Dear Colleagues,
The extraordinary moment in time in which we find ourselves seems destined to become era defining. Like 9/11 or Watergate or the Kennedy assassination, we will look back and see how events led to this point, but even more clearly how this moment set in motion an entire new configuration of thoughts. There is no reliable way to understand in advance what is about to unfold, how long it will take to play out, or how this turning point will seem in retrospect. We
can just sense that, for one reason or other (more likely a whole host of reasons coalescing into this particular configuration) the world has come to a standstill and awaits a sense of direction.
I don’t know anything about viruses and how they suddenly manifest in epidemics. Various sources blame a jump from wildlife to humans, the advent of a new electrification wave, nefarious government programs, predictable biological metamorphoses, or chance. What we can say with certainty is that fear, anxiety, and isolation have resulted. Alongside them, good will and generosity have also manifested, and many people have been learning new ways of doing what they do.
I want to offer a small contribution towards meeting the more difficult phenomena of the soul. These are exercises and meditations that I find helpful in managing the unknown. The root of all of them is the contrast between light and electricity. Rudolf Steiner calls electricity “captured light” (or, as I would translate it for greater contrast, “entrapped light”) and points to what he calls sub-nature as the sphere of existence brought about by human ingenuity, a sphere which is dominated by materialistic, dead thinking. It is important to add that Steiner did not in any way advocate avoiding electricity or technology. To the contrary, he was keen to use the newest innovations of his day. But he was under no illusion that this use would be pain free, and he was clear that the use of these innovations would take its toll on the human constitution. He specifically said, in his last written piece, that to overcome these sub-natural forces would mean that human consciousness would have to rise as far above nature as technology descended below it. This was a startling challenge even in his day, and when we consider what level of thinking we are dealing with in distance learning at the moment, it is clear that the challenge is immense.
So, with all of this as background, here are a few exercises you can do:
Live deeply into each word in turn (except “the” which can be omitted completely), speaking the sentence inwardly, slowly, with the emphasis shifting to a different word each time. Ponder “wisdom” as you hear inwardly “WISDOM lives in the light.”
Then concentrate on “lives” as you hear inwardly, “Wisdom LIVES in the light.” Then:
Wisdom lives IN the light.
Wisdom lives in the LIGHT.
Only do as much as you can manage without losing focus; don’t stress. There is tomorrow and the next day and the one after that. The mood should be quiet but not severe.
When you have contemplated all of the above in one sitting, and please don’t skip steps and assume that you can begin where you left off (this would turn it from a spiritual practice into a materialistic one); instead, try holding all of these meanings at once. You can try to “hang” them all on one word, or even a sound and, however briefly, “see” the entire meaning together. There are more possibilities after that, but this will suffice to get going.
Those are three little ways of trying to balance our increased reliance on “fallen light.” I would be grateful if you care to share any experiences you have with them or with other approaches you have tried.
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