Article 7. Infections of the Mind by Carol Anthony

   It has always amazed me how the Sage teaches through the I Ching. At first, we only get a vague feeling that we are receiving a “new lesson.” Then some time goes by when the subject presents itself again, defining it just a bit more. Then some time later, the missing Rosetta stone is revealed, at which point the message becomes clear and defined. In the end, we suspect that this process has been necessary for us to understand it.

   The following lesson began in the summer of 2011 when an I Ching friend sent us a link to a lecture by Dan Dennett on “memes.”

http://www.ted.com/talks/dan_dennett_on_dangerous_memes.html

   For you who are unfamiliar with memes, the Meriam Dictionary describes them as “an idea, behavior, style, or usage that spreads from person to person within a culture.”

   Dennett’s lecture focuses at first on a scientist who observed a peculiar ant-behavior that was clearly contrary to the ant’s biological imperative to survive, and which, indeed, brought about the ant’s death. Afterwards, a scientist examined the ant’s brain and found it had been invaded and damaged by a certain kind of fluke causing it to self-destruct.

   Dennett next compared this to the “memes” that influence the brains of humans, leading them to think in ways that are contrary to their biological imperative. He then showed a New Hampshire license place that has on it the revolutionary war slogan, “Live Free or Die.” Dennett then continued with a list of things that people have said are “worth dying for”: freedom, justice, truth, communism, capitalism, Catholicism, Islam, etc..

    His point gave a new angle to what we have learned from the I Ching, and have written about in our books: the deleterious effect that untrue words and ideas have on the human mind, psyche, and body.

   A seemingly unrelated question that long had been in my mind came after watching this video: why does the I Ching consistently make the point that evil is not an intrinsic part of our human makeup, and likewise is not intrinsic to the Cosmos? Always, when I experienced what I called “evil behavior,” it made me aware that those words were not true. It urged me to come to a deeper understanding.

   What “clicked” in me particularly while watching this video were the words “injection” and “infection.” I suddenly saw that all so-called evil behaviors are the result of infectious ideas that have been injected into the mind from an outside source. I had already learned that evil is the result of our being conditioned to think in ways that are in conflict with our true nature, but now these two new words made the matter clearer and simpler.

   The concept of “infections of the mind” came more vividly alive later when I happened to listen to a live performance of the opera, Otello, by Guiseppi Verdi. I had seen it both as an opera and in its original form in the Shakespeare play. This time, I was struck by the realization that Othello’s mind has been infected by an outright lie, told to  him by one of his lieutenants, Iago. The general situation is one in which Othello has chosen another lieutenant to replace him when he will soon be leaving for Venice. Iago, jealous of that lieutenant and seeking to discredit him and get the position for himself, has injected into Othello’s mind that his rival lieutenant is having an affair with, Desdemona, Othello’s wife. Othello disbelieves Iago at first, but Iago contrives “evidences” to prove his assertion, thus fixing Othello’s suspicion. From that point on, the infection grows in Othello to the full mental state of feeling utterly betrayed. These feelings are such that Desdemona’s innocent denials only seem to him to further prove her disloyalty. No sooner than he kills her than her maid, who happens to be Iago’s wife, enters, and in horror at what Othello has done, reveals Iago’s evidences to be false. In horror and remorse at what he has done, Othello then kills himself.

   A few more weeks passed by when the thought came that Shakespeare must have been fascinated with the way infectious ideas are being injected into the mind, because this theme occurs repeatedly in his tragedies. In King LearHamlet, and MacBeth, a single negative idea, injected into the minds of the main characters, starts them on their totally self-destructive courses.

   King Lear, for example, has become infected with the self-flattering idea that he will give his kingdom to the daughter who best proves her love for him. He has expected that Cordelia, his favorite daughter, will be the one who will best say how much she loves him. However, it is his two ambitious daughters who floridly declare how much they love him, while behind his back they mock him. Cordelia, who truly loves him, finds herself unable to make a demonstration of her love. Lear’s insistence on this idea leads to both Lear’s and Cordelia’s destruction.

   In play after play, and even in the comedies, Shakespeare investigates the self-destructive nature of ideas that, coming from without, infect the minds of the characters around which his plots revolve. Measure For Measure is one such example in the comedies. The Duke, in this play, temporarily hands over his dukedom to a subordinate noted for his strict morality. This subordinate soon turns the place into a madhouse of morality as he seeks to make examples of immoral behavior, in order to “to clean up the dukedom.” His first example is a young gentleman who has got his bride-to-be pregnant; the penalty he proscribes is for the young man to be hanged at dawn. When the young gentleman’s sister comes to plead for her brother’s life, the subordinate, attracted by her in the extreme, tries to bargain her brother’s life in exchange for her acquiescing to his desire. Fortunately, the duke who has been studying the situation in the garb of a monk, reveals himself and puts all to rights.

   It seems that the main difference between the tragedies and the comedies, is that someone in the comedies, usually an unlikely person, puts the runaway infection in a sensible light, thus exposing its totally absurd nature.

   This is shown particularly well in The Merchant of Venice. The plot revolves around Antonio, who is about to lose a pound of his flesh to Shylock, because he is unable to pay back what Shylock has loaned him. Hearing of this, a woman friend of Antonio’s resolves the problem by disguising herself as a judge who intervenes in the case. She proposes to Shylock that while by law he is entitled to cut off a pound of Antonio’s flesh, he is not entitled to “a scruple more” than a pound. If he so much as cuts off the weight of a hair more, he himself shall die. Commonsense draws Shylock back from the brink of turning the play into a tragedy. We see a similar pattern repeated in The Winter’s Tale, even though the threat is not always a death threat, in the The Merry Wives of WindsorMidsummer Night’s Dream, and The Tempest.

   What is it, I asked myself, that makes these “fictions” so interesting, “classic,” and timeless as pieces of literature? Is it because they reinforce in us an inner truth we all possess: that what we call evil is neither indigenous in us, nor part of the Cosmic way, but rather comes from abstract and false words — ideas planted in our minds, usually during our youth, that hide our true nature, which is totally good from our conscious awareness.

   I was also drawn to ask myself, what allowed that “bonfire” of vengeance to be lit in the mind of Othello, once he heard that his wife was unfaithful? Surely it was his pride, inflamed by the false words.

   Then came the question: what was behind that pride? How did it come about? The Sage answered that question, as well, namely, that pride is an ego emotion that is created the moment when, as a child, our innate dignity is injured. Usually, this happens when we are told, “you know nothing!” If this injury is not healed, pride then develops into a “compensatory system” that makes us think that we are in some way important. The pride system acts like a splint on a broken bone; it enables us, in limited ways, to use that bone until it has healed. Unfortunately, that healing usually does not fully take place. It is prevented by the false, but widespread view, that we are born faulty and lacking, and “there’s nothing we can do about that.” Pride thus becomes a permanent fixture in our psyche — our main way of compensating for the injuries to our psyche that subsequently occur. It is permanent until we find the way to heal that wound.

   Pride, being a makeshift system of compensations, is extremely vulnerable to ideas that either flatter the mind, or arouse it to a sudden defense. Hurt pride is the sickness behind all hate crimes. Pride makes us blind to the fact that everyone is born with dignity; that dignity is the Cosmic essence of our being. Dignity is also the sum-total of all our Cosmic possessions; it allows us to know innately what is harmonious and true, and what is not.

   Ideas that have the potential to infect the mind are bound up with idealistic virtues propounded by the culture we live in. In the case of Hamlet, it is the “virtuous” duty put on him by his father’s ghost, to avenge his father’s murder — an idea that was quite common in the Middle Ages. In Measure for Measure, it is the virtue of blind obeisance to the letter of the law that is enforced by the threat: “either you obey it or you will be executed.” Today’s form of “execution” is not so literal; rather it occurs in the form of  condemning people for their mistakes.

   We little realize that pride-based ideas have a strong hold on us until such time as that original deep wound to our dignity has been healed. For most of us who have grown up in the Western cultures, that idea is that “our original nature is faulty, and the source of evil in us.” We free ourselves from it by deprogramming (utterly rejecting) that idea with Cosmic help. In this way, our natural dignity is released from its prison. From that new place of full self-possession we can then discover and dispense with ideas that have been driving us to self-destruct.

Article 8. The Inner Truth of the Year 2012 by Hanna Moog

   In the more than three thousand years the I Ching has been around, the book has often erroneously been viewed as a fortunetelling device – as if the future were something prewritten. In Hexagram 25 called “Innocence/Not Projecting/Not Expecting,” the I Ching shows this assumption to be false. “Innocence” refers to our original innocent state of mind that brings us into harmony with the Cosmos and its harmonious order.

   The year 2012 is characterized by worldwide crises in almost every aspect of our lives. These crises manifest from the disharmonious consciousness created in the minds of people by disharmonious words, ideas, and beliefs. The I Ching helps us, by connecting us with our deepest inner truth to see that we are by nature part of a harmonious Cosmic order. Disharmonious words, ideas, and beliefs create the disorder we experience.

   We possess, by nature, an inner truth that is in harmony with the Cosmos. Our inner truth is a feeling knowledge, that would light our path, and enable us to respond to its inspirations harmoniously. When we follow this inner light, the word “crisis” takes on the meaning of “opportunity” — the opportunity to find the Cosmic solutions to problems that benefit the whole.

   How does our mind lose its innocence? It happens when it elevates itself over all other things in Nature by imagining that it is “special” due to its ability to think and express itself in verbal language. Looking down from its high place, our mind no longer listens to our inner truth, but plots and plans from a purely mental approach to life. It thus shuts the door to what is possible when we follow our inner truth and creates a self-made prison. The walls of that prison are made of the limitations given by the parameters of time and space, and by what we think we “should do.” The relevance of this fact becomes clear when we realize that our inner truth exists in a dimension beyond time and space, which we can call the dimension of eternity. In practical terms, it is the realm of possibility.

   The salient point here is that the Cosmic reality of which we are an integral part comprises both the dimension that is subject to time and space (the world of all the forms in Nature), and the other dimensions that exist beyond time and space. The I Ching shows us that the forms in Nature are compressed Cosmic Consciousness. The act of being compressed into form and thereby becoming subjected to the parameters of time and space occurs through transformations in the atomic realm. We can picture the process in this way: something that first exists as a harmonious feeling in the Cosmic Consciousness takes on the form of an image in the Cosmic Consciousness. Transformations then compress this image into a form in Nature that corresponds to its original image. Thus, the process of “becoming form” begins in a dimension that is beyond time and space. Although the thing has become a form, it has duration in the sense that it always remains connected with the eternal dimension. Thanks to this connection, the thing participates in constant transformations. The name for this wonderful ability is LIFE.

   By contrast, let us look at what happens when our mind projects an image that is caught in the limitations of time and space: while that image can take on form, its form lacks a connection with the unlimited Cosmic Consciousness, and is therefore lifeless.

   The I Ching shows us the difference between these two kinds of reality: the first is the Cosmic reality; it is characterized by a way of life that is in accord with the Cosmic Principles of Harmony. The second is a fake, parallel reality created by the human mind from abstract ideas that are contrived; that reality is lifeless, and therefore cannot endure. This truth becomes evident in the fact that abstract ideas inevitably produce crises. However, what seems to be the possible “end of the world” is really the end of the false, parallel reality that has been established in the lap of the Cosmic reality. The collapse of false constructs reveals the underlying Cosmic reality that has duration. What the collective crises mean for the individual is something each of us, as individuals, needs to investigate. One way is through consulting the I Ching. What we learn from it is that we each have a Cosmic destiny to fulfill; first, however, we need to become aware of our unique Cosmic possessions.

   The purpose of consulting the I Ching is to reconnect our mind with our inner truth and thereby with the Cosmic Consciousness. To make this possible our mind needs to be willing to come down from its high horse of delusionary thinking. This is neither done by incriminating ourselves nor by committing acts of repentance; the belief in fighting the crisis equally misses the point. Rather, returning to innocence is an act of freeing ourselves individually of the neurotic pride that is the cause of the world’s problems. When our mind thus takes its true place in the Cosmos, the result is “supreme success,” as it is put in Hexagram 14, Possession in Great Measure. Once reconnected with our inner truth, our mind then needs to tune into the images and inspirations it receives from this inner source, and follow them.

   In this way, our mind, instead of functioning on self-created abstract ideas that have increasingly isolated it from its Cosmic source, joins the Cosmic evolution. This act of self-correcting can only be carried out by each of us individually. Self-correcting enables us to make our creative contribution to manifesting the harmonious Cosmic order on the Earth. The energy that is set free when our mind lets go of its arrogance is then transformed into the creative energy we need, in order to express our uniqueness as individuals.

   What becomes clear from the above description is that true progress is made through returning to our original state of innocence, which is synonymous with returning to our true nature. Hexagram 24, Returning, describes this process in the following words:

   “‘Returning’ indicates the direction in which the path of development leads: back to the person’s original nature. It does not lead forward, through cultivating virtues; nor does it mean trying to become something we are not; rather, it is a process of continuously subtracting, or weeding out what we have falsely added. Each step on this path leads to increasing light and relief. We take this path through ceasing to look outward for solutions to problems; we look inward instead. Each hexagram of the I Ching illuminates some hidden part of our psyche that, through giving the mind pre-eminence, we have left behind; thus, it helps us to discover and reclaim our true nature.”

   A final note: What we have described above may sound abstract because we are not relating it to specific experiences, but everything we have written about the I Ching is based either on our own experiences in everyday life, or the experiences of people who have worked with our book “I Ching. The Oracle of the Cosmic Way,” and who have shared with us what they learned.

Article 9. On Opposition. By Carol Anthony

   Throughout my work with the I Ching, my path has always been an inner one. Things appear in my mind spontaneously. When I ignore them, they keep returning until there is some breakthrough in my understanding.

   Recently, to improve my understanding of German, since I spend some time in Germany each year, I saw three paperbacks in Hanna’s German library by Herman Hesse. Checking to see how difficult his language might be, I found them very readable for my level of German. This led to my reading, in a short time, all three, but the one that left me with the most interesting image was the book Siddhartha.

   What appeared and reappeared in my mind was the image he gave of “the river.” In some ways, Hesse painted it mysteriously as a general picture of life, with everyone beginning near the beginning point of the river, and proceeding down it throughout their lives. This image spurred memories in me of several images that came to me in meditation in 1972, only a year after I began consulting the I Ching. In these meditations different places on the river represented times when I began to understand more about my true self. I understood that everyone was “somewhere” on this river, making his learning journey. Some people got frightened when they encountered rapids, and stopped their journeys for a while. Others picnicked on the side, and some did so for much of their lives. They are all somewhere on the river, making their way down, none of them stuck forever.

   I began to realize that this image returned to mind to make me aware of a principle written into the I Ching that I had somehow overlooked. It is the principle that neither evil nor opposition to it is a natural part of the Cosmos. What stops us from continuing on our learning journey down the river, is the onset of opposition.

   _____            _____

   _____            __  __

   __  __            _____

   _____            __  __

   __  __            _____

   _____            _____

   Hex. 37            Hex. 38

   The I Ching has two hexagrams that complement each other in their structures. They are Hexagram 37, The Family, and Hexagram 38, Separating/Opposition. Undoubtedly, in the most ancient version of Hexagram 37, the family represents the Cosmic Family, to which everything that exists, belongs. It includes the multitudinous Helpers that we can call on to help us in all moments of need. Over the millennia it has been incorrectly revised to fit the hierarchical, human-centered view that refers only to the human family. This is obviously reflected in the way the Chinese culture puts heavy emphasis on the importance of the family. Yet we can understand its true meaning as the Cosmic family by comparing it to the configuration of its complement, Hexagram 38, Separating/Opposition.  The two yin lines in Hexagram 37 show a hexagram firmly grounded in the Cosmic order. In Hexagram 38, the two yin lines have moved upward, and tend to lose their grounding in the earth. Their movement upward gives rise to the meaning of “separating,” and to “opposition.” The opposition refers to the human family blotting out the significance of the Cosmic family.

   The Cosmic family, in contrast to the human family, is all embracing to that which holds to it, and is non-hierarchical. When we are in harmony with this natural order, our lives flow smoothly and rewardingly. When we limit its meaning to the actual human family, and use it to describe a hierarchically structured order of society, we fall out of this greater harmony. That is to say, we separate from it and come into opposition with the Cosmic family, which includes all its helping forces. Through this separation, we lose the blessings and protections that come with being in harmony with the whole.

   Opposition, thus defined, is the great stumbling block to all relations. In the smallest of ways, when we recognize something as disharmonious or “not right,” we are meant to say an inner No to it, and turn it over to the Cosmos for correction. Hexagram 21, Biting Through, not only informs us that saying the Inner No is the most potent action we can take in response to ego actions in others, saying No is the meaning indicated in the words “firm and correct” that we meet throughout the I Ching. Because the inner no is meant to be said from a true feeling of caring for the true self in the person doing wrong, it bypasses the notice and interference of the ego in the wrongdoer, while simultaneously engaging Cosmic Helpers to correct the matter. Thus it fulfills what Lao Tzu described as “doing through non-doing.”

   In a similar way Hex. 26, Preponderance of the Great, instructs us to turn any anger at ego-transgressions that we feel over to the Cosmos, after having said the inner No to the transgressor. Only then can the helping forces of the Cosmos that truly correct the situation be activated. Fighting injustice only temporarily suppresses it.

   We little realize that we step out of this protective system when we allow ourselves to fall into an attitude of opposition toward people, either as individuals or as groups. This happens when we fix them as obstinate, bad, or hopeless, or when we regard them as “opposite to us,” or as holding “contrary beliefs.” The opposition this sets up in us swiftly becomes a hardened, prideful competition with them that “must win.” Our inner opposition creates the blockage to any harmony being able to occur because the energy of opposition begets opposition. Pride in us engages pride in the others. The ego thrives on opposition.

   The image of people on different parts the river, where each is learning a lesson that takes him forward just a bit, has helped me to realize that it is incorrect to fix people as “stuck.” There is always a possibility for growth. This is the meaning of the “yellow light of moderation” mentioned in Line 2 of Hexagram 30, Attaining Clarity. This “yellow light” is compared there with the harsh white light of judgment and condemnation. Evil is not something to be fought, but to be transformed with the help of the Cosmic Helpers, and if necessary, with the Helper of Fate. When we fully trust these Helpers, they do exactly what is needed to rescue the person, even if that sometimes may mean his death, and a return to a life in the body at another time.

   Instead of seeing a person in “opposition to us,” we see them as somewhere on the river moving slowly in their growth, no longer fixing them as hopeless. With this enlarged view, we no longer seek to put them down, or to conquer them, or to show ourselves as better, or more enlightened.

   Without the internal tension of opposition, we develop a flabby quality that neither the ego in ourselves nor in others can engage, or master, or overcome. Even if we are endangered temporarily by another’s seeing us in opposition to them, they find no vibration in us that gives them the urge to put us down.

   I first came to this realization when I was trying to explain to myself why the I Ching always refutes the idea that the Cosmos is divided into good and evil. That is to say, evil is not indigenous to the Cosmic order. Opposition, the I Ching has confirmed, is the beginning point of what we call evil. The moment we adopt a fixed view of someone or something as defective, evil, bad, inferior, unknowing, impossible, fundamentally different, irreconcilable, or opposed, the ego, and the evil it creates, becomes active. Lost immediately is our unity with the Cosmic family, with all its helping forces. It is no wonder then that the collective ego wants us to deny entirely that such helping forces exist.

   When we recognize that all of us are on that river of learning, we keep our connection with the Cosmos; then, opposition has no easy foothold. Help is then constantly with us, blessing, supporting and protecting us as we go.

 

Article 10. Distinguishing Our Inner Voices. By Carol Anthony

   Those who may doubt that we possess demonic elements in our consciousness simply have not paid attention to the contents of their own thoughts. They take them for granted, without realizing that most of them come from outside ourselves.

   Mostly what we think as adults comes down from centuries of tradition. Few people think outside that box. Advertisers and political pollsters study this intensely, and categorize the way we think according to our particular cultural background. That shows us clearly that most of our thoughts simply repeat and justify what we have been conditioned to think and believe as true. This is true not just for ethnic groups, it is true for religious groups, and the sciences, in general. All these fields forbid thinking that is beyond the limits they as a group set and approve of. 

   Despite the I Ching’s having been edited and corrected by the various dynasties to encourage the Chinese public to conform to their views, its core text still speaks quite plainly about the need to dissolve our connection with group thinking.”  Line 4 of Hexagram 57, Dissolution/Dissolving, is but one example; it states that this is necessary in order to get in touch with our inner truth.

   Group thinking is not something we have consciously adopted. Each of us has been conditioned to believe, throughout our childhood and adolescence, that the values and dictums of our culture are what we are to accept and follow. Having our own thoughts is even presented as something risky and dangerous. We experience the opposite as true when we begin to connect with the wisdom of our inner truth: we find ourselves at peace with others, whereas group thinking encourages competition for dominance, which ultimately is the source of conflict, and the stifling of true thought.

   We tend to think of our thoughts as spontaneously occurring, and as “ours.” We cannot imagine that they could be totally foreign to our true nature, or as imposed upon us by others, or that they may be something we need to free ourselves from. Once, when I became news editor of our college’s weekly newspaper, I began to realize how much the “news” about things dominates and shapes our thinking.  Much later, through working with the I Ching, I began to be more aware of what were truly my own thoughts, as opposed to those I had unthinkingly adopted from my culture.

   Recently, during a moment of self-observation, I noticed that thoughts belonging to the ego have a different sound from thoughts that are my own. They also seem to come from a different place inside me — from the back of the mind. There is also a noticeable difference in the quality of the sound. Pure thought, I noticed, is “up-front,” modest, and plain speaking. It lacks the pretentious quality of ego thought.

   Ego thought, in its “pleasantest forms” (as in indulging in self-congratulation, or even in grandiosity) has a blustery, pompous sound. In its unpleasant forms we can hearing whispering, as when the voice is tempting, or suggesting to do something that would not feel fitting; or it can be commanding, as in making complaints, or casting judgments; it can be demanding that we DO something; it can be whining and cause us to endlessly indulge in self-incrimination when we feel guilty about something; it can indulge in self-righteousness or vindictiveness when it wants to blame or punish someone. The voice addresses us as “you,” when it is in a blaming mode. This indicates clearly that the thought is coming from outside us, i.e., from the collective ego.

   Two meditations in my early years with the I Ching made me aware of the foreign nature of certain thoughts. In the first meditation, I was knocked off a stool on which I had been sitting. Looking around, I saw a man about four feet tall, dressed in lederhosen, shiny black shoes, and a Swiss hat with a feather in it. Since he looked pleased at his prank, I asked him why he had done it. He replied, “because you shouldn’t be resting on that stool.” I did not realize he was an imp until a short time later when I saw him in a second meditation. This meditation began with a rather nasty phrase being said. Looking for its source, I realized the voice had come from this same figure that was now only 6 inches tall. He had said the phrase while running across a doorway, intending to disappear into another room before I could notice that he was the source. I recognized that he was trying to put that thought into my head. However, I was now standing beside what I later recognized to be a “Cosmic Archer”; I realized that in glimpsing this imp, I had been looking down the length of an arrow, just as the arrow was being released by the archer, killing the imp.

   These two experiences made it clear to me that the tiny, barely heard voices coming from the back of my mind were coming from one or more demonic, ego elements. As time went by, I identified various of them as “imps, demons, and dragons.” Still later, as my co-author, Hanna Moog and I were writing I Ching, The Oracle of the Cosmic Way, we identified still other types of demonic elements. 

   Very recently, I awakened in the middle of the night to the activity of a demonic element we came to call “a doubter.” One doubt after another was blitzing through my mind, attempting to make me doubt something I knew to be true. Once a doubt was inserted, it was followed by phrases that sought to “prove” the claims connected with the doubts. My mind was kept at work, finding reasons why the doubts might be true. Later, I also felt a certain pressure to spread these doubts and the fears they had created, to others. Clearly, my mind had been taken over.

   Interestingly, while thinking about this, certain characters in Shakespeare’s plays came to mind. I realized that they were given the role to express these back-of-the-mind types of thoughts; they flatter, slander, contrive, and are two-faced. They clearly are different from characters that have more balanced thoughts. In King Lear, for example, the “evil” daughters speak in flattering tones to their father until they get what they want, then they say their evil thoughts aloud and proudly. In Measure for Measure, the character Lucio is a particularly good example of an ego that indulges in gossipy, lascivious, and judgmental thoughts. In the Merry Wives of Windsor, Falstaff is driven out of town by two women who cleverly expose his schemes. Other examples abound in Shakespeare’s writings. In modern times, I Claudius, by Robert Graves, looks into the back-of-the-mind thoughts of the Roman Emperors: Augustus and his wife Livia, Claudius himself, and Nero.

   The reader who is skeptical about demonic elements must certainly be aware that he, too, has experienced unsavory back-of-the-mind thoughts that he would be embarrassed to convey to others — thoughts that, on further examination with the help of the I Ching, he finds as not coming from his true nature. Such feelings of embarrassment indicate that we have in some way lost our dignity. Unfortunately, embarrassment is the beginning of efforts to hide the existence of such thoughts from our conscious awareness. This allows the ego to gain an even greater dominance over us.

   Recognizing the tones of voice the ego uses to insert itself into our thoughts is the first step in breaking the ego’s dominance, and to recognizing that the ego is not “us.”

 

Article 11. The Carpet of Our Cosmic Destiny. By Hanna Moog

   Fulfilling our Cosmic Destiny can be viewed in the metaphor of weaving a beautiful, unique carpet. The under-threads of the carpet (the “warp”) are provided by the Cosmic possessions we come with: our inner truth, our inner and outer senses of perception, our metaphorical senses, our Cosmic virtues, and our physical makeup. Our inner senses of perception consist of our inner senses of smell, taste, hearing, seeing and feeling. Among our metaphorical senses are our sense of loyalty to our inner truth, our sense of what is fitting, and our sense of dignity. (See Hexagram 14, Possession in Great Measure, and our book, The Psyche Revealed Through The I Ching for a more complete description of our Cosmic Possessions, our Cosmic Destiny, and the metaphor of the carpet.)

   The I Ching refers to the under-threads of the carpet as our “yellow lower garment” that “brings supreme good fortune.” (Hexagram 2, Nature, Line 5.) The carpet gets woven by our living our lives in harmony with the Cosmos. The more we make use of our talents and the opportunities that are brought to us by the Helpers, the more we add to the beauty of its design.

The Helper of the Earth

   Under healthy circumstances, we are greeted at birth by the Helper of the Earth. The Earth is not only the ground on which we are meant to fulfill our Cosmic Destiny, it also helps us make progress on this path. The Helper of the Earth also holds the warp for the carpet of our Cosmic Destiny. This carpet is not meant to fly, as some metaphors would say, it is meant to remain firmly grounded on the earth. How can this be explained?

   At birth, the Helper of the Earth uses our psyche to assemble our Cosmic possessions (mentioned above), which then form the carpet’s warp. Each of these possessions that make up the warp of the carpet is necessary to fulfill our Cosmic Destiny. This warp, which we then carry in our psyche, is visible on the physical plane in the lines of our hands and in certain features of our face. These lines, unique to each person, are the expression of our uniqueness as an individual human being. (Our healthy connection with the Helper of the Earth can be blocked by one or more birth chips that contain the memory of a trauma. For more information on this subject see p. 246 of The Psyche Revealed…)

Our Carpet Gets Filled in as We Free Ourselves from the Ego

   The ego, in all its manifestations, is the only thing that prevents us from expressing our uniqueness. When we look at the way the ego tends to have occupied every aspect of our being, we may think it is hopeless to free our true selves from its dominance. However, this is only what the ego wants us to believe, to prevent us from even starting with this undertaking. It may attempt to convince us that it is more powerful than we are, and that to be able to start fulfilling our Cosmic Destiny we first must become totally free of the ego. (“You have to be perfect…”)  The truth is otherwise: with every step we make in freeing ourselves from the ego, an aspect of our Cosmic Destiny gets freed, and another piece is added to the weaving of our carpet.

   The good news is that as we process negative experiences from our past, holes in our carpet become filled in. Each time we deprogram a spell, a knot in our carpet gets undone; each time we deprogram a poison arrow, a distortion in its pattern becomes removed. While every negative thing that has ever happened to us has resulted in damage to the carpet of our Cosmic Destiny, we learn how the damage can be undone.

   It is therefore very important to deprogram any ideas or beliefs that say, “My life has been nothing but a big mistake,” “You can’t undo what happened,” “There are things I have done that are unforgivable,” “I have wasted fifty years of my life,” or, “Now, it is too late to correct things.”