Those who, being
really on the Way, fall upon hard times in the world will not,
as a consequence, turn to that friend who offers refuge and
comfort and encourages the old self to survive. Rather they
will seek out someone who will faithfully and inexorably help
them to risk themselves, so that they may endure the suffering
and pass courageously through it, thus making of it a "raft
that leads to the far shore." Only to the extent that we expose
ourselves over and over again to annihilation can that which
is indestructible arise within us. In this lies the dignity
of daring. Thus, the aim of practice is not to develop an attitude
which allows us to acquire a state of harmony and peace wherein
nothing can ever trouble us. On the contrary, practice should
teach us to let ourselves be assaulted, perturbed, moved, insulted,
broken, and battered - that is to say, it should enable us to
dare to let go of our futile hankering after harmony, surcease
from pain, and a comfortable life in order that we may discover,
in doing battle with those forces that oppose us, that which
awaits us beyond the world of opposites. The first necessity
is that we should have the courage to face life, and to encounter
all that is most perilous in the world. When this is possible,
meditation itself becomes the means by which we accept and welcome
the demons which arise from the unconscious - a process very
different from the practice of concentration on some object
as a protection against such forces. Only if we venture repeatedly
through zones of annihilation can our contact with Diving Being,
which is beyond annihilation, become firm and stable. The more
we learn whole-heartedly to confront the world that threatened
us with isolation, the more are the depths of the Ground of
Being revealed and the possibilities of new life and Becoming
opened.
Adapted from
" THE WAY OF TRANSFORMATION"
by
Karlfried Graf Durckheim