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Tale of Self Discovery Part 2
Dr. Hardt's Adventure in the Chamber
Part 2 - continued from part 1
[Published in Megabrain Reports, May, 1994, edited for the web]
James V. Hardt, Ph.D.
The Biocybernaut Institute
To help the reader participate more fully in this
adventure, I shall tell the story in the first person, starting at the
beginning of the session as soon as the feedback tone came on.
As I closed my eyes, I sat straight and perfectly still,
and I relaxed, for I had learned in my first three sessions that this was
helpful in making the feedback tone louder and steadier. If I could sit quite
still for one of the automatically timed 2 minute epochs, I would be rewarded
by seeing a large score when the three-digit illuminated display lit up as the
tone briefly shut off. The scores were derived from the integration of the
amplitude of my Alpha activity and represented the total Alpha energy I had
produced during the previous 2 minutes. If I had to cough or move or if my
attention wandered from the task, the tone would decrease, and that epoch's
score would be smaller. I was most interested to know what made the tone stay
on and what turned it off, so I listened very closely to the minute
fluctuations and tried to relate them to something:, anything, ... how I
breathed, how I sat, what I was thinking.
And there were little successes along the way. When I
breathed more slowly, the tone was a little louder and the score a little
higher. If I relaxed fully into the emptiness of the bottom of each
expiration, that would sometimes help too. If I opened my eyes, even though it
was totally dark, the tone and scores were sharply reduced. So I had some
control. I could probably have produced statistically significant differences
between "enhance " and "suppress " conditions if I had been asked to, but I still
didn't feel as though I really knew how to enhance Alpha. Pleasant relaxation
helped, but there were tantalizing bursts of very loud sound that I would have
liked to have sustained. I would even have been happy to know how to produce
such bursts at will, - even if I couldn't sustain them. When such a burst
would occur. I would mentally leap at it to analyze it, evaluate it, and thus,
I thought, understand and be able to reproduce it. But alas, it was not to be.
A year later I was to hear Ram Dass say, "the burning gem
was in my hand, but when I reached for it, - boy, it was gone. " But for now I
was in a rut and didn't understand how to get out of it. The tone would come
on strong, and I would focus my attention on it, and it would retreat into
relative silence. It was almost teasing me. I tried all sorts of maneuvers.
I tried "reaching " for it slowly; it retreated slowly. I tried to remember
what I'd been doing just before the tone burst began, and I discovered, to my
considerable amazement, gaps in what I had always thought had been a continuous
and unbroken stream of my conscious awareness.
Now I had two challenges instead of one: (1) The first
challenge was that I could not grasp, analyze, or fully control a tone
originating from my own Alpha brain waves, and (2) the second challenge was
that I had discovered gaps
GAPS! in my stream of
consciousness, lapses of awareness, which I could not explain or account for.
Moreover, I suddenly noticed, while intensely considering the implications of
this dual (frustrating and disturbing) dilemma, that there was very little
feedback sound in the chamber, and my scores were quite low. I realized that
while my mind had been racing, my muscles had tightened up, and I was taking
fast and shallow breath, instead of the preferable slow, deep ones.
So I started at the beginning again: I relaxed, I watched
my breathing to make it slow, deep, and regular, and I again noted the tone
getting louder and louder. I tried to puzzle out my problem while remaining
relaxed and slow breathing. When I finally succeeded in separating my thinking
process from an uptight body, so that I could concentrate without noticeably
tensing or shifting my breathing rate and depth, then I began to notice that
thinking itself was what was blocking my Alpha and reducing the tone. Now I
realized that the lapses of awareness which preceded those interesting, loud
Alpha bursts may actually have been instrumental in evoking or permitting the
emergence of the bursts. So then I tried not focusing on the event of a
burst when it occurred. That was hard.
I was sitting in a dark, soundproof room, and there was
little to do besides listen to the tone. The tone would start one of its
bursts, and I would try to ignore it, but I could only do so for a fraction of
a second before my attention would swing around and focus on the tone. When it
did, the tone would shrink like a balloon being squeezed by my conscious
attention. But that fraction of a second was a wedge for my understanding. By
slightly prolonging each burst, I noticed that my scores were getting larger,
so I persevered. I didn't know it then, but I was practicing the Witness,
distancing myself from the processes of my consciousness, and there was no
mistaking success for failure. If I failed to keep my attention from focusing
on the event of a tone burst, that burst would be dramatically and immediately
squelched.
That kind of almost instantaneous feedback accelerated a
most difficult self-awareness learning process which might have gone on for
years with less success if it had lacked the feedback. As the scores got
slowly larger and the tone remained loud for a longer fraction of each 2 minute
epoch, I began to notice a strange sensation of lightness. Where my body had
pressed against the chair and the floor, the pressure began to give way to the
sensation of just a gentle touching. When I "noticed " this and focused on it
and began to reflect upon it, I was at once alerted by the tone, which got
softer, And I had another clue: reflective or analytical thinking got in the
way of Alpha enhancement.
That clue helped enormously, because I hadn't fully realized
up to then that by adopting an attitude of "not-noticing, " I was suspending
rational and analytic thinking. I realized that I had, in fact, been aware of
tone bursts even when I didn't focus my attention on them. The real work was
in being aware of, but not focusing on the tone bursts with the egoic, analytic
modes of consciousness. A certain part of me, that ego center which was
concerned with DOING things, with success or failure, suddenly realized, and I
watched myself floating above the chair, which was in the middle of a little
room, which was filled with the loud Alpha feedback sound. Floating above the
chair? Floating!?? My relaxed detachment evaporated, and I awoke back into
rational and analytical consciousness almost as from a dream. Of course, as I
did so, the tone volume decreased sharply from its loud intensity, so I knew I
had been awake and not drowsy or asleep while experiencing this "floating ". If
I had been asleep or drowsy there would not have been a loud tone (indicating
lots of Alpha) to vanish as I "awoke " to rational awareness.
"I was floating above the chair, " I marveled to myself. I
realized at once that my mental focusing on what had been happening had
terminated the happening, so as quickly as possible I readopted the detached
attitude and the tone again started to increase. Before long, I was again
looking down on my body from a position near the ceiling of the room, although
how I could see anything in the total darkness I cannot explain. It wasn't a
normal kind of seeing.
I was almost afraid to deal with the fascinating situation
because I had learned that conceptualizing the situation I was in would catch
me and pull me down, and reduce the tone and my scores. So I merely floated
and observed, and tried to fend off the constant temptation to evaluate,
speculate, analyze, reason, congratulate. This last one was especially
troublesome. After a particularly sizable series of increases in the scores,
which left me feeling indescribably high, light, mellow, clear and pure, I
slipped on a fleeting prideful thought. I permitted a conceptual thought to
flash through my mind, "Gee I'm doing pretty good. " And crash! I was tumbling
back into my normal consciousness. The conceptualization caught me and pulled
me down. While I was struggling to regain the disinterested composure of the
high Alpha state and its loud tone, I noticed the gradual intrusion of the
demand of my body for air. I wasn't breathing. I was living sufficiently
detached from my physical body, that there was not enough consciousness left to
run my respiration processes.
I then remembered seeing, as a child, a man on the Ed
Sullivan TV show who had breathed pure oxygen for several hours before the
show, and then was able to remain submerged under water in a glass tank without
having to breath for almost the entire show, which might have been 45 minutes
or more. I longed for such a breathing aid so that I might dwell more
permanently in this high Alpha state and not have to be concerned with
breathing. I did the next best thing. I alternated between periods of slow
deep breathing and periods non-breathing with enhanced Alpha. For a while, I
would steal part of my attention away from the detached state and use it to
regularize my breathing.
As a child I had done extensive long distance under water
swimming, so I knew how to hold my breath. I would restore to my body an ample
supply of oxygen by consciously pumping my lungs slowly and deeply. Then I
would withdraw my attention from my breathing and enter into the detached state
in which I could just float and feel ecstatically high. I had an image of this
process of alternating between breathing and enhancing Alpha: I saw the world
through the eyes of a white bird, and my pumping of lungs was like the bird's
flapping its wings. Flapping and pumping carried both of us to a great height.
Then I could cease to consciously breathe and the bird would stiffen its wings
and soar outward while wheeling and turning ecstatically and gradually drifting
downward in effortless circles while my body gradually drifted downward to
poorer blood oxygen levels and, eventually, the necessity to begin to
consciously breathe again.
During that drifting downward of the body processes, that
which was really me (for I had ceased actually to identify with my rational ego
self) would be off soaring in feedback enhanced Alpha. I could see that the
essence which was really me, was different from my body, and was even different
from my thoughts, for I had actually ceased to identify with my rational ego
self and with the thoughts in my mind. I was off soaring in the bliss of
feedback enhanced Alpha.
I was able to exist outside of time, which flowed past
almost unrippled by my presence. The only time-like phenomenon was the
alternation between willed breathing periods (which I entered only reluctantly)
and the detached states of pure being I entered so joyously and eagerly each
time as soon as I was oxygenated enough to cease from breathing. Even the
briefest and subtlest conceptual thought which intruded into my mind during
those periods resulted in a faltering of the feedback tone. With this
infallible indicator of egoic thoughts, I was more and more able to non-think.
But non thinking did not mean non-awareness, contrary to everything my
education and experience had lead me to believe. I discovered thoughts to be
multi-layered constructions. - artifices of a certain egoic relationship to the
world, ...to myself.
A sheep is still a sheep after the wool is shorn. In many
ways its perception may even be enhanced by the removal of the insulating wool.
The warming sun and cooling breezes are probably felt more readily after
shearing. With thinking gone, the wool was removed from over my eyes, and the
new awareness seemed vast. Gradually, I even became able to be aware that a
person was in a feedback situation, and that a lot of Alpha activity was
happening. In an inner secret sort of way, I even realized that if I were to
think about it (which I now knew better than to do) that person would be
revealed as me. This was an aspect of the multi-layering of thought I had seen
earlier. Thoughts could exist at different levels of egoicity and at different
degrees of attentional focusing. I am now aware that a whole science of
thought could develop around research into such experiential explorations, but
at the time, I knew only that an ego aspect was lacking in the type of
awareness which could exist in harmony with the Alpha activity.
As this process of quieting the egoic rational processes
began to merge into a condition of ego dissolution, my ego, unprepared to
dissolve, countered with FEAR. Fear of falling is the only fear I can
clearly remember, but there were other vague and nonspecific fears too,- - all
of which reduced my Alpha activity or stopped its increase.
Slowly I learned to deal with these fears the way I dealt
with other thoughts: I fled my thoughts and filled my awareness with the
feedback tone, now an almost constantly increasing presence. The scores, also
constantly increasing, were like mileposts of my ascent. The chair and the
room were left below as I rose ever higher in what appeared to be the front
seat of a roller coaster car. I became aware of an approaching summit, and
inwardly delighted at the expected rush from swooping down the tracks of the
descent. The rate of increase of my scores slowed and the summit was attained.
The scores stood above 550, - over ten times the minimum I'd seen at about 50
earlier in the day.
I felt poised for a plunge of prolonged ecstasy. My gaze
followed the tracks downward eager to see the succession of dips and hills I
imagined would follow the initial plunge. But I was startled to see that the
tracks, instead of veering upward again near the ground, bore relentlessly
downward, entered, and were swallowed by the blackest hole I had ever seen.
The blackness lapped like a liquid at the tracks and at the edges of its pool.
As I started downward toward this engulfing, enveloping
blackness, I, my ego, understood through a flash of intuition that if it
entered this place that ego dissolution would occur and it would no long Be In
Control. So my ego told me the Big Lie and filled my mind with the warning
thought that if I entered this place, that I would never emerge, and I would
cease to be. Since I was a Physics major with a Protestant fundamentalist
religious background, I was totally ignorant of mystical experiences, ego
dissolution, transcendence, etc.,...and I foolishly believed my ego's
self-serving warning, ...and I panicked. A soundless scream of fear and
unwillingness filled my mind, ...and of course my Alpha instantly disappeared,
so the feedback tone disappeared; then the whole scene disappeared, and I
tumbled back into he-who-was-sitting-in-a-chair in Joe Kamiya's feedback
laboratory.
At once I felt sheepish embarrassment for over-reacting;
then a vague sense of loss and regret at having missed some kind of opportunity
began to grow. I tried to resume the attitude of Alpha enhancement, but the
doorway I was now seeking remained closed and unapproachable. [The good news
about Alpha training is that you can only get as much experience as you can
handle and integrate. The bad news is that you can only get as much experience
as you can handle and integrate.]
There were other experiences after that, also of
considerable interest, but the physical fatigue and the fear of the abyss
conspired to keep my Alpha levels well below those at which the most profound
experiences had occurred. The fatigue, which I had also felt in the three
earlier sessions about 5 minutes before the technician ended those sessions
caused me to estimate I had been there for about 45 minutes.
I was therefore not at all surprised when the door began to
open; but I was surprised when the technician burst into the room in a sudden
flood of light and a state of some alarm. In the background were about a dozen
people, most of the lab crew, who had all been at lunch together when my
technician remembered, [ "Oh my God! "] that she had forgotten me in the
feedback chamber, and they all rushed back together in the VW camper bus to
"rescue " me.
The rest of the afternoon was spent in telling and
retelling the story of my adventure. For two days afterwards, I walked around
feeling light and buoyant and not at all sure I was touching the ground, which
remained about 2 feet below the soles of my shoes. Four months later, still
moved by the realness of what had happened, and having heard that similar
things can happen in meditation, I started Raja Yoga lessons to prepare for
another encounter with the unmanifest, which my ignorance and unreadiness had
led me to fear and to avoid.
The following is from The Cloud of Unknowing, by an anonymous 14th
century English mystic
"... persevere in the work ... For, when you begin it, you
will find that there is at the start but a darkness; there is ... a cloud of
unknowing. No matter what you do, this darkness and this cloud is between you
and your God and because of it you can neither see Him clearly with your reason
... nor can you feel him with you ... love. Be prepared, therefore, to remain
in this darkness as long as must be. ... For if you are ever to feel Him or
see Him, it will necessarily be within this cloud and within this darkness.
... you are to try to pierce that darkness. ... You are to strike that thick
cloud of unknowing with a sharp dart of longing love: and you are not to
retreat no matter what comes to pass."
(Translated by Ira Progoff)
Self discovery continues - Part 3
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