Spiritual Practice is for Conscious Awareness

 

What are you doing with your spiritual practice but seeking to have another, better experience? You want your consciousness transformed. Specifically, you want peace in your conscious awareness—that of which you are immediately aware. You want a different world, really. And that means recognizing that your world is not the material world the body’s eyes report to you—and of which they are a part. Your consciousness—your mind—is your “world.” When spiritual teachers point out that Truth is within you, they do not mean in your person’s body, but in your consciousness—which isn’t even really “your” consciousness but is simply an individuated expression of consciousness.

There are three parts to your consciousness:

 

Conscious awareness: That of which you are immediately aware. For example, what the body’s eyes see now and the thoughts and feelings in your mind now. Your conscious awareness is limited, so it cannot contain all of what is in your individuated consciousness at once, and most certainly not all of what is in consciousness as a whole. So, there are two other parts to your individuated consciousness. And those are:

 

Subconscious: What is just out of your awareness, but accessible when you want it. For example, the birds chirping outside your window, or remembering where you left your keys or what you meant to pick up at the store, or what you were thinking before you were interrupted. When you tune in to your surroundings, your thoughts, or your memories, the awareness and thoughts in your subconscious come easily to conscious awareness. If you do not tune into or don’t need what has been in your subconscious, ideas, thoughts, feelings, and memories may slip into your unconscious. You “forget.”

 

Unconscious:  What is in your individuated consciousness and what of consciousness as a whole that is not in your conscious awareness or subconscious is in your unconscious. In other words, the unconscious is vast, containing your individuated consciousness and the collective unconscious of consciousness as a whole. Ego holds in your unconscious what it does not want in your conscious awareness, like the awareness that it projects or aspects of its story for you that it is convenient for ego to have out of your conscious awareness. Your unconscious may also hold painful ideas and memories that are “forgotten” so that you can cope and move on. But, also, God’s Spirit is always in consciousness, so if Spirit is not in your conscious awareness or subconscious, It is in your unconscious. When you become consciously aware of Spirit within you, it means Spirit has risen from your unconscious to your conscious awareness.

 

One’s spiritual path begins with some conscious awareness of God, vague or complete. It may be God’s Spirit in consciousness or God beyond consciousness. Once on a “path”, you may have fleeting insights, epiphanies, or experiences of the Light of God flash through your conscious awareness. The experience will fade and you will probably want it back. What does that mean? You want it in your conscious awareness. It isn’t lost, it is just back in your unconscious, from which it came.

In my experience, those fleeting moments were the beginning of whatever I saw rising to conscious awareness. It was the start of a process that would unfold over time. So, where I was originally dismayed when they faded because I felt I lost something, I learned that they were only the beginning of whatever I saw coming to conscious awareness.

Your person’s life takes up much space in your limited conscious awareness. So, you cannot stay consciously aware of God all the time. When you don’t have a practice that keeps the awareness of Spirit nearby in your subconscious, Spirit is not gone from consciousness, but only from conscious awareness. You become unconscious to—unaware of—Spirit, and Spirit feels distant. So, spiritual practice is about keeping an awareness of Spirit nearby, in your subconscious, so you can access it easily. The practice is not to stay focused on God, which is not possible, but to bring your mind back to God often throughout the day, which maintains an awareness of Spirit in your subconscious. This is why the lessons in the Workbook of A Course in Miracles have you often return to the thought for the day. This is why once the Course introduces practicing the holy instant it never lets it go. And this was the goal of my 4 Habits for Inner Peace, which distill the means for keeping Spirit “nearby” that the Course teaches.

Think of someone to whom you could say, “You are never far from my thoughts.” This is usually a family member or close friend. What you are saying is that they may not always be in your conscious awareness, but they are “nearby” in your subconscious, where they rise easily and often to your conscious awareness. This is what you want with Spirit. This is what I mean when I say Spirit was my Constant Companion. My peace was in direct proportion to my awareness and trust in Spirit. There came a time when peace came to stay and I knew it would never leave. Spirit had risen to my subconscious to stay, and I knew It would never leave. I always had recourse to the Answer for any problem, any upset, as Spirit easily slipped into my conscious awareness.

And later, at the shift in consciousness, Spirit came to stay in my conscious awareness. Does this mean all the time? Yes and no. When my conscious awareness is occupied with other things, Spirit is not in my immediate awareness. But when it is no longer occupied with other things, Spirit is here in my conscious awareness. There is no longer a practice needed to bring Spirit to conscious awareness. Those things that are not Spirit are lightly held in and pass easily through conscious awareness.

 

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If you have a question the answer to which you feel may be helpful to others, send it to Liz@acimmentor.com and indicate that you want it answered in this newsletter/blog.

Comments

will said…
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will said…
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Anonymous said…
Thank you for sharing your person's life journey through the experience of consciousness and awareness thereof.
sister said…
liz,
thank you, thank you, thank you. this post could not have been more timely and clarifying...
will said…
A Comment:
Is it really possible that for all these months students and mentor have been commenting on "practice" completely unaware that practice must be about spirit? It doesn't seem possible! I just found an email from Liz from 12/23 telling me my practice without spirit won't work! Has the ego so permeated the course study that "gotcha" is the highlight of studying? Sad days on this blog.
will said…
I am completely dumbfounded on how you even do practice without spirit. What exactly are you doing?
friend said…
Will,
It has been my experience that spiritual study and practice can be easily directed by the ego, especially in the early years of as yet strong personal identity. Even authentic insights with Spirit have been quickly co-opted; it's like the cartoon character, that kicked out the front door, runs to the back door and reenters. (Tom chased by Jerry!)

It takes some time (sorting out) for this to be noticed. Working with a spiritualized ego is then just the arc the path is going to take for a while. You will know this is the arc you are on when you are still invested in judging.

What has helped me to sort this out and be lifted by Spirit onto the higher arc is engaging the four habits Liz has succinctly outlined. Even on the higher arc, ego still attempts to insert itself, but I am now, with Spirit's help, able to see it unfolding, laugh with Spirit about it, and let it go without investment or being lost to its game.

Peace to you.
will said…
When it is being taught that Jesus is little more than a token religious figure, how does a teacher become an authority on spiritual practice?
Thanks Friend for the input.
will said…
Before the 'spin' on practice begins, the conversation on practice the past few months was not about the shades of grey of practicing (ego), it has consistently been 'practice in any form' does not work or is helpful. Read the blogs and comments.
will said…
When the black and white comments on practice were being made, to me, the ego was making a stand against the Course. Its purpose is to eliminate spirit from the writing, practicing, purpose and authorship of the Course.
friend said…
Will,
It takes no effort to be what we are.
It does take effort (practice) to unlearn what we are not.

When I read something in this post of Liz's writing and it does not resonate, I accept that I may yet lack sufficient understanding or that it is not relevant to me at this time: either way I let it go without judgement. When I read something in this post from the comments that does not resonate with my current experience I stay in my own yard, turn to Spirit and remember with Him the truth of our union ... and let it go. (It has taken effort -practice! - to arrive at this juncture.)

Concerning authority, that comes from the Voice of Spirit, which can be felt as Jesus; it appears within or through a perceived other. I only have my experience to share. I know it is Spirit that is directing it when it is accompanied by peace. When an experience is bringing feelings of disruption or threat, I know I have misinterpreted and missed the call to remember, and turn to Spirit for help and reinterpretation. And return to peace.

This is interesting: I have found there does come a point (finally-I am in the slow learner class) where practice becomes more often nearly effortless, because Spirit's Presence has risen up closer to the surface and lingers within easy conscious awareness. Liz's post here has been so valuable for clarifying this.

Receive with gratitude what resonates with you on this post, and give the rest over to Spirit. It is all an inside job sweetheart.

Peace be to you.

will said…
Friend,
I appreciate you sharing your approach to the Course and the blog. It seems to be working well for you.

However I feel led in a different direction.
will said…
Friend,
Please don't worry about me. You would see me quickly approaching sainthood if you knew how often I keep my mouth shut.
will said…
Friend,
You can see just from this weeks blog alone I have limited myself to 11 comments.

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