If
asked to name the most exotic place that comes to mind, we might answer
"Tibet." Certainly, Tibet seems wildly unconventional (and
maybe a little frightening) to Westerners, but most of what we hear
is based on horror stories that play on our fascination with, and fear
of, things like corpses and magic.
Yes, Tibetans think differently than we do, but they are not obsessed
with the horrible in the same way that we Westerners are. If anything,
Tibetans have an everyday reality that mixes Buddhist thought with local
traditions.
About Tibetans
Local traditions in Tibet are the outcome of a culture living in an
extremely remote area that is surrounded by the unusually riveting majesty
of nature. Like Native Americans who lived near the natural wonders
of an unspoiled America, Tibetans honor nature. They value the spiritual
essence of their land and their ancient culture. Spirits, whether human
or nonhuman, are an ordinary part of life.
In general, Tibetans have a strong interest in death. Why? Learning
about death is valuable becauseTibetans feel that death is nothing more
than a continuation of life. Understanding death completes human experience.
It is as important as life.
While it is true that, traditionally, Tibetans are attracted to death
and spirits, this attraction is not based on revulsion. It is based,
rather, on a wish to understand, and work harmoniously, with nature.
For this reason, Tibetans do not see spirits as something to fear or
abhor. If anything, the Tibetan fascination with spirits reflects a
wish to learn what spirits have to teach the living.
Educating the Dead
Learning about what happens after death is highly desirable for the
living because knowledge is essential for the positive transition of
the dead into a new life. Since the dead cannot reason, it is up to
the living to learn about death before it happens. In addition, it is
an act of compassion to help the uninformed dead effectively deal with
their new existence. In order to be useful, however, the living cannot
fear death. They must honor death as if it is as desirable as life.
In short, the living must accept death. It is not enough to be a horrified
onlooker. In Tibetan lore, if a spirit has returned as a ghost, the
fault does not lie with, say, a violent death and a confused spirit.
It lies with the inability of the living to guide sucessfully the spirit
to the world of the dead. It is this idea that led to the Tibetan Book
of the Dead.
Westerners might classify The Tibetan Book of the Dead as dark and forboding,
but, actually, the book was written as a manual to help the living to
fulfill their ability to be compassionate guides for the dead. This
help is vital because the world beyond death is confusing and a dead
spirit can get into trouble (Christian, 1972). As living people, it
is dishonorable to abandon the dead.
Being Spiritual for Spirits
Spirits need help? It seems that, if anything, the living need protection
from the dead. But wait. Should spirits scare us? Tibetans would
say "no." If we are scared, then we must reframe the problem
from a higher spiritual understanding. In a successful reframing, we
must come to the realisation that a spirit problem has less to do with
an unruly spirit than with the level of our spiritual awareness. In
short, the dead need our help. If anything, we must work on ourselves
if we are to supply help. To begin, our consciousness must evolve so
that spirits no longer frighten us. The prevailing idea is that, to
help a spirit, we must convince it to choose rebirth (Christian, 1972).
If human minds are going to guide the dead, then human minds must be
concerned with how they interact with spirits. Spiritual evolution is
critical. For this reason, Tibetans who are concerned with the evolution
of human spirit usually engage in rigorous psycho-spiritual training
that focuses the mind to such one-pointedness that the mind acquires
the intensity that is needed for communication and interaction with
spirits. Not surprisingly, such one-pointedness of mind is the core
of psycho-spiritual training that is the foundation of monastic life
in Tibet (Christian, 1972; David-Neel, 1977 ).
Psycho-spiritual Training
As one might imagine, psycho-spiritual training requires long hours
of meditation in which a student silences the incessant activity of
the brain (i.e., mentally talking to oneself) by repeating a simple
mantra over and over until mind and spirit are so focused there is only
the mantra. When a student reaches this level of one-pointedness, the
mind becomes so open that it invites experience that does not reflect
what we consider "normal." In other words, when in this state
of mind, a student enters a broad understanding in which it becomes
clear that the phenomenal world is purely subjective (Christian, 1972).
Spirits and what we consider paranormal activity are as valid as what
we consider "solid" reality. Paranormal phenomena are no longer,
well, phenomenal . . . and what seems solid is an illusion that springs
from a learned conviction that only what we see, hear, touch, and taste
is real.
One-minded Vision
When a student's one-pointed focus begins to be a natural part of his/her
expression, the student is spiritually ready to work with spirits. There
will, however, be tests, some of which will seem as horrifying as Hollywood
would like us to believe. Nonetheless, a spiritually elevated mind intuitively
knows that these visions are not worth a second glance. If the mind
is in the right place, ghosts and demons are no more challenging than
anything else in "real" life. We learn from the horrible.
We discover that ghosts are no more than souls in need of a little help.
Working With Ghosts and Demons
To a Tibetan who follows tradition, ghosts and demons are part of reality.
To work constuctively with ghosts and demons, it is useless to convince
oneself that they do not exist. With denial, a person does not fulfill
his or her abilities as a conscious human.
To learn about human potential, it is most useful to learn to identify
with other creatures-whether these creatures be of this world or another
world (David-Neel, 1977). Identification leads to deep understanding
in which a student learns to move and interact with phenomena,
not merely observe it.
Once a student has learned to move with phenomena, it becomes obvious
that true communication does not depend on words, or on the part of
the brain that produces words or analysis. Indentification depends on
subtle feeling. That is why communication between an advanced student
and guru often does not consist of words; it consists, rather, of mental
images that move between teacher and student (Christian, 1972). These
images communicate far more than words.
Not surprisingly, the intense concentration that an adept uses to transmit
images to a student also taps into the same focused concentration that
one not only uses to work with spirits, but also gives ideas a perceptible
shape and injects a spirit into objects that seems to bring them alive
(Christian, 1972; David-Neel, 197). With this intense concentration,
it is not unusual, for example, for an artist to indentify so strongly
with a deity being painted that the artist begins to express qualities
of the deity (David-Neel, 1977).
More interestingly, there are those who have reached such a pinnacle
of concentration that their bodies no longer function as a material
object. In effect, these bodies freely move between the world of the
living and the world of the dead because they transcend the physical
laws that define our lives. Perhaps, it is possible to say that these
people are both dead and alive.
Living Ghosts?
Does Tibetan spirituality seem improbable? Consider the adepts who,
as living people, have been able to create a ghostly double of themselves.
These ghostly doubles are like ghosts, except that they are projections
of a person who, having been away for a long time and lacking a telephone
or other modern conveniences, is concerned about sending a message that
he or she will arrive in a matter of days (David-Neel, 1977). In contrast
to the unconscious dead, a living person consciously projects
his or her own ghostly image to those who are waiting for the person
to arrive.
Such living phantoms surely represent a configuration of energies that
are similar to that of a dead spirit. Does this use of energy seem strange?
If it does, we must remember that, whether we understand it or not,
Tibetans who follow their traditional spirituality make little distinction
between life and death. Stepping over the boundary between the two might,
to analytic Westerners, seem unsettling and confusing, but that is only
because we have learned to deny what is obvious to many Tibetans. Still,
there is no reason to despair: heightened understanding of spirit is
not as unthinkable as we in the West make it out to be. In fact, we
may benefit from a consolidation of analytical and mystical thought.
Such consolidation might lead to a new and fruitful study of ghosts
and spirits in which we, as investigators, play a more complex role.
REFERENCES
Christian, P. (1972). The History and Practice of Magic. (J.
Kirkup and J. Shaw, Trans., Ross Nichols, Rev. and Ed.). Seacaucus,
New Jersey: Citadel Press. (Original work published 1870)
David-Neel, A. (1977). Magic and Mystery in Tibet. London: Abacus
Press.
©2004
Angela Berquist, Ph.D. All Rights Reserved.
Unauthorized duplication is prohibited.
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