What Makes You Think The Real World Is Real? Waking Up In Dreamless Sleep!
In this day and age, when everything is fast-paced and high-pressure, a little peace and quiet goes a long way towards restoring mental and spiritual balance. Where does this peace and tranquility emerge from? Some basic biological (if not spiritual) truths are that we create our own realities, be they emotional, physical, financial, social or otherwise. All our realities originate in the Mind.
Doctors and scientists probing the regions of the brain found out that for the most part the activity detected was composed of many different frequencies of rhythmic and non-rhythmic waves or pulsations. These pulsations were broken down into individual categories for easier study and for their particular properties. These categories are Beta, Alpha, Theta and Delta waves. Alpha waves were first recorded by Dr. Hans Berger, who published his recordings in 1929.
The most widely known and publicized is the Alpha wave which is prominent during relaxation mostly with eyes closed, day dreaming and self-introspection. Beta waves are prominent during the active awareness state that we experience from day to day at work and at play. The Theta wave is associated with light sleep, REM dreams and hallucinations. The Delta wave is prominent only during dreamless sleep and coma where the outward appearance is dead to the world.
The sages of the Upanishads showed a unique preoccupation with the different states of consciousness. They observed dreams and the state of dreamless sleep and asked what is known in each, and what faculty could be said to be the knower. What exactly is the difference between a dream and a waking experience? What happens to the sense of "I" in dreamless sleep? In the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, there is a long exposition on the states of the mind; the sages who explored called them waking, dreaming and dreamless sleep.
They concluded that these were not merely states of mind that a person slips in and out of several times during the day, but each state represented a layer of awareness at different depths of the conscious, sub-conscious and the unconscious mind. The Brihadaranyaka Upanishad observes "In that dream world, there are no chariots, no animals to draw them, no roads to ride on, but one makes chariots and animals and roads oneself from the impressions of past experience."
When we dream, we enter another world, another reality. As long as you are dreaming, your experience seems real. When you wake up, you realise it was just a dream. Now, that you are awake, you know you are not dreaming and that what you are now experiencing is real. What makes you think it is real?
A leap of insight from the Upanishads "Everyone experiences this, but no one knows the experiencer." It cannot be the body which is the experiencer, for in a dream, it detaches itself from the body and the senses, and creates its own experiences - experiences which are as real as those of the waking state. One even goes through the entire gamut of emotions in a dream. Dreaming and waking are made up of the same stuff and as far as the central nervous system is concerned, both are real.
Says Havelock Ellis, "Dreams are real as long as they last. Can we say more of life?" Dr. John Bigelow, a famous research authority on sleep says that the main reason we sleep is because "the nobler part of the soul is united by abstraction to our higher nature and becomes a participant in the wisdom and foreknowledge of the Gods."
The sages of the Upanishads set themselves the task of discovering a level of reality above this world of constantly changing sensory impressions. They found out that in the dreamless state, the Self detaches itself from both the body and the mind. It is this Self that is the experiencer. Contemporary science says that it is in this state that the autonomic nervous system is repaired. This state of dreamless sleep is the deepest, most universal layer of our consciousness or, if you, wish our unconscious. The Upanishads say "Wake up in this state and you will be who you truly are, free from the conditioning of the body and mind, free from the sensory perceptions, free from bondage and misery; in a world which is not bounded by the limitations of time, space and causation."
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