Sunday 4 October 2015

Realisation Alwareness theme September

In one form of Buddhism, Realisation is one of the four highest of ten states of life available to humans.
People un-awakened to their potential for enlightenment, never reach these four higher states. They reel through the four eternal sufferings of birth, illness, old age and death, tumbling between the lower worlds of hell, hunger, animality, anger, rapture and tranquillity, from moment to moment, year to year, decade to decade.
The stage just before, or in some reckoning, lower than realisation is learning.
To realise is to grasp or understand clearly or to make real; as in making a hope, fear, plan occurring in reality, The synonyms make the meanings of the word easier to grasp. To realise is to conceive, to comprehend and/or to accomplish. So within the one word is to think of something, understand it and carry it out.
It is said to be impossible to enter the world of realisation, I would say it is very difficult to realise anything without first learning.
The world above or following Realisation is that of Bodhisattva. A bodhisattva is a person who has attained Enlightenment, but who postpones entering Nirvana in order to help others to attain the same state. You could also call it the ability of perpetual selfless action.
I was taught that being educated meant that you knew where to go to find out information that you wanted or needed. Education should be about finding knowledge. After a certain amount of time trying to do research on the internet it is clear that if you want to find out what something is really about, books are still the best way to do it. Everyone raves about the Ted lectures but to my mind they are just another way of indoctrinating people into Americanising themselves. That means dumbing down as much as possible, doing as you're told, believing their lying hype and hatred for difference.
Learning is what takes us out of our narrow, mundane and ordinary lives, into a whole universe of possibilities. This is one of the reasons that access to education has been (for such a huge amount of our presented history), and is still, being denied to women and other perceived lower orders of people.
There are no lower orders of people as there are no better types of people. There are just humans, animals, bodhisattva's and buddhas. If you're not trying to learn, then the chances are you are an animal with moments of humanity.
The education system that we now have is a cryptic manner of keeping people ignorant or as animals. As I have said before, much of what is presented as learning and/or education are the narrow ideas of a group of European men whose forefathers burned and destroyed the greatest libraries the world has even known. Then add a thousand and more years of burning, torturing, suppressing and brutalising anyone and everyone who disagreed with their ideas. Murdering nay sayers is one of the best ways to make sure that everyone agrees with you.
I think it is clear that general academia is a load of crap because it is based on saying things as cryptically as possible. Real learning, real education is something that is accessible to anyone. If you have to say it in a way that only those of you in the 'in crowd' can understand, you can pretty much guarantee that a lot of it would be soundly contested when presented to those not of the chosen few. This has certainly been my experience in higher education.
Much of the foundation of our current knowledge and education system, certainly in the soft sciences, is based and decided on ideas which are a) unscientific and b) utter rubbish.
Higher education is the biased opinions of a group of people with access to every privilege possessing little common intelligence.
Up until very recently in Europe and to this day in many parts of the world a belief in the one man god is a necessity. Not believing in that restrictive and destructive idea means that any ideas, information or knowledge that one tries to present is immediately disqualified.
The determination to perpetuate - keep in place - a non humanistic society that uses the majority to provide unlimited wealth to 1% at the cost of the planet; through exploitation of people, animals and the physical attributes of the earth. This is all presented in our education systems as unavoidable, reasonable and/or necessary even in subjects which are supposed to be about being environmentally responsible.
Our responsibility as thinking human beings is to learn, to keep on learning and to find ways to act upon that which we learn. Only through consciously learning, not only what is presented to us as the truth ,but also by learning to hear and listen to our own internal truth and being prepared to follow that truth to action do we have any chance of realising a world that follows the planet's intention and intelligence, which is to provide enough for all to enjoy.