The Bright Way. Diana Rowan

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Название The Bright Way
Автор произведения Diana Rowan
Жанр Эзотерика
Серия
Издательство Эзотерика
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781608686452



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       Your Hopes and Dreams

      What do you dream of creating? Now that we’ve come this far together, take a moment to tap into your new hopes and dreams. What do you hope to achieve on our journey together, knowing what you know now? Write down your thoughts. They don’t have to be big, and they will not be set in stone. The intention here is simply to enter your Bright Way stream.

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       Past Wisdom

      Tapping into these ancient wisdom traditions, I have grown keenly aware of the real people who laid the paths we walk today. When it comes to classical piano, my longest-existing passion, I connect with the souls of the great composers and to the hopes and dreams of their entire cultures. Playing the exact notes Chopin and Beethoven wrote, I commune with them mysteriously across time. These are real, tangible energies. I learn from them. They directly transmit feelings and beliefs that are still relevant today and worth remembering.

      I feel Chopin’s vulnerability exposed in every song he wrote. He reminds us that when we share from the heart — even if it’s terrifying, as his early retirement from public performing attests to — our work becomes timeless and universal. Beethoven inspires me with his faith in the towering dignity of humanity. His music became increasingly compassionate as he matured, despite the fact that he was repeatedly disappointed by life and his relationships. Beethoven’s profound deafness was just the tip of the iceberg. From his abusive father to his famously unrequited loves to his former hero Napoleon trampling his dream of democracy, Beethoven was frequently heartbroken. Yet he wrote some of the most uplifting, passionate, humane, and heroic music of all time.

       Early Influences

      Growing up in many countries, I learned that time flows in more ways than how I experience it in California now. Here time often feels concrete, forward-moving, and linear. The old is discarded for the new at lightning speed. In contrast, in my earlier years my life experiences were largely naturally intertwined with the past. In Cyprus, for example, my friends and I attended school on a colonial compound without seeing it as old-fashioned, even as we paraded around in our eighties neon garb. We didn’t bat an eye as we careened through millennia, passing a medieval Greek Orthodox church one minute, popping into classical goddess-inspired Aphrodite’s Café the next, often in hysterics while getting ready for the disco and New Wave music that same evening.

      In school we studied both classics and modern English literature, Eliot and Euripides sitting side by side. We moved naturally between vast swathes of time, allowing us access to universal insights. One of the most striking spots to experience this phenomenon physically is Istanbul, where you can stand in Sultanahmet Square, turn 360 degrees, and take in more than three thousand years of human creativity, from the ancient Egyptian obelisk right up to the modern shops hawking knickknacks. I recommend taking a ride on that head-spinning carousel of time if you can. I remember my own experience there as if it were yesterday.

      Greek philosophy and mythology were my everyday companions, and in these pages Plato, Aristotle, and others will speak to you down through the ages. Their voices ring out with truth and understanding, as pertinent today as they were more than two thousand years ago. Artist, scientist, software developer Keith Rowland reflects:

      “Seeing the threads that have continued from past to present and are still intact helps me discern which are true. ‘There ain’t much new under the sun.’ Philosophy has helped me in my everyday life. I have been very quick to anger and say things I regretted. I tried and tried to stop that habit but couldn’t completely. I finally realized the only way was to change my attitude so that the hair trigger wasn’t there to begin with. Wisdom is the best tool with which we can change our attitude. It is applied knowledge. We have a whole encyclopedia of examples from which to learn, from others who went through great pain to acquire wisdom and teach us so that we don’t have to endure similar pain.”

       The Power of Language

      Language itself is a keeper of wisdom. Words, whether or not we know their roots, shape our consciousness. This is why words hold incantational, subliminal power. Tapping into the original meanings of our everyday words reveals many secrets. The word create, for instance, is related to the Roman nature goddess Ceres (Demeter in Greek mythology). Her name originates from the Proto-Indo-European root ker, meaning “to grow.” So, at its root, creativity is natural; creativity is growth! This confirms one of creativity’s great secrets, which we’ve already touched on together: creativity is a process, not a product. Creativity is growth, not just the fruit, delicious though that is. Heed past wisdom: it holds many such secrets hidden in plain sight.

       Creativity is a process, not a product. Creativity is growth.

       BRIGHT WAY ACTIVITY

       What Has Inspired You?

      What stories from the past have inspired you? Think about fairy tales, books from childhood, movies, paintings, images, song lyrics. How have these shaped and informed your real-life experiences? Great works of art touch on truth and reflect life’s meaning back to us. This is why I count even humble works as great, if they tap into universal truth.

      When I was a child, I loved the Moomintroll book series by Tove Jansson. Looking back on those books, I see that many of the themes that moved me then still inspire me today. I loved the freedom, the playfulness, the philosophical asides, the drawings, everything! Once in a while I read those beloved books again, and I feel refreshed and affirmed.

      What is contained in your store of past wisdom?

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       Past Wisdom and the Alchemy of the Bright Way

      As you know, it’s not just past artworks, stories, and cultures that influence and inspire us. Ancient philosophies are also trustworthy guides on the Bright Way. Why? As Keith said, they’ve been distilled through millennia of hard-won human experience to quickly communicate our deepest truths. While you don’t have to buy into any of these philosophies wholesale (there are too many of them for that, and no guide should be followed blindly), they are sharp skill-building tools and potent symbols of inspiration.

      Alchemy, for example, is a practice going all the way back to ancient Egypt and the legendary Greek-influenced Hermes Trismegistus. Alchemy’s history and impact fan out from what we now know as the Middle East to all of Europe, the Americas and Asia.

      On the surface alchemy may seem to be about transforming lead into gold, an impression encouraged by those wanting to reserve this wisdom for a select few (hence the phrase hermetically sealed, referring to Hermes Trismegistus). Story and metaphor are among the best ways to communicate profound messages. As such, “lead into gold” is mostly an allegory for transformation. It refers to transmuting the heavy, dull, and toxic parts of ourselves into light, strong, bright, beautiful gold. This process reflects the grand journey of self-realization we all take and that we are walking together now. Alchemical symbols surround us, for example, heading part 1’s chapters. The circle-and-dot represents the sun (creative energy) and gold; the wheel-cross, cycles and the physical plane; the infinity sign, eternally renewing life force. These imagination-stimulating symbols also appear in many belief systems and eras, some dating all the way back to the Bronze Age.

      On our Bright Way journey, we’ll work through the Operations of Alchemy. These processes, to put it briefly, initiate us with fiery ego-taming and conclude with a celebration of our integration as a body-mind-spirit. This evolution becomes a way of life as we spiral through this healing, creative process over and over, reclaiming our internal gold. As Plato reflected, “Love is born into every human being; it calls back the halves of our original nature together; it tries to make one out of the two and heal the wound of human nature.”

      Whether you are spiritual, scientific, agnostic, or not involved in any of these perspectives, the tenets of alchemy can