"Man has no
Body distinct from his Soul; for that called Body is a portion of Soul
discerned by the five senses, the chief inlets of Soul in this age." ~William Blake
The practice of softening our perception softens the world we perceive.
Anoint
the earth through your senses. Redeem creation by perceiving it more
gracefully. Pour your inner light outward through intentional acts of
sacramental seeing, hearing, smelling, touching. A soft caress of
perception infuses Prakriti with Purusha, the womb of Mary-Matter with
Christ-Consciousness.
Until now our senses have been
receptors, passive recipients of a world flowing into us. But in the dawning age, we become
transmitters, blessing the world with wands of sensation. Sensation activates the hidden potential of matter. Perception is
blessing. Awareness is a priestly function.
Sunbeams radiate, not
into our eyes, but from them. Thrush music rises from inner silence,
reverberating from our ears. Our hearing is half the song. Breathe out
the musk of awakening. This world is a garden: we are the Spring.
Practice: the Energy Around the Flower
Practice this
exercise no more than a minute or two, without concentration or
strain. Then resume your work. If you are on a hike in the wilderness or a daily walk, you can pause to do this little exercise now and then
for short moments. Please be without force or concentration. In fact, this exercise asks you to de-concentrate: to diffuse your attention to the creature's periphery, where hints of the Creator glow through the thinnest veil of physical things.
Begin
by perceiving the space around a flower, a leaf, any still small living
creature. Later, practice this with a person's face.
Notice the subtle fractal luminosity at the outline of the object, between spirit and matter, where form dissolves into space.
Usually
we focus on an object, and the space around it is periphery. In this
intentional act of softening, let your focus gently shift to the empty
space around the object, so that
the object is peripheral to the space around it.
The surrounding
void deepens in substance, while the form it contains becomes less concrete, more transparent. See that form like a ray of sunlight refracted by
water in a still green pond.
Soft perception is not
imaginary, just indirect. Through indirection, we perceive what is more
subtle. Quantum science teaches us that the object that seems concrete is ever dissolving into subtler layers of energy. At the subtlest
level of the physical world, particles arise and dissolve
instantaneously in a vacuum. Ultimately, these particles are but waves
of emptiness.
In softening our perception, we see the true
pointalism of
matter - to borrow a term from art history. We allow old patterns to
gracefully deconstruct into finer and finer particles of light. We let
the radiance of Creator outshine the mirage of creation.
Buddha's
Heart Sutra begins, "Form is emptiness; emptiness is form." Softening
our perception puts this sutra into practice. The goal of this exercise is, in St.
Paul's words, "to behold all things created anew." (2 Cor. 5:17)
On
a golden afternoon, practice this in the forest with a wildflower. Then
practice with someone you love in a moment of stillness, softening your
gaze from direct encounter to the aureole at the edge of the physical
form. Soon you will sense your beloved enfolded in compassion.
Next,
practice in a mundane public place: waiting in line at the supermarket,
sitting on a train, attending a meeting at work. You will awaken
compassion for the ordinary, and for the stranger. You will begin to see
the beauty that envelopes all wondrous weary human beings.
Finally,
practice soft perception in a negative situation: while gazing at
someone in deep distress, someone dying, or someone with whom you are in
conflict. As their face dissolves into its luminous essence, this face becomes the light of Christ. There really are no negative
situations.
When you acclimate to this practice, allow your
awareness to descend from the head to the heart: quite literally, from the brain to
the warm area in the chest. Even while using your
eyes, ears and nostrils, the source of your attention can flow from the
heart. As this shift occurs, you literally see through the eye of the
heart, and the world around you becomes a Sacred Garden.