in experience.
Enlightenment is and is not religious. It is religious in the sense that it suggests that there is something very important beyond what we know with our senses and mind. It is not religious in that it requires no blind belief in God, prayer, sacrifice, scripture, or membership in any church: merely a willingness to look deeply into your experience of yourself. It is self-validating. Anyone can test it and experience it for themselves.
I could tell you that enlightenment will make you less selfish and help you save the world. This might happen, because it will release you from a large number of negative emotions. The reality, though, is that it may or may not lead to greater service and charity.
Enlightenment is peace and joy, but not in the normal sense of those words. Its peace and joy is perfectly compatible, in a strange way, with ordinary pain and suffering. Enlightenment reveals that there is no world and that there are no people, at least not in the way you think there are. So saving the world may or may not happen then. To proceed into the inner mysteries, you have to be willing to give up prior notions, assumptions, and goals. To enter the temple sanctum, you have to remove your shoes and bow your head.
Trust me, it’s worth it.
Enlightenment is not just for mystics in a mountain cave. It is something available to everyone, because it is your nature right now. Something stops you from recognizing what you are literally experiencing this second and at all times.
It takes no special talent to get to that recognition, only a sense that there is something more and a strong desire to obtain it.
I know this to be true for a fact. You can find my personal spiritual experience at the back of this book, though if you are new to the non-dualistic way of thinking (or even if you aren’t), you might get more out of it after reading the rest of the book.
This book is meant to be short, dense, and useful. Its purpose is to help you attain a goal that, I have to say — in classic paradoxical spiritual teacher fashion — is not a goal, and cannot be attained. And yet you must try with all your strength and sincerity to attain it.
I hope for this book to be a simple tool just sufficient to the task: rough, ready, and made to accomplish, not to dazzle.
Let me also make a couple of important disclaimers. I thought hard about how to make this book flow as organically as possible, and banged my head against that problem until I realized that it was a variant of the perfectionism that I’d always suffered.
Perfectionism isn’t entirely bad. It is actually a pointer to the spirit, where alone real perfection lies. Perfection isn’t to be obtained in the realm of action and result. That isn’t to say that effort and quality don’t matter — far from it. But in particular when working on that which deals with the spirit, there is a special problem with trying to make something perfect. Perfection in art and engineering usually involves full comprehension, full seeing, and then translation of that seeing into a work. That’s miraculously hard when it comes to even the normal world,
but it becomes downright impossible when it comes to the depths of the soul. There, words stumble and turn back, perplexed and befuddled. Mind cannot penetrate: and where mind cannot penetrate, what hope is there of consciously attained perfection? Perfection will come if it comes by the choice of a higher power.
In the meanwhile, I’ll go by the maxim that the perfect is the enemy of the good, and good is what I hope for this book to be. In the meantime, I apologize in advance for those places where I stumble and fall.
I’d also love to hear your thoughts on the book and your spiritual journey. If you want to let me know how you feel, have questions, or perhaps want to learn more closely from me, feel free to contact me at my website, Sifting to the Truth:
http://www.siftingtothetruth.com/
I look forward to hearing from you.
Good journeying.
Introduction: The Big Picture
The basic case this book makes is simple. It is that at heart, what you seek in life, whatever else you may say or think, is to know your own self, or Self, in its typical spiritual capitalization.
The Self is bliss, peace, happiness, meaning, and truth, though not quite in the way in which you understand these terms. The Self will resolve the most cutting of your existential worries, will assuage your fears of death, will console you for your losses and your disappointments, will reassure you always.
And — it — is — what — you — are — right — now.
You just don’t know it. Or you sort of know it, but not quite in the right way.
Something like that.
Still, be assured that it is what you have been seeking, and what you already are. Is it a paradox to seek what you already are? If so, it is one of many paradoxes to come.
We’ll call this clear experience of the Self enlightenment. It could also be called self-realization, moksha, nirvana, or liberation.
Now there is good reason to believe that there is a way to see this truth clearly, not just intellectually (though the intellect is very important), but in your own experience. When you do, you will understand why all the benefits promised above are in essence true, even if they are somewhat imprecise when worded that way.
There is very little talk of God in this book. Belief in God is not required to proceed, though neither is it disregarded. In essence, the question of God is an individual one, and belief either way is compatible with the route to the Self outlined