FROM MEDITATOR.ORG
Quote by Karlfried Graf
von Durckheim, "The Way of
Transformation"
"The man who, being really on the Way, falls upon hard times
in the world will not, as a consequence, turn to that friend who offers him refuge and
comfort and encourages his old self to survive.
Rather, he will seek out someone who will faithfully and
inexorably help him to risk himself, so that he 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 man exposes himself over and over
again to annihilation, can that which is indestructible arise within him. In this lies the
dignity of daring.
Thus, the aim of practice is not to develop an attitude which
allows a man to acquire a state of harmony and peace wherein nothing can ever trouble him.
On the contrary, practice should teach him to let himself be assaulted, perturbed, moved,
insulted, broken and battered – that is to say, it should enable him to dare to let go his
futile hankering after harmony, surcease from pain, and a comfortable life in order that he
may discover, in doing battle with the forces that oppose him, that which awaits him 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 Divine Being, which is beyond annihilation, become firm and stable.
The more a man learns whole-heartedly to confront the world that threatens him with
isolation, the more are the depths of the Ground of Being revealed and the possibilities of
new life and Becoming opened."
–Karlfried Graf von Durckheim, The Way of
Transformation
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