Archive for the ‘Meditation’ Category

Mystery Explained: How Frozen Humans Are Brought Back

Saturday, June 12th, 2010

Mystery Explained: How Frozen Humans Are Brought Back:

One form of “forced hibernation,” the behavior known as “suspended animation,” literally involves the sudden halting of chemical reactions in the body due to the lack of oxygen….

“There are many examples in the scientific literature of humans who appear frozen to death. They have no heartbeat and are clinically dead. But they can be reanimated,” Roth said. “Similarly, the organisms in my lab can be put into a state of reversible suspended animation through oxygen deprivation and other means. They appear dead but are not.”

Documented cases of humans successfully revived after spending hours or days without a pulse in extremely cold conditions first inspired Roth to study the relationship between human hypothermia and his own research in forced hibernation.

In the winter of 2001, the body temperature of Canadian toddler Erica Norby plunged to 61 degrees Fahrenheit (16 degrees Celsius) as she lay for hours in below-freezing weather after wandering outside wearing only a diaper. Apparently dead, she recovered completely after being re-warmed and resuscitated.

The same curious fate befell Japanese mountain climber Mitsutaka Uchikoshi in 2006, who was discovered with a core body temperature of 71 degrees F (22 degrees C) after 23 days after falling asleep on a snowy mountain.

“We wondered if what was happening with the organisms in my laboratory was also happening in people like the toddler and the Japanese mountain climber. Before they got cold did they somehow manage to decrease their oxygen consumption? Is that what protected them?” Roth said. “Our work in nematodes and yeast suggests that this may be the case, and it may bring us a step closer to understanding what happens to people who appear to freeze to death but can be reanimated.”

Oxygen deprivation’s protective effect comes from the way it arrests biological processes before dangerous instabilities can develop. When reanimated, the processes continue where they left off, with no sign of disruption having occurred.

If breathless catalepsy/samadhi really happens in meditation, you can’t help but wonder if the same process is involved.

The Internal Mystery Plays

Monday, July 20th, 2009

While I was looking for an old article on the oculocardiac reflex, I stumbled on this small goldmine, from ReVision magazine in 1994: The Internal Mystery Plays: the Role and Physiology of the Visual System in Contemplative Practices. They (Questia) have a 72-hour free trial, so I used that to copy-and-paste the contents of that paper into a Word document. Man, I love the Internet!

[T]he foundations for all mystical experiences can be found in various aspects of the near-death reflex, which is the ultimate reflex of the “fight-or-flight” mechanism of the autonomic nervous system for fear and stress responses….

The eye has long been held in high regard as a mysterious organ and, therefore, has been associated with the secret mysteries of all the world religions for over five thousand years. The sense of sight was considered more excellent than all the rest of the senses because it did not depend upon contact with or close proximity to the object….

The eye was also considered analogous to the chemical mercury as the catalyst for transformational change…. This is due to the reflection seen of one’s self when looking in the eye of another, similar to the reflection of oneself when looking at a small ball of mercury. This is representative of the transformational process in the psyche….

Since the transformational process is the equivalent of a “rebirth,” the pupil of the eye as a metaphor for the rebirth of the soul has also been associated with the yoni of the Hindu religion. The analogy is made to the birth into this life through the yoni of the female, while birth into the afterlife passes through the opening of the “Inner” eye….

What [Wilder] Penfield found was that stimulation of the right temporal lobe in the area of the anterior Sylvian fissure led to typical, reproducible images of neardeath states, angels, the Virgin Mary, and other archetypal forms of images with significant physiological and theological aspects attached to them….

[W]hen there is an excessive stimulation of the parasympathetic nervous system, which can also occur in darkness, a vasodilation of the peripheral circulatory system occurs, leading to a slow decrease in blood flow to the cerebral cortex. When this occurs, the areas most sensitive to decreased blood flow and decreased oxygenation are those areas called “watershed” areas at the end of capillary beds. These areas occur where the capillary beds of one major artery comes in contact with the capillary beds of another artery, such as those seen in the occipital lobe and brainstem. The occipital pole, which serves central visual acuity, is one of the most common areas involved in cerebral vascular accidents of the watershed type. Typical to loss of blood flow to this area leads to a condition known as a cortical release phenomenon … with the generation of a large, white light in the central portion of the vision…. As this white light extends, it increases to involve the entire occipital cortex and, thus, the entire visual field.

This is what occurs in profound mystical states such as those seen in Zen Buddhism and Hinduism, where profound relaxation (i.e., parasympathetic overload) occurs with marked peripheral vasodilation … leading to cortical ischemia of the type described above. This has also been called “Nirvana,” “Samadhi,” or “Union With God”…. Also, the sudden loss of blood pressure to the brain that elicits this phenomenon is basic to the neardeath experience and the commonality of vascular collapse seen in those patients….

[W]hen [the over-stimulation of the sympathetic arc] occurs in certain physiological states, such as in meditations or while lying horizontally with a vascular collapse, then the stimulus can be prolonged and, in some cases, remembered, thus leading to reports of neardeath states, vision of angels, dancing with elves, or other “hallucinations.” The remembering of these states is enhanced through meditation by a purposeful increase in parasympathetic tone for relaxation to counter the physiologically and physically painful stimuli that increasingly drive the sympathetic nervous system and these images. Hence, in eliciting trance and near-death states, the advanced meditators may be causing ischemia to these vital cortical areas, with possible permanent damage. These damaged neurons will become supersensitive and, thus, enhance the reflex when reelicited….

Why do these reflexes cause people to feel as if they are “suffused with light” as the White Light experience is occurring? This, I think, can be explained by the various physiological aspects that are occurring at the same time as the White Light experience. When this light occurs, there is a profound and sudden decrease in peripheral vascular resistance due to the excessive parasympathetic stimulus (Jevning 1978). This sudden release in vascular resistance will cause a very rapid increase in blood flow throughout the entire body, beginning centrally and moving to the extremities. This gives a sensation of energy, or “light,” being transmitted through the body. Along with this decrease in peripheral vascular resistance there is also a profound relaxation of the skeletal muscles due to this parasympathetic stimulus, which also adds to the feeling of “something” flowing through the body. After years of practice, members of certain Buddhist sects can raise their skin temperature through this mechanism (Benson 1982), showing one instance of where conscious mind can control autonomic functions….

[A]s the White Light develops, blood is being shunted away from the occipital lobe, thus enhancing the White Light and simultaneously increasing blood flow to the extremities in such a rapid fashion that an actual tactile sensation of “energy” flowing through the body is realized. This is also accompanied by a profound release of B-endorphins and other neuropeptides that will induce an “ecstatic” state. This profound parasympathetic state also leads to marked relaxation of the entire body, a state which can only be achieved in deep sleep, Stage IV anesthesia, death, or certain contemplative states….

After the blood has drained from the cortex [in the neardeath experience], the remaining circulatory pressure is shunted into the circulation of the basilar artery, providing circulation to certain areas of the cortex as a result of evolution’s extension into those areas that are related to the persistence of visual, auditory, and memory functions during the near-death state….

During darkness, the visual association areas of the brain, and specifically the occipital and temporal lobes, become supersensitive during visual deprivation. After approximately thirty minutes of total dark adaptation, both the retina of the eye and the occipital cortex of the brain begin having spontaneous discharges of activity due to a lack of external stimulation, which are seen as various lights, phosphenes, and visual phenomena [e.g., form constants] that can be perceived and characterized verbally….

One aspect of eye closure for contemplative practices that is sometimes mentioned, but that I feel is underemphasized, is that of bringing the eyes in convergence (i.e., “crossing your eyes” or looking at your nose) during these exercises, which drives the meditative process to a more rapid induction into the trance state and is usually described as looking at the “third eye” (Rouselle 1960). This occurs through a neurological mechanism known as the “oculo-cardiac reflex” (Duane and Jaeger 1990). This reflex occurs when the muscles surrounding the eyeballs are placed in tension or there is pressure placed on the globes, and this stimulates the parasympathetic nervous system through the vagus nerve to slow the heart rate (Arnold et al. 1991). This reflex is commonly seen in eye surgery when the extra-ocular muscles are stimulated. It is exactly these two muscles, the medial recti muscles, that are over-stimulated in crossing the eyes, and this is mediated through the parasympathetic nervous system (Miller 1985).

Thus, crossing the eyes is not only a result of stimulation of the parasympathetic nervous system but of itself will further stimulate the parasympathetic nervous system to slow the heart rate. Forcibly crossing the eyes through closed eyelids while meditating will stimulate this reflex to its maximum and thus facilitate the stimulation of the parasympathetic nervous system….

The temperature that the body experiences can lead to profound states of mystical experience when brought to an extreme, as seen in hyperthermia and hypothermia (Fay 1959). Cold has played an important role in the internal mysteries in that many of the ancient practices included the placing of the initiate in a cold environment, such as in the underground pits of Eleusis, in caves or on mountain tops, as practiced in the Himalayas. Excessive cold will cause a decrease in the temperature of the anterior hypothalamus, causing a secondary sympathetic stimulation and vasoconstriction of the peripheral blood vessels to preserve body heat. Thus, this decrease in body temperature can add to the overall sympathetic stimulus, inducing the reflex parasympathetic response and increasing its effect on the imaging process….

Similar to visualization is the aural isolation that occurs with these practices in the form of chanting (Glueck and Stoebel 1984) or rhythmic sounds, such as shamanic drumming. These monotonous sounds isolate the hearing to also allow cortical release phenomena of sound. As the trance reaction develops, it is common to have a “rushing sound” in the ears (Harner 1972), similar to the sound of the ocean, preceding the sound of a “tinkling of bells.” This is followed by musical arrays that are unique and sometimes cacophonous, sounding very much like a Buddhist band. It has been shown through electroencephalographic tracings that these monotonous sounds, when given to naive subjects over extended periods of time (i.e., greater than fifteen minutes), can induce marked theta synchronicity across the cerebral cortex (Maxfield 1991), which is the hallmark of meditative state of mind (Kasamatsu and Hiri 1969)….

In these isolated states of mind, including sleep, meditation, and panic situations, the gain of the parasympathetic nervous system is increased to help pick up more information about the potential threat and to facilitate the spread of that information to more areas of the brain for interpretation. It is during these states of isolation that the lower brainstem centers take over because there is no cortical sensory input coming into the system, that is, normal vision and hearing.

This amplifying gain in the sympathetic nervous system increases and takes any information obtained, applying it to its memories through a temporal spreading of information that allows the brain to act as a comparitor (Livingstone 1988; McClurkin et al. 1991), so that, when someone is in a meditative trance while listening to shamanic drumming that is beating at a constant rate, after a period of ten to fifteen minutes or sometimes sooner, many overtones are heard due to increasingly finer discrimination attempts by the brain to identify differences from one tone to the next. Occasionally, this leads to perceptions of hearing songs or voices and, more commonly, changes in tempo (Maxfield 1991).

Likewise, in the visual system, the phosphenes that are spontaneously generated within the retina due to dark adaptation, micro-saccades, and other forms of retinal stimulation, get multiply integrated by numerous areas to try to interpret the shapes it is perceiving (Livingstone 1988)….

Rebirthing and holotropic breathing both utilize hyperventilation techniques to induce first a trance state and, eventually, near-death states. With hyperventilation, there is decrease in the amount of carbon dioxide going to the brain, which acts as a chemoreceptor messenger to decrease bloodflow to the brain to allow carbon dioxide to increase to normal levels. However, after only a few minutes of hyperventilation, there is a paradoxical stabilization of the lowered carbon dioxide levels that is maintained even with normal breathing. Hyperventilation is well known to induce both theta (Kellaway 1979) and delta (Kooi et al. 1964) waves, which are associated with meditative states….

[I]n severe fasting, as hypoglycemia occurs in the brain, there is a sense of ensuing death; this fear of death alone can have sufficient sympathetic stimulation to stimulate the survival-maintaining images of the right temporal lobe….

Other forms of ascetic practices, such as mutilation and sacrifice, have similar reflex stimulation to the sympathetic nervous system. Any painful stimulation on the body surface usually evokes a vasopressor response in the body through the vasomotor areas in the medulla; thus, the pain of these practices will increase sympathetic stimulation and become additive to any other sympathetic stimuli occurring simultaneously in the body.

With contemplative practices, a balance of these parasympathetic states are consciously waged against the sympathetic stimuli that are entering the physical body. The goal of such practices is to maintain a high state of alertness while simultaneously maintaining as much relaxation as possible in response to the stimuli, such that the sympathetic nervous system and parasympathetic nervous system are both simultaneously and maximally stimulated. With experience, the practitioner of these rituals will gain the ability to withstand extremes of stress to the physical body, psyche, and spirit through the control of these stressors, while developing relaxation techniques to reach altered states of consciousness. So as this balance is upset, the increase in the parasympathetic nervous system tone will lead to increasing levels of controlled cerebral ischemia, leading to the visual imagery and various Light experiences….

Many of these conditions are related to actual stresses on the physical body or perceived threats to the physical body. Physical stress, such as that seen in the Ghost Dance of the North American Indians, or the psychological stress of knowing that one is about to die, can be of sufficient magnitude to stimulate the appropriate reflexes and begin the cascade of events that leads to a near-death experience and the ability to elicit the aid of the entities of the “other world” (Eliade 1958; Walsh 1990). This is the key to the mystical process and to the rebirth of the soul and the individual.

Over many years of meditative practice the great healers have been able to heighten their sensitivities to the point of reaching levels of autonomic quietude, with maximal gain of the sympathetic system, such that the brain feels that the only other state it remembers and identifies with is near-death state. It is at this point of meditative practice that the adept has the spontaneous near-death experience due to the paradoxical feeling in consciousness that there is a total disconnection between the sympathetic and the parasympathetic sides of the autonomic nervous system and, therefore, loss of control of the physical body—hence the shamanic death and rebirth….

The [near-death] reflex itself appears to be a paradoxical disconnection between the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems, with vascular shunting away from the cortex with relative preservation of oxygenation to the brainstem and memory centers of the temporal lobes. This would account for the marked amount of catalepsy that occurs in the physical body while vivid imagery is simultaneously playing within the conscious mind….

There has now been enough significant research done in shamanic journeying and near-death experiences to realize that there needs to be an actual fear that one is losing one’s physical body and actually dying before the neardeath experience will manifest. This would seem appropriate as a protective mechanism to an animal in the jaws of a predator, who then reflexively collapses to avoid the pain of death. The feeling of “ecstatic rapture” that occurs is most likely mediated by certain chemoreceptors, such as beta-endorphins, as has been suggested by Candice Pert (Dossey 1989), and is identical to the “runner’s high” or any other physical stress that will produce a reflex endorphin surge in response to pain….

This state is also seen in lower animals and man as the “dive” reflex. In certain psychological experiments, laboratory animals have been placed into a pool of water that has no egress; after a period of frustrated swimming, the animal will dive to the bottom of the pool and die. On autopsy, there is no evidence of drowning but only that the heart stopped suddenly of an atrio-ventricular block. However, if the animal is rescued as the dive reflex is occurring and resuscitated, the animal can be put back into the pool and it will then swim for three to five times longer. This indicates that the animal has learned the concept of “hope” of rescue, and that there is “faith” in a higher power that it will not have to dive to the bottom and die.

This leads to the second aspect of the near-death experience that I feel is essential for the transformational aspect of the psyche: not only realizing that the physical body is dying but then consciously releasing the physical body from the personal will through the sudden acceptance of a Higher Authority. It is this subjugation of will that is the common feature of almost all persons who have had near-death experiences and have then had a transformation in their psyche in the way they live in the physical world….

This tends to follow the teachings of all the major religions of the world, all of which have stemmed from shamanic practices of stimulating neardeath experiences to make the shaman a “wounded healer” (Achterberg 1988). It is this “willingness” to guide the physical body through these experiences that allows the mystic to reach levels of understanding and compassion that could not otherwise be obtained….

The numerous techniques of achieving ecstasy that have developed over the past fifty millennia are distinctive, separate, and equally capable paths to that same, singular goal of an “asexual rebirth” into the same physical body found in the near-death experience (Eliade 1969; Eliade 1972; James 1982). This rebirth, in some cases, has been metaphorically referred to as “virginal,” as seen in the stories of the Jesus, Buddha, the Hindu’s Shiva, the Sumerian’s Mwuetsi, and the Egyptian’s Osiris, to name a few (Campbell 1949).

Amazing that ReVision would have published such a reductionistic piece, as it pretty much undercuts their whole spiritual worldview.

Biblio: Peters, Larry (1994), “The Internal Mystery Plays: the Role and Physiology of the Visual System in Contemplative Practices,” in ReVision, Volume  17, Issue 1, p. 3-11.

Karma and Reincarnation

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

From Hiroshi Motoyama’s Karma and Reincarnation (p. 119, 121):

Many different systems use breath regulation as a technique to alter consciousness. The Taoists, for example, teach a method called tenporin, or circulation of light. The disciple concentrates either on drawing the breath slowly from the coccyx to the head and back to the coccyx (the shoshuten, or “lesser circle”) or from the soles of the feet to the head and back down again (the daishuten, or “greater circle”). Various Christian meditators also mention an equivalent of pranayama practice. For example, in Method of Holy Prayer and Attention, Simeon, the New Theologian (circa 1250 AD) instructs the monk: “Then seat yourself in a quiet cell, apart in a corner, and apply yourself to doing as I shall say. Close the door, raise your mind above any vain or transitory object. Then, pressing your beard upon your chest direct the eye of the body and with it all your mind upon the centre of your belly—that is upon your navel—compress the inspiration of air passing through the nose so that you do not breathe easily, and mentally examine the interior of your entrails in search of the place of the heart, where all the powers of the soul delight to linger.” Pressing the chin into the chest is a common yogic device to aid in the retention of breath….

[O]ne of the common pratyahara techniques is to close the eyes. EEGs indicate a significant change in the brain’s activity even when the eyes are simply opened then closed.

Nevermindfulness

Monday, June 15th, 2009

If you name your emotions, you can tame them, according to new research that suggests why meditation works.

Brain scans show that putting negative emotions into words calms the brain’s emotion center. That could explain meditation’s purported emotional benefits, because people who meditate often label their negative emotions in an effort to “let them go.” (more)

Another big piece of transpersonal psychology which turns out to be not so transpersonal after all. Big surprise.

Evidently Not

Monday, June 15th, 2009

There’s no evidence that meditation eases health problems, according to an exhaustive review of the accumulated data by Canadian researchers….

They analyzed 813 studies focused on the impact of meditation on various conditions, including high blood pressure, cardiovascular disease and substance abuse….

Some of the studies suggested that certain types of meditation could help reduce blood pressure and stress and that yoga and other practices increased verbal creativity and reduced heart rate, blood pressure and cholesterol in healthy people.

However, the report authors said it isn’t possible to draw any firm conclusions about the effects of meditation on health, because the existing studies are characterized by poor methodologies and other problems. (more)

Yep, those “solid, repeated” studies just never stand up to questioning, do they? Having been designed and performed, you know, by persons who lack even the most basic professional competence in their fields.

Hoo!

Monday, June 15th, 2009

From Margaret Singer’s Cults In Our Midst (p. 128-9):

A former follower of Rajneesh demonstrated for me what he termed Hoo meditation, a frequent exercise in that group. He stood with his feet wide apart, his arms above his head, and began to bow at the waist, rapidly with stiff arms, blowing out air as sharply, forcefully, and as fast as he could, turning the heavy puffs into the sound “hoo” while bowing. This was done, he said, until most members fell to the mats on the floor.

I asked several medical doctors to give me a brief explanation of hyperventilation, or overbreathing, so that I could help former cult members understand the effect. The physicians explained that continuous overbreathing, by causing large volumes of air to pass in an out of the lungs, produces a drop in the carbon dioxide level in the bloodstream, which in turn causes the blood to become more alkaline. This is called respiratory alkalosis.

A mild degree of respiratory alkalosis produces dizziness or light-headedness: people feel “high” and experience loss of critical thought and judgment. More prolonged or vigorous overbreathing produces numbness and tingling of the fingers, toes, and lips; sweating; pounding of the heart; ringing in the ears; tremulousness; and feelings of fear, panic, and unreality. Even more vigorous and prolonged overbreathing can cause muscle cramps, including clawlike rigidity of the hands and feet, body cramps, and severe chest pain and tightness…..

By consciously reframing, or relabeling, the effects [of hyperventilation], thus confounding individuals’ gut-level reactions that something unpleasant has happened, [spiritual] leaders turn a frightening state into a supposedly positive one, telling neophytes, for example, that they are “becoming blissed out, … getting or receiving the spirit, … on the path.”

Hare Grapefruit

Monday, June 15th, 2009

From Oliver Sacks’ An Anthropologist on Mars (p. 43-6):

Greg’s first year at the [Hare Krishna] temple went well; he was obedient, ingenuous, devoted, and pious. He is a Holy One, said the swami, one of us. Early in 1971, now deeply committed, Greg was sent to the temple in New Orleans….

One problem arose in Greg’s second year with the Krishnas—he complained that his vision was growing dim, but this was interpreted, by his swami and others, in a spiritual way: he was “an illuminate,” they told him; it was the “inner light” growing. Greg had worried at first about his eyesight, but was reassured by the swami’s spiritual explanation. His sight grew still dimmer, but he offered no further complaints. And indeed, he seemed to be becoming more spiritual by the day—an amazing new serenity had taken hold of him. He no longer showed his previous impatience or appetites [e.g., for drugs], and he was sometimes found in a sort of daze, with a strange (some said “transcendental”) smile on his face. It is beatitude, said his swami—he is becoming a saint….

When [his parents visited him in 1975] they were filled with horror: their lean, hairy [i.e., hippie] son had become fat and hairless; he wore a continual “stupid” smile on his face … he kept bursting into bits of song and verse and making “idiotic” comments, while showing little deep emotion of any kind … he had lost interest in everything current; he was disoriented—and he was totally blind….

Greg was admitted to the hospital, examined, and transferred to neurosurgery. Brain imaging had shown an enormous midline tumor, destroying the pituitary gland and the adjacent optic chiasm and tracts and extending on both sides into the frontal lobes. It also reached backward to the temporal lobes, and downward to the diencephalon, or forebrain. At surgery the tumor was found to be benign, a meningioma—but it had swollen to the size of a small grapefruit or orange, and though the surgeons were able to remove it almost entirely, they could not undo the damage it had already done.

Greg was now not only blind, but gravely disabled neurologically and mentally—a disaster that could have been prevented entirely had his first complaints of dimming vision been heeded, and had medical sense, and even common sense, been allowed to judge his state….

He seemed bland, placid, emptied of all feeling—it was this unnatural serenity that his Krishna brethren had perceived, apparently, as “bliss,” and indeed, at one point, Greg used the term himself. “How do you feel?” I returned to this again and again. “I feel blissful,” he replied at one point, “I am afraid of falling back into the material world.”

Yet amazingly, even after everyone concerned knew that Greg’s “spiritual advancement” was a product only of the detrimental effects to his brain of a purely physical illness, his fellow “seekers” still managed to elevate it to transcendental status:

[W]hen he was first in the hospital [in 1977], many of his Hare Krishna friends would come to visit him; I often saw their saffron robes in the corridors. They would come to visit poor, blind, blank Greg and flock around him; they saw him as having achieved “detachment,” as an Enlightened One.

Jyoti Mudra

Monday, June 15th, 2009

From Yogananda’s Autobiography of a Yogi:

“[Lahiri Mahasaya] touched my forehead. Masses of whirling light appeared; the radiance gradually formed itself into the opal-blue spiritual eye, ringed in gold and centered with a white pentagonal star.”

From Kriyananda’s The Essence of the Bhagavad Gita (p. 355):

In Jyoti Mudra the fingers are used lightly in such a way as to close the eyes, ears, nostrils, and mouth openings, and to direct their energy inward and upward, focusing it in the spiritual eye at the point between the eyebrows.

In the beginning you may not see any light just an empty darkness or a somewhat hazy glow. Keep looking intently, be still, calm but fully concentrated. As and when you see any speck of tight or some colored glow, concentrate gaze steadily. Many colored lights of different shapes and intensities will appear from time to time. Do not waste time in trying to analyze them. Just know that the astral body is made of such colored lights. Regular practice of Jyoti mudra and steady gazing at the eyebrow center will reveal a golden circular light with a blue circle inside it. This is the light of the spiritual eye. Inside the blue circle advanced Yogis see a five pointed white star. This star is the focal point of advance concentration and meditation. Yogis penetrate their consciousness through this star and experience the infinite kingdom of God beyond and its bliss. (Mind: Its Nature)

Using your thumbs, index fingers, middle, ring, and little fingers to close your ears, eyelids, nostrils, and upper and lower lips, take in a slow full breath and hold, pressing very gently against the eyelids on the lower edge of the bony socket (not on the cornea) to release eye tension in a flourish of colors and patterns. Watch them in meditative wonder. This completes the yoni mudra. (Stuart Sovatsky, Eros, Consciousness, and Kundalini, p. 108)

However, we learn from Margaret Singer’s Cults In Our Midst (p. 136):

Former members report that in [Maharajji's] Divine Light Mission the lights would be dimmed and the guru would pass among the followers bestowing “divine light” on individuals by pressing on their eyes until the pressure on the optic nerve caused them to see flashes of light. This was reframed as Divine Light.

The same (self-induced) thing was happening in Yogananda’s SRF, of course, with physical phenomena and mere overactive imagination being framed as if they were “spiritual experience.” And if you don’t think that overly active imaginations are capable of generating inner phenomena such as the “spiritual eye,” think again:

[T]he core issue for Jim was his belief that he had “spiritual” experiences, such as seeing a golden light emanating from [Frederick] Lenz and filling the room. I explained that hallucinations like these are often the result of easily reproducible hypnotic processes that have very little to do with being spiritual. Jim said, “Prove it.” So I was forced to demonstrate this hypnotic effect for him. I asked him to close his eyes and meditate, as he had been doing for months as a student of Lenz. Once I saw his facial muscles relax, I added, “You’re going to meditate even deeper than you have ever done before, and I don’t want you to open your eyes until you’re ready to see an even brighter light emanating from me.” We waited less than a minute, and when he opened his eyes, he looked at me and said, “Whoa! That’s brighter than the light I saw coming from Lenz!” (Steven Hassan, Releasing the Bonds, p. 63-4)

By the same token, consider David Lane’s demonstration of the Kirpal Statistic:

Of the some 80,000 people Kirpal Singh initiated from 1948 to 1974, a majority of them claimed to have had some type of inner experience, ranging from simple visions of blue, green, and red lights to hearing subtle sounds like a bell, conch or a flute to sophisticated encounters with radiant yogis, sages, and mystics….

I tried several meditation experiments with my students which convinced me that Kirpal Singh and other gurus like him were taking undue credit for their disciples’ inner experiences. In my trial meditation sessions, I informed my students beforehand about the possibility of seeing inner lights and hearing inner sounds…. I informed them that I knew of an ancient yoga technique that would facilitate their inner voyages. I turned the lights off, instructed them briefly about closing their eyes gently and looking for sparks of light at the proverbial third eye. I told them that I would touch some students on the forehead lightly with my fingers. They meditated for some five minutes. I then proceeded to ask them about their experiences…. To my amazement, since I felt that Kirpal Singh and others were actually transmitting spiritual power, the majority of my students reported seeing light. A few students even claimed to have visions of personages in the middle of the light. Others reported hearing subtle sounds and the like.

All of which, however, still pales in comparison with the hallucinatory experiences of Ram Dass’ buddy, Bhagavan Das, as related in his It’s Here Now (Are You?) (p. 127, 136):

As the Karmapa sat reading aloud from a Tibetan text, he kept looking at me. I felt as if my body had turned into a giant pot and he was pouring a substance into me. He was filling me with the sounds that were coming from his mouth. These were sacred teachings spoken in a language I couldn’t understand. These sounds were turning into deities: hundreds and hundreds of tiny vajra dakinis falling into me from the sky like snowflakes. They each had a little skull cup and a khatvanga (a trident with a skull on top of it). Each had three eyes, and they were naked and had beautiful breasts. Light emanated from their yonis (vaginas)….

Many times I’d be walking around the temple and I would actually see dakinis flying around its pinnacle. I was amazed to see these fairy beings, these miniature goddesses.

Pressing on your eyeballs, in the jyoti mudra taught by Yogananda and others, makes pretty lights appear. It also invokes the oculocardiac reflex, which slows down one’s heart, sometimes even to the point of asystole and death.

And when you’ve found something that both causes “inner lights” to appear, and measurably slows the beating of your heart, you know you’ve found the “airplane route to God.”

Never mind that both effects are purely physiological and non-paranormal.

Star of the East

Monday, June 15th, 2009

From childhood, we have seen stars (e.g., atop Christmas trees) represented as if they had five points, i.e., in the form of pentagrams.

Yet, stars themselves are not in any way five-pointed.

Where, then, does that symbolism of the five-pointed star come from?

The pentagram has long been associated with the planet Venus, and the worship of the goddess Venus, or her equivalent. It is also associated with the Roman Lucifer, who was Venus as the Morning Star, the bringer of light and knowledge. It is most likely to have originated from the observations of prehistoric astronomers. When viewed from Earth, successive inferior conjunctions of Venus plot a nearly perfect pentagram shape around the zodiac every eight years. (Wikipedia)

Our Earth, like all the planets in the solar system, orbits in an ellipse around the sun, spinning on its own axis as it does so, and creating alternating periods of day and night for each region on its surface as it spins. As it traverses that ellipse, the range of “fixed stars” and associated constellations visible to observers on the night side of the planet—that side facing away from the light of the sun—changes.

Because of that annual periodicity in the range of constellations that are visible at night, it is natural and common for the zodiac to be represented in the form of a circular “pie”—i.e., a “map of the ecliptic,” with the constellations inscribed around the perimeter. Further, since as early as the first millennium BC, that pie has been cut into twelve equal “slices,” with each of the latter corresponding to one zodiacal “sign,” from Aries through Pisces.

Now, the planet Venus is the brightest point-like object in the sky—brighter than anything, in fact, except for the sun and moon. It owes that luminary distinction to its proximity to the sun, and to being covered with an opaque layer of highly reflective clouds composed of sulfuric acid. Being alternately visible either just after sunset or just before sunrise, in a 584-day cycle, it has been known traditionally as either the Evening Star or the Morning Star.

Venus orbits the sun approximately thirteen times for every eight orbits (i.e., years) of Earth. Because of that near-”orbital resonance,” if the positions of Venus (relative to the fixed stars) are plotted on a zodiacal “pie chart” over a mere eight-year period, that planet will trace out a five-pointed star, within the circular representation of the zodiac.

If one knows the ecliptic … and can pinpoint the present position of the planets in relation to the constellations of fixed stars in the zodiac … it is possible to mark the exact place in the 360 degrees of the zodiac where the Morning star first appears shortly before sunrise after a period of invisibility. If we do this, wait for the Morning star to appear again 584 days later (the synodic orbital time of [Venus]) mark its position in the zodiac, and then repeat this process until we note [Venus] back on point one again (six notations on five different positions in the zodiac) as the Morning star, we will find that exactly eight years have passed. If we then draw a line from the first point marked to the second point marked, then to the third, and so on, we end up with a regular pentacle or pentagram [i.e., a five-pointed star]. (Symbols.com, 29:14)

Found scrawled in caves of ancient Babylonia, the five-pointed star was copied from the star shaped pattern formed by the travels of the planet Venus in the sky. (About.com)

The pentagram was probably discovered as a result of astronomical research in the Euphrates-Tigris region about 6000 years ago….

Isolated pentagrams have been found on broken fragments of burned clay in Palestine, in layers dating from around 4000 BC. It was a common sign among the Sumerians around 2700 BC. (Symbols.com, 27:21)

Like the moon, the stars, and everything else in the sky as viewed from the Earth, Venus rises in the east, regardless of whether it is rising in the morning or in the evening. It is thus not merely the Morning Star, but also, in its own way, the Star of the East—which, in its primitive zodiacal representation, is again a five-pointed star within a circle. (Of course, even early astronomers could tell that Venus is actually a planet rather than a star, simply by observing how quickly it moved through the heavens. Still, the object has indeed traditionally been called a “Star.”) When that “Star” rises in the morning, it may continue to be visible near the sun even after sunrise—when seen from the Earth, Venus never strays more than 48 degrees from the sun. In that case, it will appear to be a point-source of white light, in a blue sky.

The aforementioned apparent “orbital resonance” between Earth and Venus is not actually dynamically significant: on timescales of thousands of years or more, the relative position of the two planets is effectively random. More accurately, every eight years the “starting point” of the pentagram traced out by Venus shifts in the zodiac by 1.5 degrees. That is the pentagonal star rotates within its containing “circular” zodiac—a phenomenon which would have been visible within the lifetime of even a single prehistoric astronomer, or at most over several generations. (It is unlikely that the early Egyptians, for example, lived past the age of thirty [Blackmore, The Meme Machine, p. 30].)

So, we have the movements of the planet Venus giving rise, quite naturally and unavoidably, not merely to a five-pointed star, but more colorfully to the idea of a Star of the East, as symbolized by a rotating five-pointed (white-light) star (in a sky-blue background) within a containing circle.

The fact that the brightest object in the night-time sky traces out a slowly-rotating pentagonal star (with respect to our one planet only) in its traversing of the zodiac is, of course, nothing more than dumb luck in how our solar system was thrown together. (Venus is the only planet in our solar system “that can clearly be identified with a simple graphic structure unambiguously derived from a plotting of its astronomical movements in space.”) Yet, that mere coincidence has not stopped the phenomenon from spawning important religious symbolisms and calendars in cultures around the world, where the five-pointed star contained within a circle is treated as if it were a sign from God Himself, which was then imagined to be reflected by the same Creator in the microcosm of the human body.

Thus, from Yogananda’s Autobiography of a Yogi:

During deep meditation, the single or spiritual eye becomes visible within the central part of the forehead. This omniscient eye is variously referred to in scriptures as the third eye, the star of the East, the inner eye, the dove descending from heaven, the eye of Shiva, the eye of intuition, etc….

“[Lahiri Mahasaya] touched my forehead. Masses of whirling light appeared; the radiance gradually formed itself into the opal-blue spiritual eye, ringed in gold and centered with a white pentagonal star”….

Why color the outer (zodiacal) ring gold? Presumably because that ring represents all the stars of heaven, and the gods (in constellations and otherwise) therein. (The alchemists’ [and astrologers'] symbol for gold was actually a circle with a point at its center.) Gold, as we know, does not rust, and has long been a symbol of purity and royalty.

[T]he Kriya Yogi learns, and practices daily, a technique known as Jyoti Mudra, the purpose of which is not only to see but to pass the life force and consciousness through the spiritual eye into infinity. (Swami Kriyananda, The Essence of the Bhagavad Gita, p. 355)

The astral spiritual eye, as described by Yogananda, was simply borrowed from early astronomical observations—it doesn’t really exist as a “third eye,” and thus won’t be seen by any meditator except in an Imagination Run Amok way. But why, then, would that symbol of the physical macrocosm have been internalized, to be used as one of the most important images upon which one is advised to meditate, in the kriya yoga path? For that matter, why appropriate any primitive symbol of the macrocosm—from the World Axis (“of the spine”) to the hemisphere-like dome (“of the sky/skull”)—and use it not merely as a pragmatic image upon which to concentrate, or as an architectural principle in the building of temples and houses, but as a pretend-aspect of a nonexistent, microcosmic subtle body? Why would extended focus upon such a transplanted symbol/structure be supposed to raise one’s consciousness and ultimately to yield transcendent spiritual experiences?

The answer, I suspect, has to do with the sympathetic-magical mindset of our distant, primitive ancestors, when they were developing their external rituals and (later) internalized visualizations, the latter of which we now consider to be esoteric techniques of meditation. That is, “content” techniques of (kundalini, etc.) meditation may well have arisen as attempts at mimicking, and thus literally encouraging, a climbing of the World Axis to reach the Pole Star, in precisely the same way as pins stuck into a voodoo doll are believed to cause real pain to the actual person in whose image the doll was constructed.

In our “esoteric” meditations the “pins” exist only in imagination, and the “doll” is an equally imagined “subtle body” rather than, say, a physical ladder or smoke-hole in the roof of a yurt. But the difference between that and the mindset of the literal voodoo practitioner is only in the degree of abstraction—a natural and inevitable improvement in the slow evolution of our species. The central expectation that the sympathetic magic will work, and the primitive reasons for that expectation (i.e., that “like affects like”) are no different.

So, in meditating on the five-pointed star at the center of the golden ring, we are riding in sympathetic magic along with the brightest “star” through the literal sky-heavens, i.e., through the literal abode of the gods. That is the “transcendence” to which the ancient sages of India aspired, when visualizing the spiritual eye.

And we, as “spiritual seekers,” have received those primitive-mindset techniques, and taken them not for the “abstract voodoo” that they are, but rather as real means toward effecting spiritual transcendence via the visualized manipulation of imagined astral and causal bodies. Beautiful.

The whole edifice is built on primitive ideas of magic which never worked in the first place, any more than homeopathy works today. (In defense of most consumers of homeopathic remedies, they at least are probably ignorant of the “like affects like” theory underlying the quack/placebo medicine, and so are not generally guilty of explicitly endorsing the magical worldview from which that “medicine” arose. Not so for the doctors who prescribe those ineffectual “sugar pills,” nor for the manufacturers of the same “candy.”) No surprise, then, that when the methods of meditation we use, from mantras to attempts to raise a kundalini “energy,” are tested with competent experimental protocols, they amount to nothing more than techniques of relaxation, having no greater, measurable effect than the placebo/control techniques against which they are tested. After all, how much effect should “mental voodoo” have?

The best part about the (cf. content-meditation) Star of the East is this:

[I]n the year of Treya’s fortieth birthday, a teacher of both of us, Da Free John, began saying that the ultimate enlightened vision was when one saw the five-pointed cosmic star, in a very real and direct way….

And it is held that, at the precise moment of death, the great five-pointed cosmic star, or the clear light void, or simply great Spirit or luminous Godhead, appears to every soul….

[Treya] had simply had this vision, of the luminous cosmic star, in a very real and direct way. Thus upon actual death, I thought to myself, Treya would simply be seeing her own Original Face, and not for the first time.

Da was just borrowing that idea and symbol (uncredited) from Yogananda, and Wilber then swallowed it whole, while conveniently overlooking the fact that, as even a novice student of kriya/raja yoga would know, merely seeing that (astral! not causal or Ultimate) Star was never the goal—you’re supposed to pass your consciousness through it in daily meditation, not merely at death. Regardless, the only thing real about any of that was the motions of the planet Venus, as observed by primitive astronomers/astrologers and then plotted against the ecliptic in early star charts; the rest is just internalized rituals and Imagination Run Amok.

Dennett

Monday, June 15th, 2009

… And then I stumbled on this:

There was also a follow-up point made by Daniel Dennett, that he does not dismiss the value of studying mystical experiences for either understanding how our brains compose our sense of self, or for personally helping one to achieve a sense of peace and contentment. In fact, Dennett said, he himself meditates and finds it very beneficial. He just disagrees that it gives someone insight into the nature of how the entire universe works, vs. into the nature of how the mind works. People who have spent years and years meditating don’t come up with anything interesting beyond themselves … or something like that.