Doctor Nur

Doctor Nur

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

A Course in Miracles Lessons 32-35

From A Course in Miracles (ACIM): "You are not the victim of the world you see because you invented it..." This subject has to do with our perceptions and the images we create in our minds. My Sufi guide, Sidi Muhammad al-Jamal says in his book, Music of the Soul, on page 199, “My love, everything from you is for you and vice-versa. Everything is an expression of your being in your existence in what you witness, especially the rank of your existence [emphasis mine]. You shall be that which you judge.”

I would like to share with you the following lessons from ACIM and see how they relate to the above teaching from Music of the Soul:

32.  “I have invented the world I see.”
Today we are continuing to develop the theme of cause and effect.  You are not the victim of the world you see because you invented it.  You can give it up as easily as you made it up.  You will see it or not see it, as you wish.  While you want it you will see it; when you no longer want it, it will not be there for you to see.

 The idea for today, like the preceding ones, applies to your inner and outer worlds, which are actually the same.  However, since you see them as different, the practice periods for today will again include two phases, one involving the world you see outside you, and the other the world you see in your mind.  In today’s exercises, try to introduce the thought that both are in your own imagination.

The idea for today should also be applied immediately to any situation which may distress you.  Apply the idea by telling yourself:

            “I have invented this situation as I see it.”

33.  “There is another way of looking at the world.”

Today’s idea is an attempt to recognize that you can shift your perception of the world in both its outer and inner aspects. 

34.  “I could see peace instead of this.”

 The idea for today begins to describe the conditions which prevail in the other way of seeing.  Peace of mind is clearly an internal matter.   It must begin with your own thoughts, and then extend outward.   It is from your peace of mind that a peaceful perception of the world arises.

35.  “My mind is part of God’s.  I am very holy.”

 Today’s idea does not describe the way you see yourself now.  It does, however, describe what vision will show you.  It is difficult for anyone who thinks he is in this world to believe this of himself.  Yet the reason he thinks he is in this world is because he does not believe it.

You will believe that you are part of where you think you are.  That is because you surround yourself with the environment you want.  And you want it to protect the image of yourself which you have made.  The image is part of it [this environment].  What you see while you believe you are in it is seen through the eyes of the image.  It [This] is not vision.  Images cannot see.

The idea for today presents a very different view of yourself.  By establishing your Source it establishes your identity, and it describes you as you must really be in truth.  We will use a somewhat different kind of application for today’s idea, because the emphasis for today is on the perceiver, rather than on what he perceives.

 For each of the three five-minute practice periods today, begin by repeating today’s idea to yourself, and then close your eyes and search your mind for the various kinds of descriptive terms in which you see yourself.  Include all of the ego-based attributes which you ascribe to yourself, positive or negative, desirable or undesirable, grandiose or debased.  All of them are equally unreal because you do not look upon yourself through the eyes of holiness.

            In the earlier part of the mind searching period, you will probably emphasize what you consider to be the more negative aspects of your perception of yourself.  Toward the latter part of the exercise period, however, more self-inflating descriptive terms may well cross your mind.  Try to recognize that the direction of your fantasies about yourself does not matter.  Illusions have no direction in reality.  They are merely not true.

A suitable unselected list for applying the idea for today might be as follows:

            “I see myself as imposed on.”
“I see myself as depressed.”
            “I see myself as failing.”
            “I see myself as endangered.”
“I see myself as helpless.”
“I see myself as victorious.”
“I see myself as losing out.”
“I see myself as charitable.”
“I see myself as virtuous.”

            You should not think of these terms in an abstract way.  They will occur to you as various situations, personalities, and events in which you figure cross your mind.  Pick up any specific situation that occurs to you, identify the descriptive term or terms which you feel are applicable to your reactions to that situation, and use them in applying today’s idea.  After you have named each one, add:

            “But my mind is part of God’s.   I am very holy.”

            During the longer exercise periods, there will probably be intervals in which nothing specific occurs to you.  Do not strain to think up specific things to fill the interval, but merely relax and repeat today’s idea slowly until something occurs to you.  Although nothing that does occur should be omitted from the exercises, nothing should be “dug out” with effort.  Neither force nor discrimination should be used.

            As often as possible during the day, pick up a specific attribute or attributes which you are ascribing to yourself at the time, and apply the idea for today to them, adding the idea to each of them in the form stated above.  If nothing particular occurs to you, merely repeat the idea to yourself, with closed eyes.

Comments: What seems so plain to me as I work with these exercises is that at any given moment during the day, images dominate me to the point that I am no longer aware that "My mind is part of God’s. I am very holy." So, as Sidi says the rank of my existence is highly variable, or  I’m a work in progress. I find this exercise to be useful and I intend to work with it.

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