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“Our postindustrial, materialistic, secularized culture does not encourage the awakening of our essential Self. Widespread consumerism, self-indulgence, habits of immediate gratification, the moral relativity of our age, and the displacement of individual and communal responsibilities by large corporations, institutions, and bureaucracies bring us fewer moments of truth, fewer encounters with our essential and authentic selves. The distraction of entertainment that appeals to every human weakness and the pervasive artificiality that technology has brought leave us little chance of being what we are meant to be.” SelfSpiritualityEssenceMaterialismSpiritual GrowthSufismConsumerismSelf KnowledgeTrue SelfSpiritual Development Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“We live in a time when there seem to be very few heroes. The original meaning of hero was someone favored by heaven and having godlike qualities. A hero is not without humility; humility is our awareness of our dependence on Spirit, and our interdependence with our fellow human beings. Gandhi, Malcom X, and Martin Luther King were all examples of both humility and heroism. Often humility exists because of the hero's connection to a higher aim: humility in front of a great idea, in front of the Infinity of Life. It is this kind of humility that leads to the forming of a connection with the infinite creative energy. (p. 144)” HumilityMindfulnessHeroismSufi Way Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“The simplest form of meditation requires two things: a body that is still and relaxed, and an object to focus attention on. Many traditional postures for meditation exist. I have found the greatest ease and stability sitting in a chair, with the spine erect and the palms of the hands resting on the knees. The focus of attention that I have found most useful for the beginners is the awareness of breathing combined with a mental focus: „I“ as a feeling in the heart with each inhalation and „am“ as a sensation of the whole physical presence on the exhalation. It should be understood that this is not the „I“ of the ego as we commonly know it, but an I-ness rooted in the heart, an „I-ness-without I.“ (p. 56)” MeditationMindfulnessContemplative Life Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“Holistic, unconditional love, agape, is the unity in which duality disappears. It is as if a certain internal boundary has vanished. With agape what we love is ourselves, the way a mother loves her child as herself. This is the meaning of loving another as yourself – transcending our phenomenal borders and experiencing ourselves in another and the other in, not apart from, us. Eventually, if love is comprehensive, it unites us with everything and allows us to know that we are everything. Therefore, how can we support the illusion of this isolated, separate self that is threatened by and defends itself from everything outside? Love returns us to the unity that is actually Reality. Reality is not the isolation, suspicion, envy, selfishness, and fear of loss that we have come to accept as normal; it is that we are all part of one Life. The same Spirit moves in us all. You come to know this better when you realize that we all have the same kinds of feelings, the same wish to be known and respected, to share ourselves and let down our defenses. We are continually faced with a choice between personal achievement, personal security, and comfort on the one hand, and working for the whole and helping everyone and everything toward perfection on the other. We are faced with a choice between looking out for ourselves and contributing wholeheartedly to a common good. We are faced with focusing on self-love or increasing our love of all Life. (p. 191)” LoveMindfulnessOnenessNondualitySufi WayAgape Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“The state of emancipation toward which we are journeying can be described as freedom from the fear of loss. It is understood that Life flows to us from an unstinting Source of grace that will never lessen its giving as long as we are open to receiving. The people and things that are so precious to us are embodiments of qualities, and these qualities are derived from this beneficent Source. What we are so afraid of losing are qualities that we have invested in the particular forms we are attached to. We have confused these qualities with the forms we have discovered them in. Their beauty is like the beauty of sunlight that falls upon a brick wall: „Sunlight fell upon the wall; the wall received a borrowed splendor. Why set your heart on a piece of earth, simple one? Seek out the source which shines forever.“ Rumi, Mathnawi II: 708-09 The wall may crumble or be torn down, but the sun will always return to shine. To be spiritually mature is to be free of the fear of loss, knowing that we are connected to the Source of all generosity. (p. 161)” GraceMindfulnessTransformationAwakeningRumiSufi WayMathnawi Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“We may also struggle with what could be considered justifiable fears. We have fears of loss, pain, disability, and death. These can be transformed only by the human being who has come to know what it means to „die before you die“. In the discipline of transformation, this expression means coming to know our spiritual home, our eternal Self. It is not a metaphor but an accurate description of a psycho-spiritual truth. Many of those who have lived through the experience of a clinical death and have returned to life know that death is not something to fear and that life is an immeasurable gift. These people return to their lives with less fear because they have experienced their true metaphysical home. At the same time they have known that this physical body is important as a means of contact with their fellow human beings. Against the backdrop of eternity this transient human life has acquired a new beauty. To die before death is to detach from our physical body, our thinking, and our emotions at will, as a conscious choice. This is the aim of certain forms of spiritual training. Through control of the breath, fasting, and sustained awareness it becomes possible to separate from our coarser bodies – physical, emotional, mental – and to mount the steed of pure consciousness. When consciousness is separated from the conditioned intellect and desire, it makes direct contact with the electromagnetic field of Love. The soul comes to know a different relationship to all the beings within this electromagnetic field. When we are connected with this Love, we are free of fear and of the domination of the lower self and the thoughts it generates. As Rumi said: „Thinking is powerless in the expression of love.“ Love is reckless and does not count the cost; it expresses itself through courage and self-sacrifice. Often our fear is a lack of love. To be free of fear we must love very much. (p. 159)” MindfulnessSufi WaySpiritual Transformation Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“As long as human beings are unconscious and dominated by selfish and illusory desires, there is no god who will force us to change. But as the history of revelation on earth testifies, guidance has come to all communities and nations. Through masters, saints and prophets, through sacred texts and oral tradition, humanity has been reminded and warned. Cosmic intelligence has continually been in communication with us; now the burden of responsibility rests on each human heart. (p. 164)” MindfulnessAwakeningRevelationSufi WayPerennial PhilosophyCosmic IntelligenceTradition Of Rumi Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“When you are drawn into love, your own sense of an isolated, separate self melts. When you are in love and you sit face-to-face with the one you love, you forget yourself in the beauty of your beloved. Because the beloved is a point of contact with beauty, you are filled with this beauty. Any lover becomes more beautiful through this love. This Beloved, which most people know only in the first moments of romantic love, is in fact present in many faces and guises as our capacity for love grows. This capacity transforms us and makes us more alive. We are never so alive as when we are in love, so why should we restrict this love to the almost impossible conditions of romantic love? Can't we be lovers all the time? (p. 192)” LoveSufi Way Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“The Work is to bring the outer and the inner into harmony. (p. 103)” MindfulnessSufi WayThe Great Work Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“In Sufism we understand the human being to be composed of three aspects: self, heart, and spirit. Self is the experience of our personal identity, including our thoughts and emotions. Heart is something deeper, experienced through an inner knowing, often with a quality of compassion, conscience, and love. It can ultimately lead to the recognition of the deepest part of ourselves - our inmost consciousness, or Spirit, the reflection of God within us. If we simply say that souls is our inner being, then the quality of our inner being, or soul, is the result of the relationship between self and our innermost consciousness, Spirit. The self without the presence of spirit is merely ego, the false mask, which is governed by self-centered thoughts and emotions. The more the self becomes infused with spirit, the more „soulful“ it becomes. We use the words presence and remembrance to describe the conscious connection between self and Spirit. The more we live mindfully with presence, the more we remember God, and the more soulful we are, the more we drop the mask. Care of the soul, then, is always the cultivation of presence and remembrance. Presence includes all the ways we mindfully attend to our lives. Soul is the child of the union of self and spirit. When this union has matured, the soul acquires substance and structure. That is why it is said in some teachings that we do not automatically have a soul; we must acquire one through our spiritual work. (p. 75)” MindfulnessEnlightenmentAwakeningSufi WayThe SoulLiving Presence Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“The mirror of pure awareness is obscured by layers of emotional and mental conditioning. Just as polishing transforms a mineral or stone into a reflective object, regularly wiping clean the mirror of awareness will allow a human being to reflect the light of Being itself. The spiritual process can be understood as learning to consciously reflect more and more of this Being. If we would clear the inner mirror, the light of Being would be reflected outwardly, pouring out of our eyes. (p. 100)” MindfulnessAwakeningSufi Way Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“Let the Jesus of your Spirit ride the donkey; Don‘t make your Jesus carry the donkey. Rumi, Mathnawi II: 1853-5” EnlightenmentAwakeningSufismRumiSufi WayLiving PresenceMathnawi Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“EVERYDAY MAINTENANCE OF THE SOUL What does it mean to care for your soul? Care of the soul is the constant practice of bringing loving attention to the problems, conflicts, and longings of our lives. Emotional suffering is something to be attended to, not split off from. We can learn to read our life as a story, rather than as a clinical case. Moreover, if the story we have been telling ourselves is a melodrama or tragedy, we need to rewrite the story. Every human life, when seen from the perspective of the unrelenting Divine Mercy, is the story of grace unfolding. Love is revealing itself in the precise details of each human life, if only we do not impose the script of self-pity, bitterness, and fearfulness. The soul is where the divine attributes of God may be awakened from their latent state to be integrated into our character. These qualities are the soul's natural inheritance from the Divine. It is through communion with the Divine that the soul takes on the spiritual attributes of kindness, generosity, courage, forgiveness, patience, and freedom.” MindfulnessEnlightenmentAwakeningSufi WayThe SoulLiving PresenceThe Tradition Of Rumi Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“Since in order to speak, one must first listen, learn to speak by listening. Rumi, Mathnawi I: 1627” MindfulnessRumiSufi WayMathnawi Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“Realization, in its fullest meaning, is not merely knowing something, but making it real in oneself. We come to this essential Self through a process of deconditioning, reconditioning, and unconditioning. This can also be described as minimizing what is negative, increasing what is positive, and, ultimately, opening to Spirit.” MindfulnessEnlightenmentAwakeningSufismSufi WayLiving PresenceHeartfulnessSelf Realizationali Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“A Seed has no energy of its own, but it can respond in the right environment. Every form of life has a capacity for response but none so much as the human being. In an infertile environment this capacity for response may be dormant. The cultivation we need to provide is through conscious awareness. This makes the difference between nominally being alive and being alive abundantly. Life is not just this bioenergetic vitality, but a spiritual vitality that is eternal, and we are that. This life span that we know on earth is said to be one chapter in the story of Life. This eternal Life reflects through us. With awareness we can develop all our faculties. The body, mind, spirit, and ecology form an interconnected whole. When a harmonious relationship exists among all of these, we have abundant life.” MindfulnessEnlightenmentAwakeningSufismSufi WayTreshold SocietyKabir HelminskiLiving PresenceHeartfulness Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“The work of presence is first to purify and harmonize our conscious and subconscious faculties, to purify the heart around a single center; and second to patiently awaken those latent human faculties that have gone to sleep or atrophied. One day the heart may reach such contact with its own Source; it will gain an intimacy with the Creative Power and know the One behind multiplicity. It will rediscover its home in the unity of all that is. This possibility exists, and human beings are destined to realize it more and more. This is the complete human being, the drop that becomes the sea. It is not difficult, as our teachers told us, because we are made for it.” EnlightenmentAwakeningSufismSufi WayTreshold SocietyTradition Of Rumi Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“Our work is to cross a treshold into emptiness and stillness. It is like entering an empty room that proves to hold a great presence. The apparent emptiness of simple presence is richer than the crowded experience of ordinary personality. We can either be empty with Spirit or full of ourselves.” EnlightenmentIslamAwakeningSufismSufi WayTreshold SocietyTradition Of Rumi Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“To cross the treshold from habits and conditioning to emptiness, which is the receptive quality of the soul, we must become still and patient. We must give up certain impulses and let go again and again. This is the way we come into our essential Self. We leave behind our compulsive egos, embodying the „I am“ and selflessness at the same time. The „I am“ is not the mechanical self - the role-playing, superficial personality - that feels its existence through its ordinary reactions and resistances. With the right kind of attention and observation we can see the relationship between our various thoughts and sentiments and how each of them invokes some imaginary „I“. Instead we can learn to feel our own existence through recollection and intention. A positive sense of I-ness emerges through recollection. It is the first thing we can trust: our own presence, the sacred „I am“.” EnlightenmentIslamAwakeningSufismSufi WayTreshold SocietyKabir HelminskiLiving Presence Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“The apparent conflict between a strong sense of our own presence and selflessness can be resolved if we realize that presence helps us to be more selfless. Selflessness is the soul's own willingness to make sacrifices in the material world as well as in the artificial world of personality. The „I am“ is selfless in that it holds no special idea of itself, does not justify itself, and is not envious, resentful, or proud. Because it already feels secure in the infinitely merciful Spirit, it can accept the annihilation of what is false in the ego personality. If we are rooted in presence, we ar e capable of leting go of the demands of the ego. If we are not secure in th eemptiness of pure presence, we will cling to events and things, to lies and fears. But in a state of presence, free of the coercions of the ego, we can become our most authentic selves.” EnlightenmentIslamAwakeningSufismSufi WayKabir HelminskiLiving Presence Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“We can bring quality into the details of life if we remember to be and act with precision. If we can consciously be at that point where the horizontal force of active choice meets the vertical force of Being, a certain „something“, larger than life, will be activated. This „something“ can be felt in anything produced by the hands and hearts of a conscious human being – in works of art, in a well-tended garden, in food prepared with love.” MindfulnessSufi WayTreshold SocietyLiving Presence Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“The soul is a knowing substance that knows the Reality beyond time and space. To acquire this kind of knowing is to become illuminated, to be connected to a greater intelligence that will guide every step of your life. Instead of living in fear and uncertainty, you will more and more be able to trust the unfolding of Life. (p. 78)” MindfulnessSufi WisdomSufi WayTreshold Society Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“The Work of the Soul is the greatest satisfaction in life. It is a long journey with many stages of realization. If you want to know how close you are to living the life of the soul, simply ask yourself: how much of my life energy is devoted to complaining about my circumstances, blaming others for my own unhappiness, controlling others to achieve my desires, deceiving others to make myself look good, or promoting myself? The remedy for all these spiritual diseases is the same: contact with your true inner being, which is a reflection of the Divine. After all is said and done, after all our spiritual practices and all the esoteric knowledge that might be acquired, the real measure of soulfulness is simply the degree of our humility, gratitude, patience, and love.” MindfulnessSufi WayTreshold SocietyLiving PresenceTradition Of Rumi Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“One danger is that the person will strive very hard in spiritual disciplines as a way of avoiding or burying deep pain. Eventually, however, he or she will realize that the spiritual path must bring everything to light.” MindfulnessSufi Way Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“What we most need is what we already are: our essential Self. There is no escape; there is only coming home [...] The submission of the lower self to the Higher Self, of the self to the Whole in each moment, becomes the central fact of existence. Submission is t olive for one's Self - the eternal I - not for one's ego.” MindfulnessSufi WayEssential Self Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“In Sufism we understand the human being to be composed of three aspects: self, heart, and spirit. Self is the experience of our personal identity, including our thoughts and emotions. Heart is something deeper, experienced through an inner knowing, often with a quality of compassion, conscience, and love. It can ultimately lead to the recognition of the deepest part of ourselves - our inmost consciousness, or Spirit, the reflection of God within us. If we simply say that soul is our inner being, then the quality of our inner being, or soul, is the result of the relationship between self and our innermost consciousness, Spirit. The self without the presence of spirit is merely ego, the false mask, which is governed by self-centered thoughts and emotions. The more the self becomes infused with spirit, the more „soulful“ it becomes. We use the words presence and remembrance to describe the conscious connection between self and Spirit. The more we live mindfully with presence, the more we remember God, and the more soulful we are, the more we drop the mask. Care of the soul, then, is always the cultivation of presence and remembrance. Presence includes all the ways we mindfully attend to our lives. Soul is the child of the union of self and spirit. When this union has matured, the soul acquires substance and structure. That is why it is said in some teachings that we do not automatically have a soul; we must acquire one through our spiritual work. (p. 75)” MindfulnessSufismSufi WayThe SoulLiving PresenceThe Great Work Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“In the world of the Spirit, the human being is a witness. The mirror is for witnessing not only the outer, visible world, but the inner, invisible worlds where spiritual qualities abide. Through the sensitive screen of our own awareness, we behold moment by moment and flash by flash the manifestation of infinite beauty, and that beauty need never be absent from the mirror. What may appear in the mirror at a given moment is a gift and should never be underestimated or taken for granted. As we polish away conditioning, concepts, and the false, reacting self, wherever we turn there is the face of Reality. „There is a polish for everything“, said Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him, „and the polish for the heart is the remembrance of God“ (Bukhari)” MindfulnessSufi WayRemembrance Of God Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“Spiritual attainment is a fundamental transformation of the „I“ from a separate, limited, and contracted identity into a rich and infinite one. It is a movement from separation to union. One of the first steps in this process is to observe and understand the chaotic and fragmented nature of the ordinary self and to understand that a very practical integration and harmony can be achieved. This integrated self is the drop that contains the ocean. At the dimensionless center of our identity is the creative potential of Universal Intelligence. (p. 120)” MindfulnessAwakeningSufi Way Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“The original meaning of healing was „to make whole“. We can be healed of our separateness through our contact with something whole. We can know we are not separate from the whole, and we can know the universe through knowing ourselves.” HealingMindfulnessWholenessSufi Way Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“Grace is always there. It is the Life that flows from the Source of Life. What we need to learn is to receive it and to become aware that grace is flowing from Life all the time. This Life is within us. All the qualities we might need are available if we can form the right connection. The three unlocking keys to the Source of Life are humility, gratitude, and love. When these qualities begin to prevail in our inner life we become receptive to grace. (S. 144)” MindfulnessAwakeningSufi WaySpiritual Transformation Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“As faith grows, all our human faculties and attributes are absorbed in the Love of the One and the quest for Truth. As presence develops in us, so does faithfulness. Everything becomes harmonized by that presence. Finally, that presence is unified in the One.” FaithMindfulnessPresenceFaithfulnessSufi Way Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“What is most characteristically human is not guaranteed to us by our species or by our culture but given only in potential. A spiritual master once expressed it this way: A person must work to become human. What is most distinctly human in us is something more than the role we play in society and more than the conditioning, whether for good or bad, of our culture. It is our essential Self, which is our point of contact with Infinite Spirit. This Spirit is not to be understood as a metaphysical assertion requiring belief, but as something we can experience for ourselves. What if you, as a human being, represent the final result of a process in which this Spirit has evolved better and better reflectors of itself? If the human being is the most evolved carrier of the Creative Spirit – possessing conscious love, will, and creativity – then our humanity is the degree to which this physical and spiritual vehicle, and particularly our nervous system, can reflect or manifest Spirit. That which is most sacred in us, that which is deeper than our individual personality, is our connection to this Spirit, this Creative Power. Whereas conventional religious belief has the tendency to anthropomorphize God/Spirit, this process consists of the human being becoming qualified by the attributes of God. It could be called the „sanctification“ of the human being. Our human nature is realized through the understanding and awareness that the essential human Self is a reflection of Spirit. To become truly human is to attain a tangible awareness of Spirit, to realize oneself as a reflection of Spirit, or God. The education of the Soul is the Great Work. The beginning of this Work consists of awakening a transcending awareness...” SpiritualityMindfulnessEnlightenmentAwakeningSufismSufiLiving PresenceHeartfulnessThe Great Work Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“This presence is like a passport to greater life. It is our connection to that Greater Being to which we belong, but which is often buried beneath mundane concerns, bodily desires, emotional disturbances, and mental distractions. Through knowledge, practice, and understanding, this presence can be awakened. Eventually, we will not be without it – whether in speaking or moving, whether in thinking or feeling. Awakening this presence is the most reliable and direct means of cultivating our essential human qualities, of activating everything that we need to meet the conditions of our lives. Presence is the point of intersection between the world of the senses and the world of the Spirit. May we never cease to discover its beauty and power.” EnlightenmentIslamAwakeningSufismTreshold SocietyKabir HelminskiLiving PresenceHeartfulnessLiving Tradition Of Rumi Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“When we are aware of the abundance of Life, synchronous events unfold in the continuum of time; Love brings together what needs to be brought together. (p. 217)” MagicSynchronicitySynchronistic Events Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“The heart is not merely a metaphor for an undefined capacity for feeling. The heart is an objective, cognitive power beyond intellect. It is the organ of perception which can know the world of spiritual qualities. It is the heart that can love, that can praise, that can forgive, that can perceive the Divine Majesty. Only the human heart can say yes, can affirm wholeness, can know the Infinite. Guided by its inner discernment, al-Furqan, the heart can apprehend what is Real. As a Hadith Qudsi says: „The heavens and the earth do not contain Me. Only the heart of my faithful servant contains me.“ We need an education of the heart to receive this qualitative knowledge.” SufismTreshold SocietyThe Way Of The HeartHolistic IslamHeartintelligence Book:Holistic Islam: Sufism, Transformation, & the Challenge of Our Time Source: Holistic Islam: Sufism, Transformation, & the Challenge of Our Time
“As spiritual seekers, we know that the objective knowledge we require cannot be constructed by human intellect alone. Intellect can perform many useful functions; it can divide, critique, and negate, but intellect is not the source of inspired knowledge about the purpose of life. Intellectual conjecture too often leads only to a labyrinth of opinion. Rather it is the heart that is the seat of true knowing. (p. 53)” IslamSufismThe Way Of The HeartAwakening Of The Heart Book:Holistic Islam: Sufism, Transformation, & the Challenge of Our Time Source: Holistic Islam: Sufism, Transformation, & the Challenge of Our Time
“The essential insight and consistent point of view of Islam is tawhid: the fundamental Oneness underlying all of existence. From the perspective of tawhid, everything is emerging from God, being sustained by God, and ultimately returning to God. This has profound significance for all of our experience within this existence. All areas of human knowledge are related to this fundamental, unifying Truth. Sufism is the science, the objective knowledge, of the souls relationship to God. This science describes an Origin, a downward arc of manifestation, and an upward arc of return. In the arc of manifestation, everything is coming down from God into successive levels of ever denser realities. In the arc of return, we recognize our Origin and begin the journey back toward its light. This essentially means that we ourselves must become more conscious of the light within ourselves. [...] The arc of return calls us to make a journey from darkness and toward the light. The immediate darkness we face around us is the imaginary world created by human ignorance, fear, self-righteousness, and hatred. We must not succumb to the mass heedlessness and self-hypnotism which presents itself to us, mostly through the mass media, as the so-called real world. It is our responsibility to find and act upon the knowledge that can guide us in that journey. This means establishing the truth of tawhid within our own minds and hearts. ~ Essays and talks by Kabir Helminski/Breathe And Remember” IslamSufismTreshold SocietyTawhid Author:Kabir Edmund Helminski
“Love is the essence of this religion. I pray that we will approach all of our questions and concerns, especially the most difficult and intimate questions, with love, in order to be able more and more to solve our problems with love. The Sufi lives in a compassionate and passionate universe, a universe born from a spark of love. (p. 108)” IslamLove Quotes And SayingsSufismTreshold Society Book:Holistic Islam: Sufism, Transformation, & the Challenge of Our Time Source: Holistic Islam: Sufism, Transformation, & the Challenge of Our Time
“There is a knowledge and a practice of connecting ourselves with cosmic Life. It has nothing to do with belief; it is learned. It is increased by our consciousness of it, by our increasing awareness of the abundance of cosmic energy. Life is infinite, and this infinity can be tapped. The only limitation is one of awareness. (p.13 Soul Work, Reflecting Spirit)” EnlightenmentAwakeningSufismTreshold SocietyLiving Presence Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“The education of the Soul is the Great Work.” SufismTreshold SocietyKabir HelminskiLiving PresenceThe Great Work Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“Water says to the dirty, „Come here“ The dirty one says, „I am so ashamed“. Water says, „How will your shame be washed away without me?“ Rumi, Mathnawi II: 1366-67” RumiMathnawi Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“The Sufi's book is not of ink and letters; it is nothing but a heart white as snow. Rumi, Mathnawi II: 159” MindfulnessSufi WisdomRumiMathnawi Book:Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self Source: Living Presence: A Sufi Way to Mindfulness & the Essential Self
“Ibn Arabi is suggesting that the contemplation of God is possible, indeed enhanced, through the human form: when man contemplates the Reality in woman he beholds God. The Epiphany that Ibn Arabi found in the contemplation of the feminine need not be exclusive to the feminine. Indeed, as the Qur‘an says in Surah Tin, the human being is created in the most beautiful proportions, created on an archetype of beauty. What Ibn Arabi found in his contemplation of Woman is a profound recognition of the Divine in the „other“. Since God has breathed His Spirit into human beings, the outward form is creaturely, while the inner nature is Divine. Therefore, God is loving Himself in us, and we are loving God in each other. In the same way, man is loving himself in woman, and she is loving herself in him. But the finding of wholeness within oneself doesn‘t necessarily cancel out the beautiful polarity between lovers. Ibn Arabi is describing sexual union as a mirroring of God within God, as a Divine Union of deep awareness, and this is the appropriate human state for sexual relations. Sexuality is sacred because it is a form of relationship within this great electromagnetic field of Love. To disparage this polarity is a denial of the Divine origins of our very humanity. To ignore its spiritual potential is to deny the Spirit that has been breathed into us. (p. 107)” IslamSexualitySufismMan And WomanIbn ArabiSacred Sexuality Book:Holistic Islam: Sufism, Transformation, & the Challenge of Our Time Source: Holistic Islam: Sufism, Transformation, & the Challenge of Our Time
“Sufism is the reconciliation of all opposites: the outer and the inner, the material and the spiritual, the finite and the infinite, the here and the hereafter, freedom and servanthood, the human and the divine. Enlightenment in this tradition does not prevent us from functioning in a practical and humble way in life, does not entitle us to special treatment, does not exclude us from the inevitable joys and griefs of life. The Sufi’s union with God does not cancel servanthood. What I found through Sufism far exceeded my hopes. As an example, one poet said to me: “All of my reading, study, and creative writing could not have prepared me for the poetry of Rumi.” And yet all Rumi’s poetry is just the wave on the surface of the ocean of Sufi spirituality. Perhaps it is consistent with the idea of Divine generosity that it should exceed in actuality the gift we had foreseen in our imagination. The Source is not only infinitely generous, it is infinitely creative, and its gifts surpass human imagination.” SufismMevlana Celaleddin RumiSoul Of Islam Book:The Knowing Heart: A Sufi Path of Transformation Source: The Knowing Heart: A Sufi Path of Transformation
“An illuminated heart is rare; opinion is all too common. The illuminated heart sees the Divine Reality, the Balance in all things; it sees with the impartial light of Allah. Illumination says: „Let‘s see what God does, what God does is always beautiful.“ when the heart is purified, Truth becomes an objective reality that can be known by human beings. This Truth is not equivalent to the formulations of beliefs and concepts. For the human being, Truth is the direct experience of Divine Presence. Freed from our illusions and enslavement, we can go on to discover the treasure we really are, which will inevitably lead to the sharing of this treasure, a spontaneous service to Life itself. (S. 44 Holistic Islam)” EnlightenmentSufismPerennial PhilosophyHolistic IslamThe Illuminated Heart Book:Holistic Islam: Sufism, Transformation, & the Challenge of Our Time Source: Holistic Islam: Sufism, Transformation, & the Challenge of Our Time