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		<title>Finding Autonomy, Part Two</title>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 24 Apr 2010 21:27:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>William</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[The Toltec I Ching]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[autonomy]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.thetolteciching.com/blog/?p=197</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Lesson Of Autonomy revolves around the practical application of these wisdom teachings.  While they may appear somewhat abstract at first glance, their principles demand of us concrete changes in our behavior and attitudes.  This is perhaps most evident in the way we think of ourselves:  if I look through the eyes of the relative [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Lesson Of Autonomy revolves around the practical application of these wisdom teachings.  While they may appear somewhat abstract at first glance, their principles demand of us concrete changes in our behavior and attitudes.  This is perhaps most evident in the way we think of ourselves:  if I look through the eyes of the relative self, all I see is loss and death—but if I look through the eyes of the <em>true self</em>, all I see is communion and immortality.</p>
<p>In order to exercise the right to change things for the better, we must first allow ourselves to be changed for the better.  This means allowing the relative self to be changed by the <em>true self</em>.  Voluntarily submitting to the higher self’s purpose like this allows the relative self to awaken to the life within its life, to remember the life beyond its life—by becoming more than just the sum of our body’s experiences, we let go of the personal history that has conditioned our reactions and we begin acting without being constrained by precedents and preconceptions.  Rather than acting only on our own interests, we become devoted to making things better for the people, animals, and nature around us.  When we allow ourselves to be changed by the <em>true self</em>, in other words, we are no longer concerned with how circumstances affect us—what concerns us is how we affect the circumstances around us.</p>
<p>Undergoing this self-transformation leads us to the Fourth Paradox Of Wisdom:  <em>it is only by voluntarily submitting to the will of the true self that the relative self achieves Autonomy—it is only by recognizing its dependence on the true self that the relative self achieves real independence. </em>But the will, ambition, and impatience of the relative self are not easily tamed and it requires sincere dedication to the true self’s purpose<em> </em>if we are to master the kind of self-control that carries us along the <em>path of wisdom</em>.</p>
<p>We may be devoted to changing things for the better, for example, but the interconnectedness of everything means our actions become part of a web of causes that is interwoven in increasingly complex ways, making it impossible to ever predict the ultimate effects of any single action.  This is why one of the principal symptoms of wisdom is humility:  we can act in good faith that our motive will guide our action to its intended effect, but we must not harbor the pretense of knowing its final outcome.  To exercise creative power and the right to change things for the better without a firm grasp of the governing principles is the precise opposite of wisdom.</p>
<p>Humility, then, is the practical face of Autonomy:  we can be devoted to changing things for the better, but we cannot be attached to the results of our efforts.  Rather than imagining we can control all the potential ways our actions might interact with all other actions over time, we must free ourselves from the relative self’s perspective and adopt that of the <em>true self</em>:  the successful fulfillment of the true self’s purpose cannot be understood as spanning a single lifetime but, rather, must be viewed as a long-term enterprise spanning many lifetimes.</p>
<p>Freedom, therefore, is the ideal face of Autonomy—the freedom to act and react without being unduly influenced by externals, the freedom to act and react without being controlled by past experiences, the freedom to act and react without being inhibited by fears and expectations of the future.</p>
<p>The freedom, in other words, of the untroubled spirit.</p>
<p>And herein lies the difference between freedom and imprisonment—for the untroubled spirit is untroubled no matter how difficult things get, whereas the troubled spirit is troubled no matter how good things get.</p>
<p>If we are to exercise the freedom of the untroubled spirit, we need to relinquish control of events and take control of the troubled spirit—yet because this is the precise opposite of how most people conduct themselves, we come across few people after whom we can model our behavior.  Even though this makes finding our way in life more difficult, it does force us to find our own way.  There was, of course, a first enlightened person.  A first healer.  A first shaman.  A first artist.  A first poet.  A first storyteller.  Autonomy forces us to live as if we were each the first person to see the world and respond to it in a wholly unpremeditated and original way.</p>
<p>Freedom is what happens when the relative self and the absolute self act as one.</p>
<p>Autonomy must not become just another kind of strength to be relied upon in our effort to overcome others in the competition for social resources.  It needs to be the center from which we act and feel and remember.  It needs to replace the sense of identity that has been unintentionally patched together by the relative self through its reactions to the body’s experiences.  Just as the vulnerable caddis worm crawls along the streambed picking up bits of debris it passes and then attaching them to its body to make a protective shell, the relative self builds up a reassuring sense of identity by piecing together a personal history out of the random events to which the body has been exposed.  Autonomy needs to become the sense of self from which all our actions and reactions arise without any ulterior motives.  Once our only motive is the creation of constructive change, the only obstacle to success is our desire to succeed:  by <em>detaching our attention</em> from any sense of success and failure, we have already succeeded in shifting our sense of personal purpose away from <em>what is created</em> and toward the <em>act of creating</em>.</p>
<p>Herein lies the short path to Autonomy.  By experiencing the <em>act of creating</em> first-hand, we are led to recognize that all of creation stems from a single source.  And by withdrawing our attention from the creation itself, we are subsequently led to experience the inexpressible purpose driving the <em>act of creating</em> itself.  After that experience, it is no longer possible to create anything counter to the underlying purpose to the whole of creation:  from that point on, our personal purpose is wholly aligned with the single purpose of the universal source.  Taking an active part in the universal <em>act of creating</em>, in other words, leads us to discover our own personal purpose in the grand scheme of things and, thereby, the unique sense of identity that transcends our individual lifetimes.  The short path to Autonomy runs straight through the quagmire of cultural conditioning without ever diverging into the quicksand of self-importance.</p>
<p>With this background in mind, let us turn to our training exercises and receive, in the experiences they engender, the answers that the Lesson Of Autonomy gives to our most stubborn questions.</p>
<p><em>Exercise One</em>—Sit quietly with eyes closed, silently repeating to yourself, <em>My Heart Is Another Sun</em>.  Concentrate your attention on the center of your chest, visualizing a grapefruit-sized sun there radiating light and warmth out into the world.  Allow the visualization to sink into your emotions, so that the sun-heart within your chest emits unconditional loving-kindness and goodwill out into the world.  After these first steps are accomplished, allow the emotional feelings to sink deeper yet into your material body, producing physical sensations of a corporeal sun from which emanate life-sustaining rays of golden light.  After this stage of the training is mastered, carry the exercise out during all your daily activities until it becomes second nature.  Keep in mind that no shadow can ever fall upon the sun as you silently repeat the catch-phrase, <em>My Heart Is Another Sun</em>.</p>
<p><em>Exercise Two</em>—Sit quietly with eyes closed, visualizing a spider web upon whose every knot there gleams a dewdrop.  Visualize further that each of these many dewdrops is reflecting every other dewdrop and, indeed, that each dewdrop is reflecting the whole of all the dewdrops together.  Once you can sustain this image, place yourself in the visualization as one of the dewdrops and then place everyone and everything you know as the other dewdrops on the web.  Allow yourself to feel how you are reflected in each of those dewdrops.  Allow yourself to feel how everyone and everything you know is reflected in you.  As you stabilize this image, allowing yourself to feel both how each dewdrop is reflected in the whole and the whole is reflected in each dewdrop, silently repeat the catch-phrase, <em>All In One, One In All.</em> When this stage of the exercise is mastered, extend the spider web to infinity and eternity, allowing everything in all places and in all times to become a dewdrop similarly fixed on the living web of creation, radiating <em>All In One, One In All.</em></p>
<p>Ultimately Autonomy means to sense the omnipresent Act Of Creating and then aligning ourselves with it rather than going along with those who are not aware they are being motivated in large part by a mass hypnosis that has, over the generations, settled upon human nature.  Strive to see the world the way it really is rather than allowing yourself to be unduly influenced by the received wisdom of civilization, since that world view is the one that has created the history of suffering we are trying to change.  True Autonomy allows us to exercise freedom of perception and judgment, even as it draws us into a more passionate and compassionate involvement with the times in which we live.  Similarly, true strength allows us to defeat the self-defeating habits of thought, feeling, and memory that make us confuse weakness for strength, failure for success, and folly for wisdom.</p>
<p>Of all the exercises in this training regimen, the Lesson Of Autonomy is the most trying, for it demands the most of us, prodding us on to climb heights we never imagined attempting.  So take your time, re-read the background material regularly, and practice the exercises by steeping yourself in the feelings they evoke.  Move from the abstract to the bodily, making your experiences ever more concrete.  What we are searching for is not something that happens to us—it is something that we ourselves produce.</p>
<p>~</p>
<p>The above is an excerpt from The Spiritual Basis of Good Fortune by  William Douglas Horden.</p>
<p>If you’d like to learn more, visit the website: <a title="here" href="http://spiritualbasisofgoodfortune.com/" target="_blank"> http://spiritualbasisofgoodfortune.com/</a></p>
<p>~</p>
<p><em>The Toltec I Ching</em>, by Martha Ramirez-Oropeza and William  Douglas Horden has just been released by Larson Publications.  It  recasts the I Ching in the symbology of the Native Americans of ancient  Mexico and includes original illustrations interpreting each of the  hexagrams.  Its subtitle, <em>64 Keys to Inspired Action in the New  World</em> hints at its focus on the ethics of the emerging world  culture.</p>
<p><a href="../../" target="_blank">Click here</a> to go to the main site to see sample chapters, reviews and the link to <a href="http://www.larsonpublications.com/book-details.php?id=81" target="_blank">Larson Publications</a> for ordering the book.</p>
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		<title>The 2012 Meme of  Restoring Wholeness</title>
		<link>http://www.thetolteciching.com/blog/the-2012-meme-of-restoring-wholeness/</link>
		<comments>http://www.thetolteciching.com/blog/the-2012-meme-of-restoring-wholeness/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 24 Nov 2009 01:35:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>William</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[The Toltec I Ching]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.thetolteciching.com/blog/?p=138</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
The great Chinese sage Chuang Tzu calls our attention to a strange tree beside the road.  Its bark is so tough that no ax can penetrate it, its wood is so twisted that it cannot be split or used for carpentry.  We can imagine this ancient tree, growing in the most dramatic and inspiring way, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center">
<p>The great Chinese sage Chuang Tzu calls our attention to a strange tree beside the road.  Its bark is so tough that no ax can penetrate it, its wood is so twisted that it cannot be split or used for carpentry.  We can imagine this ancient tree, growing in the most dramatic and inspiring way, its leaves no good for tea, its fruit no good for medicine.  Of what value is this Useless Tree?</p>
<p>As Chuang Tzu points out, perhaps we ought to simply seek out its shade and be grateful for a place to rest or even admire the uniqueness of its form and beauty—perhaps we ought, in other words, to seek its true usefulness instead of pressing our own wants on it.</p>
<p>He goes further, however, to point out that the tree is ancient—and indeed, will continue to go on as it is—precisely because it cannot be exploited.  It remains true to its nature, so its life is not cut short by the whims of others.  Because it cannot be exploited, it lives on to fulfill its destiny of inspiring all who value the <em>sublimely useless</em>.</p>
<p>Objects of inspiration capture our attention because they defy our attempts to categorize them or domesticate them or explain them away.  They are troublesome in the sense that they speak to an older part of us, one that longs for symbolic communication, authenticating our own symbolic self.  And they can be particularly troublesome when their symbolic utterances precede actual events, as if there exists an underlying order to the world that synchronizes its happenings in a way that is completely invisible to our human senses.</p>
<p>Like the Useless Tree, they root alongside the road, offering us a place to rest and seek inspiration but oblivious to all who pass oblivious to their antiquity.  Such objects of inspiration are <em>sublimely useless</em>, beyond the exploitation of our own wants, precisely because they <em>themselves</em> are inspired.  Emerging out of the mists of prehistory, like great pyramids suddenly revealed by evaporating fog, they speak the language of our common ancestors.  They speak the language of our common soul.</p>
<p>The <em>I Ching</em> of ancient China is one such monument.  The <em>Mayan Calendar</em> of ancient Mesoamerica is another.  Both are divinatory systems that have survived now for more than three thousand years.  Both will still be standing, offering respite and inspiration, three thousand years from now.  They will outlive us as they have outlived all those other generations.</p>
<p>Troublesome indeed.  They beg so many questions.  Like the great pyramids, we wonder at how they were built in the first place, who conceived of their form and symmetry, what was the original source of their own inspiration.  But unlike pyramids that are built stone-by-stone, the <em>I Ching</em> had to emerge full-blown as a flower blooming overnight—what mind grasped the whole of its system all at once?  And unlike pyramids that are built stone-by-stone, the <em>Sacred Calendar</em> had to emerge full-blown as a flower blooming overnight—what mind grasped the whole of its system all at once?  Troublesome indeed.</p>
<p>Particularly now.  Because it is now that the Mayan Calendar completes its 5,128-year cycle.</p>
<p>On December 21st, 2012, the Winter Solstice, the Long Count of the ancient Mayans will arrive at the last day of its journey through the 13 Baktuns that comprise the Grand Cycle of 1,872,000 days.  Yes, that is correct:  the Mayan Calendar, originating among some of the world&#8217;s greatest astronomers and mathematicians of antiquity, comes to an end after nearly two million days, precisely on the Winter Solstice of 2012.</p>
<p>Troublesome indeed.  What are we to make of this strange coincidence?  Certainly it has now become a cultural meme of the first magnitude, propagated by an apocalyptic movie, dozens of knowledgeable books, and thousands of concerned websites.  The noise, for those tuning into the conversation, is an escalating crescendo of mixed messages and contradictory predictions.</p>
<p>What are we to make of this strange coincidence?  Here we are, alive at the time that the Mayan Calendar completes its Grand Cycle.  The stirring of voices around us grows louder with warnings, alarm, and scientific debunkings.  The media has jumped into the fray with both feet now and its ratings-driven programming requires as sensational an approach as possible.</p>
<p>I have written elsewhere in these blog postings about the actual mechanics and meanings of the Sacred Calendar, as well as the tendencies of groups to move unconsciously as a herd, so I am not going to cover that ground again here.  At the suggestion of Paul Cash of Larson Publications, I have consulted the Oracle of The Toltec I Ching regarding the meaning of this strange coincidence and what changes this <em>2012 cultural meme</em> augurs.</p>
<p>With all this in mind, I cast the Oracle on November 14, 2009, and received an answer of Hexagram #5, <em>Restoring Wholeness</em>.  The result contained no line changes, indicating a relatively lengthy period—at least two years long—of <em>similar change</em>.  In other words, there may be fluctuations in the <em>degree</em> of change but not in <em>kind</em>.  The clearest way to think of this is that each Hexagram represents a season:  although every day in summer may bring some changes, they are within the context of summer and do not partake of the spirit of another season until that one passes.  We are entering the situation of <em>Restoring Wholeness</em> and there are no prevailing trends within in it signaling a move into another situation any time in the near future.</p>
<p>The term <em>Restoring Wholeness</em>, of course, indicates first and foremost that the situation we are coming out of is one of division, conflict, and alienation—a not-too-far-off description of the past few years of our collective, even global, experience.  Since the 2012 cultural meme has expanded beyond any borders in particular and is considered significant in nearly every country in the world, the present reading should address the global human situation as well as possible.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>Image</strong>:  An old woman heals a young male warrior, who wears an arrowhead necklace.  While she chants an ancient curing song, she places a lizard on his shoulder and administers purifying herbs and water.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">
<p><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-139" title="05 copy" src="http://www.thetolteciching.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/05-copy.jpg" alt="05 copy" width="288" height="432" /></p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>Interpretation</strong>:  This hexagram depicts great <em>benefit</em> fulfilling great <em>need</em>.  The old woman personifies the great-great-great-grandmother, the feminine force of profound wisdom and nurturing, the inner healing force within all, the aged and loving medicine woman.  The male warrior personifies the strength and vitality of youth, the great potential of the young, the idealism and insensitivity of the inexperienced, the impatient and reactive nature of the untrained passions.  Taken together, they symbolize the exchange of forces needed to heal old wounds and enable you to bring <em>benefit</em> to all around you.  The herbs symbolize the feminine medicines of compassion and the understanding of relationships.  The arrowhead represents the masculine medicines of single-mindedness and the pursuit of new experiences.  Taken together, they depict the exchange of energies whereby the new must be refined by the old and the old must periodically be revitalized by the new.  For this reason, the hexagram shows that the young warrior is both a patient and an apprentice of the medicine woman, learning firsthand the ways of restoring natural and original wholeness and, thereby, bringing much needed energy to the feminine half that has been giving to others for so long.  The lizard, the one who grows back its tail, represents the spiritual medicine of regeneration whereby the original state of wholeness is restored.  The medicinal herbs and water together represent the purifying and cleansing away of the useless, the wasteful, and that which only confuses and drags down the original energy of body, mind, and spirit.  Taken together, these symbols mean that you reclaim your spiritual birthright of indivisible wholeness.</p>
<p>The most obvious aspects of this hexagram are the discrepancies between the healer and the warrior.  She is aged, wise and benevolent.  He is young, inexperienced and independent.  She is the ancient healer, whose vitality is no longer that of the young.  He is the youthful warrior, whose vitality is not yet that of the aged.  In terms of the global rift whose wholeness requires restoration, she symbolizes the older naturalistic worldview of heart-based spirituality, while he symbolizes the newer technological worldview of head-based scientific materialism.  She is the nature mystic, attuned to and immersed in the sacredness of everything.  He is the manipulator of nature, the controller bending dead matter and insentient life to his will.</p>
<p>Interpreting the Oracle&#8217;s answer in terms of these two worldviews is dictated by the context of the question, which seeks to uncover the meaning behind the confluence of the ending of the Mayan Calendar and the way the modern mind is reacting to it.</p>
<p>These worldviews are no longer confined to ethnic cultures or geographical regions, of course.  Now entire sub-cultures of people living in the technological culture, for example, have abandoned the worldview of matter as dead and insentient, taking up a lifeway of revering the sacred in every form.  This movement back towards the animistic—or what is often thought of as the shamanistic—worldview can be seen as the vanguard of the coming widespread restoration of humanity&#8217;s ruptured wholeness.  It is not necessary to recapitulate all the elements of that rupture.  Everyone in the world knows that things cannot continue in this way. We have entered the time of <em>Restoring Wholeness</em>.</p>
<p>This Hexagram says that nature and people will no longer be treated as disposable resources.  Heartless greed and cold intellectualism will no longer make policy for the whole of nature and humanity.  The head is a good adviser but a heartless tyrant when allowed to rule.  The newer worldview of technological hubris will voluntarily step out of the leadership position and take up a power-sharing stance with the older worldview of openhearted reverence for all of nature and humanity.  The head is gradually realizing it is part of this relationship between spirit and matter.</p>
<p>Knowledge is not wisdom.  Knowing how to wreak havoc is not the same as having the wisdom not to do so.  Knowing how to harm ourselves is not the same as having the wisdom not to do so.  The young warrior in this hexagram knows how to produce vast technological changes but not how to reverse their unintended consequences.  The old healer in this hexagram knows how to avoid creating unintended consequences by sustaining a more simplified, if less materially extravagant, lifeway.</p>
<p>The warrior&#8217;s arrowhead symbolizes the directness of his approach to matters.  The drawback to this strategy is that different circumstances require different approaches—the approach cannot always be <em>direct and purposeful action</em>.  Such a one-sided focus on <em>doing</em> creates tremendous stress on the body.  Those brought up in a <em>worldview of doing</em> are constantly frustrated by the fact that they cannot act yet, or that they missed the opportunity to act, or that increasing competition among other actors conflicts with their own actions.  Those brought up learning how to change things do not learn how to accept things that do not need changing.  This fundamental level of chronic stress upsets the body&#8217;s natural response to life, causing poor sleep, an impaired immune system, a heightened sense of alarm, anxiety, and impaired judgment.  <em>Impaired judgment</em>—not the best resource for people bent on <em>doing</em> at every turn.</p>
<p>Awareness <em>is</em>.  Will <em>does</em>.</p>
<p>The healer&#8217;s medicine, the power to restore wholeness, is based on the ability to <em>be</em> with things.  This is not nearly as nebulous as it sounds to the modern mind, which generally translates <em>being with things</em> as <em>not doing anything</em>.  Nothing could be farther from the truth.  Or closer.</p>
<p><em>Being with things</em> means being a part of things, feeling ourselves a part of things, sensing the world around us—indeed, the entire universe—as the larger body of which we are an integral part.  So <em>not doing anything</em> does not describe the active process of psychologically merging with the one body of creation.  It requires dropping away boundaries of the self-other duality and feeling ourselves fully immersed in the Whole, just as each of our cells is fully immersed in our bodies and each fish is part of the sea.   On the other hand, <em>not doing anything</em> does precisely describe the ancient worldview, since it is the world itself that is <em>doing</em> and any active striving on our part to exert our own will on things inevitably results in unintended consequences. The ability to move along with the flow of change, making sure that all people and animals and plants are living in peace and shared prospering, is an ancient art and one built on the wisdom of sustaining a lifeway that is in harmony and balance with the entire world.  Of what good is progress, in other words, if it leaves the majority of people in the world behind and drives other species into extinction and sows the seeds of our own destruction in the environment?</p>
<p>Wisdom <em>is</em>.  Knowledge <em>does</em>.</p>
<p>By answering with this hexagram, the Oracle is saying to us all, <em>the solution is not coming from outside you:  you must commit to an extended period of healing this immature warrior mentality—only then will you have the sense of belonging together that you need to move forward as an entire world.</em></p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>Action</strong>:  The masculine and feminine halves of the spirit warrior replenish one another.  It is a time for seeking new experiences that will broaden your vistas and deepen your joy of life.  Your innate wisdom and compassion do not have their source in thought but, rather, in life—they are not replenished by good intentions but, rather, by meaningful experiences.  In order for a well to bring <em>benefit</em> to others, it must tap into the unseen river of <em>benefit</em> flowing beneath the surface of the world of the senses.  Take no comfort in your accomplishments or knowledge now.  Instead, look to your <em>need</em> and pursue new interests that hold the possibility of discovering more meaningful joy in this lifetime. Because you make yourself whole again, you succeed in bringing <em>benefit</em> to others likewise seeking to restore their own wholeness.</p>
<p>Restoring wholeness with the world is an essential step.  But real wisdom knows when to open the heart to compassion and forgiveness.  Old enemies will find the profoundest source of relief and joy as they put away arms and forget old wrongs.  Difficult as it is to imagine before it has happened, this will feel like the most natural and foreordained of events once it has occurred.  The worldview of the nature mystic fosters not just mutual respect among all but reverence, love and adoration.  Life cannot hate life.  Life cannot hold one life more sacred than another.  The change that is coming is one of universal reverence—we will be One again once we hold the sacredness of all things in our hearts, we will be Whole again once we feel nothing but benevolence and good will toward all.  The lost art of regeneration is a <em>soul art</em>:  it is the forgotten practice of dissolving guilt, anger, hatred, revenge, and hostility with the open heart of joyous gratitude.  It is the lost <em>soul art</em> of dropping every expectation that joy is going to come from outside and setting forth to spend every moment <em>producing joy  regardless of circumstances</em>.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>Intent</strong>:  When people’s reactions are out of proportion to events, it is a clear signal that an old wound has not fully healed and is being reactivated by present circumstances.  Such reactions barely disguise the fact that something in the present is provoking an individual or group to relive the emotions of an old injury.  But disguise it they do, for the impact of many injuries is either long-forgotten or unrecognized.  Whether you find this imbalance in yourself or others, the nurturing-medicine of the wise feminine force must be augmented by the directing-medicine of the single-minded masculine force:  while it is essential that the wounded warrior be healed through reassurance and loving-kindness, it is just as necessary that the wounded warrior take up the discipline of recognizing that the new is not the old.  At the first sign of distress, the wounded warrior must immediately name the present and not allow the past wound to be re-opened.  Using the beneficial masculine force in this way allows you to keep the past from infecting the present.</p>
<p>The Oracle closes with these final words regarding the intent we need to carry forth with us into the coming time of <em>Restoring Wholeness</em>.  The day-to-day practice involves constantly reminding ourselves that <em>this</em> is not the past.  We must all be willing to start over, recognizing that there is more than enough blame to go around on all sides and that the old worldview of forever keeping old animosities alive by constantly recounting the wrongs of history needs to be replaced with a worldview of universal amnesty and goodwill.  The past is dead, long live the present.</p>
<p>Everyone in the world knows that things cannot go on like this any longer.</p>
<p>The Oracle says everyone in the world is on the verge of acquiring the wisdom to act on that knowledge.</p>
<p>The Golden Age of Humanity is within our grasp if we will but dare reach out our hand.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">
<p>.</p>
<p><a title="The Toltec I Ching" href="../../" target="_blank"><em>The Toltec I Ching</em></a>, by Martha Ramirez-Oropeza and William Douglas Horden has just been released by Larson Publications.  It recasts the I Ching in the symbology of the Native Americans of ancient Mexico and includes original illustrations interpreting each of the hexagrams.  Its subtitle, <em>64 Keys to Inspired Action in the New World</em> hints at its focus on the ethics of the emerging world culture.</p>
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		<title>The Oracle and the Smoking Mirror</title>
		<link>http://www.thetolteciching.com/blog/the-oracle-and-the-smoking-mirror/</link>
		<comments>http://www.thetolteciching.com/blog/the-oracle-and-the-smoking-mirror/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 01 Aug 2009 19:00:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>William</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[The Toltec I Ching]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2012]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[animism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[divination]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ethics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[global community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Golden Age of Humanity]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hexagram]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[I Ching]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Intention]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[metamorphosis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nahuatl]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[new world]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[oracle]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[shamanism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social transformation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Toltec]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://thetolteciching.com/blog/?p=18</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Tezcatlipoca, the god of the Smoking Mirror of ancient Mexico, wore an obsidian mirror on his chest that reflected the true nature of anyone looking into it.  Those who could not gaze at their reflection without averting their eyes lost their lives.  Those who could look into the Smoking Mirror without flinching, however, would have [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Tezcatlipoca, the god of the Smoking Mirror of ancient Mexico, wore an obsidian mirror on his chest that reflected the true nature of anyone looking into it.  Those who could not gaze at their reflection without averting their eyes lost their lives.  Those who could look into the Smoking Mirror without flinching, however, would have their wish fulfilled.</p>
<p>I take a deep breath and ask the Oracle my question out loud, determined not to flinch:  <em>At what crossroads does our global civilization stand now—and in what direction does good fortune lie?</em></p>
<p>A rare thunderstorm shatters the Oregon twilight.  Lightning strikes the foothills, thunder rattles the windows, the wailing wind drives sheets of rain sideways against the house.  The lights blink off on off on.  I shake the coins, drop them, count them, six times.  The squall passes on to the next valley.  The Oracle speaks.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><img title="64thumb" src="http://thetolteciching.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/64thumb.jpg" alt="Safeguarding Life" width="193" height="300" /></p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em>IMAGE:  A male warrior holds the funeral bundle of his child, preparing to place it in its burial site.  His face reflects the shock, anguish, and horror that fills his heart.</em></p>
<p>I almost flinch.  This is surely the most ominous of the 64 hexagrams.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em>INTERPRETATION:  This hexagram depicts the inevitable result of carelessness and irreverence.  The male warrior symbolizes the versatility and fortitude that are at the core of outer nurturing.  That he prepares to place the funeral bundle of his child in its burial site means that strength cannot accomplish afterwards what nurturing can accomplish beforehand.  That his face and heart are filled with shock, anguish, and horror means that he is in the grips of the most terrible truth:  that which we most cherish cannot be replaced.  Taken together, these symbols mean that you avoid causing suffering by honoring and nurturing all that your spirit touches.</em></p>
<p>Animism is the world&#8217;s oldest Life Way.  It&#8217;s a world view in which everything has spirit, in which every thing is alive and aware.  A world view in which all is sacred—humanity no more or less than anything else.  It is not driven by self-interest but by reverence.  It&#8217;s not that I treat nature right so that I might live better, for instance.  It&#8217;s that I treat nature right because it is the living body of the One Spirit.</p>
<p>The corpus of practices by which people interact with Spirit in a mutually beneficial way is called shamanism.  The way in which human beings communicate with Spirit is a principal concern of shamanism and that gives rise to systems of divination.  An Oracle gives voice to the essence of situations and the trends developing out of them—it is the spontaneous response of the One Spirit to an individual’s act of divination.  The I Ching is one of the world&#8217;s best-known Oracles, having been in continuous use for at least 3,500 years.<br />
For all who perceive the world as something grander and more noble than a merely materialistic set of mechanistic causes and effects, the Oracle issues this dire warning of imminent loss.  The last line of the Interpretation reminds us that the only thing that cannot be taken from us without our permission is our spirit of reverence and good will toward all.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em>ACTION:  The masculine half of the spirit warrior draws back from the brink before it is too late.  It is not a time for pursuing desires and ambitions:  those who cannot temper their strength run the risk of losing a source of that strength.  When our masculine half goes too far in pursuit of goals and becomes short-sighted and impatient, it is necessary to balance it with the strongest medicine possible:  real problems can be avoided only by balancing the masculine half with the power of the feminine half’s protective love.  It is the feminine half’s sense of caring and reverence that holds the key to fulfilling the real goal of happiness, companionship, and a clear conscience:  those who do not hold the emotions of caring and reverence dear to their hearts run the risk of causing pain for themselves and others.  Just because we can acquire something doesn’t mean we should, just because we can accomplish something doesn’t mean we have to:  stopping to really consider what we are risking, allowing ourselves to feel the full brunt of such an emotional loss—this is the protective and loving nature of the feminine half’s medicine.  Likewise, stubborn pursuit of goals even in the face of warning signs, longing for something that threatens to cause suffering for others, refusal to change course when it endangers the greater good—this is the short-sighted and zealous nature of the masculine half when it loses its balance and sense of proportion.  Because you treat nature, other people, and your own creations with the care and reverence you would your own infant child, you counteract every self-defeating action before it ever arises in thought or feeling.</em></p>
<p>The spirit warrior is a man or woman who aims to defeat his or her enemy-within, his or her own self-defeating habits of thoughts, feelings, and reactions.  The dual nature of Spirit, whether cosmological principles on the largest scale or complementary halves of each individual, are symbolized by the terms masculine and feminine.  The masculine half is often thought of as direct purposeful action, such as the act of tunneling through a mountain to get to the sea.  The feminine half is likewise thought of as unconditional open-hearted nurturing, such as the river that waters everything it touches as it winds around mountains to get to the sea.  Obviously, the goal of the spirit warrior is to bring her or his two halves into the kind of dynamic balance that allows for the optimum response to circumstances in the most timely manner.</p>
<p>Here, it is the stubborn pursuit of obsolete and self-destructive goals that the Oracle warns us against—and encourages us to envision the irreparable loss of the true benefits of civilization, to feel the emotional pain of those losses ahead of time in order to motivate ourselves to immediate action.  As it makes clear, this is not the kind of action that has brought us to an impasse:  we can&#8217;t get out of a hole using the same shovel we dug it with.  As the Life Way of ethical values and behaviors becomes more widespread and replaces the consensus of self-interest and needless consumption, the rigid patriarchal hierarchies supporting—and supported by—such decadence give way to self-directed egalitarian groups coordinating their efforts to protect what is valuable.  It&#8217;s this emotional connection to what needs to be salvaged, this treating all things as we would our own child, that forges us together in a sense of shared purpose and mutual respect.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em>INTENT:  The foolish ruin even that upon which they depend.  When we recognize the sanctity of life, however, and work to protect it from unnecessary and pointless harm, then we safeguard our own spiritual foundation and that of all who touch our spirit.  Consider what cannot be replaced and then cherish it, planting seeds of intent in the spirit realm to nurture it and keep it from being lost forever.  Shun materialism and self-interest as you would a poisoned well:  keep to the path of the balanced and harmonious way of life, revering all that the life-giving and life-sustaining forces themselves love.  By maintaining an unbroken alliance with the helping spirits, the community of spirit warriors ensures that the hidden storehouse of life-giving power is never depleted:  only in this way can human nature continue to draw upon the power to create its own, unforeseeable, future.</em></p>
<p>Not everything can be quantified and brought down to plans of action.  Those who simply act as if they care and merely feign sincerity continue to make bad decisions because their intentions are still rooted in self-interest.  Those who sincerely maintain that all of matter is imbued with spirit, on the other hand, do so from direct personal experience and treat their thoughts and emotions as inner actions that are just as consequential in the field of intentions as physical actions are in the field of material cause-and-effect.  Within the shamanic Life Way, our inner actions are as significant as our outer ones.</p>
<p>The text of this hexagram closes with this demand on those wishing to transform civilization while there is still time—that we open our hearts, drop off all the trappings of cynicism, and consciously wish the best for all.  The curative demeanor for the coming Age is the feminine face of loving-kindness and good will, not merely a re-painted mask of the patriarchal grimace of conquest and dominance.</p>
<p>Typically, the Oracle&#8217;s answer involves two hexagrams, the first of which refers to the present or near future and the second of which to the future developing from those present trends.  The present reading is no exception, involving line changes in the second and fifth places.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em>2nd    The primal relationship between humans and nature has been disrupted by your predecessors’ short-sightedness.  Look upon nature as you would your beloved and work to repair this rift.  Begin by puncturing the bubble alienating you from the affection surrounding you.</em></p>
<p style="text-align: left;">The second line refers to local leaders and groups.  Here the concern is clearly with remedying environmental problems, which have been initiated by earlier generations.  As before, the Oracle advises us to become inspired not by appealing to our heads but to our hearts.  But now, it reminds us that we have stopped pouring out open-hearted affection toward nature because we have closed ourselves off to the love and generosity pouring into us from the natural world.  Being too absorbed in the strictly social sphere deprives us of the time and attention we need to share in the strictly natural realm.  It takes no leap of imagination to foresee that we must strive for greater intimacy with nature if we are to salvage civilization or, in the worst case, survive its fall.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em>5th    You have made a good start but do not really have the stomach for some of the difficult decisions ahead.  Find someone trustworthy to enact reforms.  Focus on encouraging people to advance by reminding them of the positive accomplishments of their predecessors that will remain in place.</em></p>
<p>The fifth line refers to leaders at the highest levels.  Here it clearly faults them for lacking the character and resolve to make the necessary reforms.  While we have little hope that they will voluntarily step aside and hand over the reins any time soon, we can see that the Oracle envisions a smoother, rather than a more drastic, transition of power.  Ultimately, however, difficult decisions will have to be made, which entail reforms that can only be enacted by someone that people whole-heartedly trust.  If a successful transformation of civilization is to take place, then the sacrifices people have to make will be made easier if they know what they are sacrificing for:  a better world that will carry over the best of the past while jettisoning the rest.</p>
<p>Whereas the first hexagram and its line changes can bee seen to answer the first part of the question, <em>At what crossroads does our global civilization stand now</em>, the second hexagram can be viewed as answering the second part of the question, <em>In what direction does good fortune lie?</em></p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px; text-align: center;"><img title="63thumb" src="http://thetolteciching.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/63thumb.jpg" alt="63thumb" width="193" height="300" /></p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em>Image:  A great feathered serpent hatches out of the earth as if from an egg.  Its feathers are adorned with conch shells and it senses its surroundings with its bifurcated tongue.</em></p>
<p>The Plumed Serpent is the symbol of the enlightened human being.  In a historical sense, it refers to the great Toltec spiritual and political leader, Quetzalcoatl, who lead his people into a time of great peace, prosperity, and cultural flowering.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em>INTERPRETATION:  This hexagram represents the great forces released by the accumulated efforts of spirit warriors over the ages.  The feathered serpent symbolizes the collective intent and vision shared by spirit warriors in every time and every place.  That it hatches from the earth as if from an egg means that the community of spirit incubating within the material world emerges as a living, dynamic force of creation.  The conches adorning its feathers symbolize the call for all to join the community of spirit.  Its bifurcated tongue symbolizes the duality that is one.  That it uses its bifurcated tongue to sense its surroundings means that you are attuned to the universal presence of the masculine and feminine creative forces.  Taken together, these symbols mean that you align yourself with those whose only need is to bring benefit to their surroundings.</em></p>
<p>Though times are dark, we are the light bringing it to an end.  For millennia, women and men with the highest motivations have dedicated their lives to the creation of a Golden Age of Humanity.  That their names are not always celebrated in history books is of little matter—their spirits live on just as ours will.  Just as a pyramid is raised stone by stone, the world we wish to bequeath to the future is built life by life.  The cumulative effect of light-bearing individuals inevitably tips the scale to an equally long period of history in which universal good will prevails.</p>
<p>Beyond this, the very nature of the One Spirit is to benefit all in equal measure.  Joining forces with others who wish to practice unconditional benevolence is the path of good fortune.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em>ACTION:  The spirit warrior reverses the flow of power, channeling it inside instead of outside:  by storing up power internally rather than expending it externally, we are able to both free ourselves of habits and gain control over our actions.  This inner autonomy also extricates us from social influences that strive to mold us into obedient marionettes even as it allows us to be more tolerant of the deeper motives of those social influences.  From the spirit warrior’s perspective, the original intent of religion is to awaken the higher soul to its potential freedom while purifying the lower soul of fear, greed, envy, and hate—just as the original intent of government is to awaken the higher soul to its responsibility to others while instilling in the lower soul the capacity for self-control.  From this perspective, the fact that religion and government acquire ulterior motives over time and begin to act in their own self-interest merely demonstrates that they are managed by human beings and must be viewed accordingly.  Similarly, the fact that all religions and governments strive to awaken the higher soul and purify the lower soul—even when they have forgotten how and why—simply demonstrates that the quest for metamorphosis is a universal and irresistible force.  Just as our inner autonomy releases us from the trap of depending on social influences for our sense of self, in other words, it also releases us from the trap of not seeing how those social influences contribute, however unintentionally, to the gradual unification of humanity.  Reversing the flow of power, we gain inner autonomy and, paradoxically, become one with the universal civilizing force.</em></p>
<p>We give away our power when we are dependent on something, especially when we are dependent on it for our sense of self.  We reclaim our power when we pull it back from externals and cultivate an independent sense of self, one not reacting to circumstances in a predictable and automatic way.  When we can no longer be manipulated by others or controlled by our own unmanageable desires, we achieve the kind of autonomy that is free to respond to the needs around us in creative, innovative, and successful ways.</p>
<p>Such autonomy also frees us from seeing overly simplistic snapshots of complex processes.  It allows us to consider the potential value of social institutions that have fallen into disrepair and disrepute, especially by considering their original value and working to revive it.  When a temple was to be rebuilt or enlarged in ancient Mexico, for example, the old temple was not torn down and replaced—the new temple was built around and over the old one because it was recognized that it was the site itself that people already held sacred.  The shock of dramatic transformations of culture can be mitigated by slowly and methodically reshaping the institutions people have long held in esteem.  History holds clear examples of failed reforms that attempted to remake society from the ground up.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em>INTENT:  The wise become independent even from what they revere.  Like children who are grown up and independent of the parents they love and admire, spirit warriors take their place among the community of spiritual equals.  Because you use this lifetime to bring the most benefit to others, you incubate the higher soul that is preparing to hatch from the lower soul:  joining in the collective labor shared by spirit warriors in every time and every place, you contribute directly to both the fulfillment of humanity’s destiny and the creator’s vision.  Becoming part of the universal civilizing spirit, you contribute directly to the founding of a free and harmonious world of equals right here within this world.</em></p>
<p>Wisdom isn&#8217;t so much knowledge as it is freedom—freedom in every sense imaginable.  Freedom even from what we have held valuable, since everything changes, rigidifies, loses its original impetus and takes another direction.  And freedom, especially, from emotionally-charged words, since they are among the most potent manipulators of behavior.</p>
<p>Breaking through the barriers that have long been used to divide and conquer a world of peers, we are, individually, a microcosm of the greater metamorphosis at work on the whole of civilization.</p>
<p>Thunder still echoes in the distance but the rain has stopped.  I close the book, put away the coins.  Not quite as ominous as it started out, the Oracle&#8217;s answer to my question doesn&#8217;t just point to the darker side of human nature—in fact, it spends much more time illuminating the light half of our nature.</p>
<p>Perhaps, ironically, it is easier for us to stare into our darker half than it is for us to gaze into our own nobility.  It would be the cream of the jest if civilization faltered and crumbled simply because we averted our eyes from the Smoking Mirror&#8217;s reflection of the grandeur of our true nature.</p>
<p style="text-align: right;">—Oracle Cast  2 June 2009</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">
<p style="text-align: left;"><a title="The Toltec I Ching" href="http://www.thetolteciching.com/" target="_blank"><em>The Toltec I Ching</em></a>, by Martha Ramirez-Oropeza and William Douglas Horden has just been released by Larson Publications.  It recasts the I Ching in the symbology of the Native Americans of ancient Mexico and includes original illustrations interpreting each of the hexagrams.   Its subtitle, <em>64 Keys to Inspired Action in the New World</em> hints at its focus on the ethics of the emerging world culture.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">
<p style="text-align: left;">This article first appeared on the Reality Sandwich website July 7, 2009: <a href="http://www.realitysandwich.com/oracle_and_smoking_mirror"> http://www.realitysandwich.com/oracle_and_smoking_mirror</a></p>
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		<title>Inspired Action [1]</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 26 Jun 2009 22:29:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>William</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[The Toltec I Ching]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2012]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[animism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[divination]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[new world]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[I am part of a Living Whole that wants the best for me and all others at the same time.
This is the lesson I&#8217;ve learned in my sixty years.  It&#8217;s the lesson I repeat to myself constantly.
Like a favorite song you hum to yourself all the time.  Or the heart of a story you don&#8217;t [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>I am part of a Living Whole that wants the best for me and all others at the same time.</em></p>
<p>This is the lesson I&#8217;ve learned in my sixty years.  It&#8217;s the lesson I repeat to myself constantly.</p>
<p>Like a favorite song you hum to yourself all the time.  Or the heart of a story you don&#8217;t want to forget.</p>
<p><em>I am part of a Living Whole that wants the best for me and all others at the same time.</em></p>
<p>We don&#8217;t have to go far or look hard to see this lesson at work.  The sun shines everywhere and on everyone equally.  Water nourishes everything and everyone it touches equally.  The soil nourishes every seed equally.  Air breathes life into all equally.</p>
<p>The lessons we repeat to ourselves, like the songs and stories we identify with, become part of us.  They color our moods and influence how we see things.  They are like a filter on a camera that changes the whole tone of light before it is ever recorded—they form a <em>predisposition</em> toward interpreting our experiences in a certain light.  We are open or closed to things, ready to be excited or irritated by things, primed to encourage or criticize others, already leaning forward or holding back, already wanting to smile or scowl—all before the experience has even begun.</p>
<p>In this sense, the lessons we learn determine <em>ahead of time</em> how we will react to whatever comes our way.</p>
<p>The problem, of course, is that the early lessons of life are learned without our consent.  We are too young and lack the independent sense of self needed to reject lessons that will prove self-defeating later.  In fact, we lack the criteria by which to make such judgments—and even the awareness that such rejection is possible—until we reach a certain level of maturity.  By that time, such lessons have become ingrained, part of our unconscious disposition, habits coloring every thought, emotion, memory, and reaction.</p>
<p>Such habits are the opposite of Inspired Action.  They result in thinking the same thoughts, feeling the same feelings, reliving the same memories, responding with the same reactions, over and over and over.  Rather than inspiring us to new and surprising insights, demeanor, and behavior, they lock us into a rigid and routinized way of interacting with the world.  Rather than sparking our spontaneity and creativity, they make us predictable and, therefore, prone to manipulation.</p>
<p>But not all lessons lead to self-defeating attitudes and behavior.  Those we learn voluntarily and accept consciously can lead to thoughts, emotions, and actions that are better adapted to life and therefore bring us greater happiness and success.</p>
<p>Since habits are kept alive by repeated reinforcement, trying to eliminate them by focusing on them merely reinforces them all the more.  For this reason, they have to be <em>replaced</em>, not eliminated.</p>
<p>We replace old self-defeating habits by focusing our attention on new lessons—lessons that we consciously <em>choose</em> to learn.  By focusing attention on these new lessons, repeating them to ourselves all the time, we find our feelings changing and our reactions to events surprising us.  Like musicians and athletes training to peak performance, we train ourselves through repeated practice to see the world in a different light and participate in it with a greater sense of purpose.</p>
<p>We unlearn self-defeating lessons by holding our attention on new ones that bring us into closer harmony with people, nature, and spirit.  <em>All</em> people, not just those it is convenient or easy to get along with.  <em>All</em> nature, not just those parts it is convenient to care for while ignoring the harm done to the rest.  <em>All</em> spirit, not just the conventional <em>idea</em> of spirit but the living <em>presence</em> of the sacred everywhere at hand.</p>
<p><em>I am part of a Living Whole that wants the best for me and all others at the same time.</em></p>
<p>We live in a time when intense competition and self-interest is promoted as the greatest good.  A time when natural resources are not protected by the governments who should be stewarding the land.  A time when religious ideology spreads hatred instead of love and factionalism instead of universality.  Not precisely a time promoting harmony with <em>all</em> people, <em>all</em> nature, and <em>all</em> spirit.</p>
<p>After more than 5,000 years, the Mayan Calendar is coming to an end and starting anew on the Winter Solstice of 2012.  People everywhere know that things cannot continue as they are.  The future doesn&#8217;t exist yet.  There are more than six billion of us.  We can create whatever we collectively choose.  We do not have to let governments, religions, corporations, or the media choose for us.  We are a world of peers and we can decide our destiny.  We <em>can</em> learn new lessons.</p>
<p>We <em>can</em> create the Golden Age of Humanity if we choose.</p>
<p><em>I am part of a Living Whole that wants the best for me and all others at the same time.</em></p>
<p>Inspired Action transcends self-interest and benefits the whole.  It arises from a sense of trust in the world and reveals itself in acts of generosity.  It is fascinated with how accurately it can discern others&#8217; needs and how well it can benefit others.  It is self-sacrificing in the sense that it places the needs of the whole ahead of self-interest.</p>
<p>Inspired Action arises from a sense that all things, including human beings, are sacred.  It is based on the lesson that all matter <em>is</em> spirit.  It reveals itself in the personal experience of all spirit being <em>immediately</em> present.  It is self-transcending in the sense that it draws us into ever-closer communion with all spirit, all nature, and all people.</p>
<p><em>The Toltec I Ching</em> incorporates the common lessons of the ancient cultures of Asia and the Americas.  The sum of these lessons embodies a worldview in which humanity stands precariously balanced between nature and spirit—a worldview that forever balances between (1) the guilt of having to take other lives in order to live and (2) the awe of being consciously alive in the maze of matter.  These roots of the indigenous cultures produced a brand of moral ethics based on personal responsibility for (1) genuine sorrow and remorse for taking the lives of plants and animals and, consequently, taking no more than absolutely necessary, and (2) making this life as meaningful and as rewarding as possible by treating everyone and everything honorably and nobly.</p>
<p>With this introduction to the concept of Inspired Action under our belts, let&#8217;s consider the worldview in which people can communicate with spirit through the practice of divination.  In ancient Mesoamerica, divination was conducted using the Sacred Calendar, or Tonalpoalli, while in ancient China, it was accomplished through the Oracle of the I Ching.  The logic of that worldview can be seen as we follow the line of reasoning outlined in the book&#8217;s <em>Glossary</em>—</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>Oracle</strong> The means by which the <strong>One Spirit</strong> gives voice to the <strong>essence</strong> of situations and the trends developing out of them.  The natural, appropriate, and spontaneous response of the <strong>One Spirit</strong> to an individual’s act of <strong>divination</strong>.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>Divination</strong> The art and practice of interpreting signs and symbols to see into the <strong>essence</strong> of things.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>Essence</strong> The living presence of the <strong>One Spirit</strong> manifesting itself in every creation at every moment.  The unchanging background of all change that makes up the underlying harmony of all creation.  The timeless perfection of all things underlying their apparent imperfection.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>One Spirit</strong> The single immaterial living awareness of the material universe.  The origin and destination of every individual <strong>soul</strong> and, thereby, the eternal repository of all the memories and experiences of all who ever lived.  The marriage of the <strong>masculine creative force</strong> and the <strong>feminine creative force</strong>, whose union of Light and Love creates and sustains all of creation.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>Soul</strong> The personal aspect of <strong>spirit</strong>.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>Spirit</strong> The invisible half of <strong>nature</strong>.  The living awareness within all matter.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>Nature</strong> The visible half of <strong>spirit</strong>.  The single body of the <strong>One Spirit</strong>.  The living and aware form of the sacred.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>Masculine Creative Force</strong> The creating half of the <strong>One Spirit</strong>.  The natural, appropriate, and spontaneous catalyst of all creation, whereby all things are inspired to take form and strive toward continual <strong>metamorphosis</strong>.  The universal principle of fire, which ignites all it touches and, within the individual, manifests as the masculine half of the <strong>spirit warrior</strong>.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>Feminine Creative Force</strong> The sustaining half of the <strong>One Spirit</strong>.  The natural, appropriate, and spontaneous benevolence of all creation, whereby all things are accorded an equal measure of essential <strong>benefit</strong>.  The universal principle of water, which nurtures all it touches and, within the individual, manifests as the feminine half of the <strong>spirit warrior</strong>.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>Spirit Warrior</strong> A man or woman engaged in consciously defeating the <strong>enemy-within</strong>.  Women or men consciously <strong>training</strong> themselves to unite their feminine and masculine halves in order to promote and share in the good fortune of all.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>Enemy-Within</strong> The conditioned and artificial aspect of every individual’s personality that is acquired unconsciously from their surroundings and must be consciously extinguished through training in order for each to return to their essential nature.  The set of self-defeating behaviors and perceptions that the <strong>spirit warrior</strong> defeats.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>Metamorphosis</strong> The natural, appropriate, and spontaneous return to <strong>essence</strong>, understood as the result of self-liberation, which does not imply liberating the self but, rather, that liberation can only be achieved by oneself.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>Benefit</strong> The natural, appropriate, and spontaneous response to <strong>need</strong>.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>Need</strong> A temporary blockage in the free flow of <strong>benefit</strong> among all things.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><strong>Training</strong> Consciously working to eradicate the thinking errors based on self-interest by concentrating on thoughts and feelings based on good will toward all.  Consciously working to quiet the inner monolog and experience each moment of life just as it is, without interpreting it in reference to oneself.</p>
<p><a title="The Toltec I Ching" href="http://www.thetolteciching.com/" target="_blank"><em>The Toltec I Ching</em></a>, by Martha Ramirez-Oropeza and William Douglas Horden has just been released by Larson Publications.  It recasts the I Ching in the symbology of the Native Americans of ancient Mexico and includes original illustrations interpreting each of the hexagrams.   Its subtitle, <em>64 Keys to Inspired Action in the New World</em> hints at its focus on the ethics of the emerging world culture.</p>
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