Spiritual Health Learning Community Center
Exploring Life's Horizons
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People are asleep, and when they die, they awake. - Prophet Muhammad (Peace be upon
him)
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Dream
Mystical reality is to the waking state, as the waking state is
to the dream state. More specifically, just as the waking state
is considered by most of us to be, somehow, more real than
the dream state, so, too, do the Sufi masters consider
mystical realization to be more real than the events of the
normal, waking state.
Similarly, life after death is to life in the physical/material
world, as the post-natal world is to the pre-natal world. In
other words, just as most of us would judge the condition of
awareness of the post-natal state to be far more acute,
intense and nuanced than our state of awareness in the
womb, so, too, do the Sufi masters consider the condition of
awareness in the next life to be more acute, intense and
nuanced than is the case, for most of us, in our earthly life.
From the perspective of the practitioners of the Sufi path, we
are living in a dream-like state. When we die, we will come to
realize this. The experience of mystical reality affords us the
opportunity to gain insight into the truth of the foregoing
realization prior to our physical death.
Dream states, waking reality, pre-natal experience,
post-natal experience, life after physical death and mystical
states, all give expression to different facets of reality. They
form a broad spectrum of possibilities.
Each of the aforementioned categories could be further
sub-divided to reflect the richness of experiential potential
inherent in this spectrum. Moreover, just as visible light
constitutes but a small portion of the total spectrum of
electromagnetic radiation, so, too, according to the Sufi
masters, does normal waking reality represent but a very
small fraction of the total spectrum of possibilities inherent in
reality.
Until the great discoveries of X-rays, ultraviolet light, radio
waves, infrared radiation, microwaves and so on, our
understanding concerning the parameters of electromagnetic
radiation were limited. Similarly, until the announcements of
the great mystics, across the ages, with respect to the many
different kinds of mystical states and conditions, the grasp of
the average individual concerning the possibilities available
to us was very restricted.
To be sure, even now, the understanding of most of us
vis-a-vis mystical states is very superficial. In fact,
many people are, probably, relatively skeptical about the
existence or reality of the mystical realm.
Nonetheless, on the basis of their experiences, various
mystics from a wide-variety of spiritual traditions have
repeatedly tried to draw our attention to the substantive
nature of these states and conditions. Of course, we could
dismiss or explain away all of these reports as the
proclamations of: crazy people; victims of some organic
dysfunction; liars; con artists; attention seekers and so on.
Undoubtedly, some of the people reporting such mystical
experiences may be subsumable in one or more of the
foregoing categories of dismissal. Whether or not all of them
can be so subsumed is an entirely different matter. This is
especially the case given that the tendency to dismiss is not
based on a direct, rigorous examination of the evidence or
the people making the claims. In fact, for the vast majority of
those who reject the reality of the mystical realm, the
dismissal is categorical and out-of-hand.
From the perspective of the mystics, such people continue on
in their waking state of dream. The latter people treat the
mystics like individuals who are trying to wake the former
people from a very intense and pleasant dream. The people
who are dreaming tend to get irritated and annoyed with the
disturbers of their dreams.
Sufi masters indicate that not only are we living in a waking
dream, the dream is a nightmare. Notwithstanding the
character of some aspects of our waking dream experiences,
our waking dream is not the pleasant affair we have allowed
ourselves to be deluded into believing is the case.
We are being manipulated in our waking dream, and our
situation is extremely precarious. We are not who most
people in the dream say we are. Our identity is quite
different, and everything depends on our coming to know our
true identity.
When the alarm of death goes off, we will be brought rudely
to our senses and recognize the truth in what the
practitioners of the mystical path have been saying. When
that happens, however, it will be too late, and we shall realize
we have overslept and missed the bus of opportunity.
Some people have the capacity to experience what is known
as lucid dreaming. In this condition one is able to exercise a
degree of conscious control over what goes on in the dream.
Such people are able to act, within limits, on the character,
contents and direction of the dream rather than be merely
passive witnesses to it.
Sufi masters are those individuals who, by the grace of God,
have acquired the mystical counterpart to lucid dreaming in
relation to the dream of waking life. In a sense, they are able
to wake up within the dream state of waking life and become
active participants rather than passive witnesses.
To be awake within the dream of waking life, is to be aware
of the nature of the dream which constitutes waking life.
Such a person has knowledge and insight into the
possibilities of that dream state. Such an individual can take
advantage of this understanding in order to act within the
waking dream in a way that generates benefits for the
individual.
Some of these benefits are as follows. One can come to know
one's true identity. One can realize one's essential capacity.
One can come to know the purpose of the dream. One can
fulfil the conditions of that purpose. One can come to know
God in a direct fashion, unmediated by concepts, theories,
language, or rational limitations.
When most people dream, their muscles become paralyzed.
There are restrictions imposed on what they can and can't
do.
In the dream, of course, we usually feel like we have full use
of our muscles. Yet, these are only our "dream muscles". In
point of fact, most of us do not have access to use of our
"real world" muscles during the course of the dream.
In the dream of waking life, we believe we have full use of
our muscles. These, however, are only the muscles of the
waking dream. Our spiritual muscles are paralyzed.
When one learns, if God wishes, how to wake up within the
dream of waking life, one's spiritual muscles are no longer
paralyzed. Consequently, one can use them to fulfil various
kinds of tasks, as well as to journey to various realms within
the spectrum of possibility of reality which are not possible to
do as long as one is asleep in the dream of life.
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