This is Worth a Look!

Are you a Ready-Aim-Fire or Ready-Fire-Aim type? Read about the benefits of both . . ..... Find Out More

German Spanish French Italian Japanese Korean Portuguese Chinese

Momentary Gods

Tony Brussat | 01-05-2010 | Abundance | Viewed: 412 | Bookmark and Share
Article Summary What is “reasonable” hides “miracles” from our sight; just as the statisticians' bell curve excludes outliers that don't fit the mold, what is merely probable excludes the vast potential of the possible.
As the great philosopher of language and meaning, Ernst Cassirer revealed: “Every impression that man receives, every wish that stirs in him, every hope that lures him, every danger that threatens him, can affect him thus religiously. Just let spontaneous feeling invest the object before him, or his own personal condition, or some display of power that surprises him, with an air of holiness, and the momentary god has been experienced and created.”

Alas, our entire world view tends to prevent us from being enthralled by immediate experience when we are confronted by it. As Cassirer revealed, we have lost the ability to connect with the spirit of the present moment by continually referring events to what we already know about the world. Discursive thought ensnares every separate event “by invisible threads of thought, that bind it to the whole.” We are logical creatures, and logic removes sensory and intuitive experiences from the isolation in which they usually occur.

This habit of thought makes it difficult to experience new or unique ways of seeing. It pens us like sheep beneath the bell curve of what is normal and acceptable, and it robs us of individualism and spirit. What is “reasonable” hides “miracles” from our sight; just as the statisticians' bell curve excludes outliers that don't fit the mold, what is merely probable excludes the vast potential of the possible.

Learning to see every moment as disconnected from the patterns of mind we have inherited opens the doors of perception. Of course, when things fall apart like this, there is crisis – but during crisis we encounter the momentary gods. Rest assured, their appearance will affect us with the same spontaneous hopes and fears that impressed our ancestors.

Thus, in crisis, the ordinary becomes the extraordinary. Reality becomes magical. Nature becomes supernature. The physical becomes metaphysical.

Along with the momentary god, who appears as if out of nowhere in response to a crisis, comes a ritual. The ritualing comes of our wish to return to the magical moment with the momentary god. It enables us to recapture the moment by reliving the crisis, by stepping out of the bell-curve with controlled spontaneity.

It is only when we see the world as outsiders, from outlying positions, that we can (as Cassirer puts it) “comprehend the nature and direction of noticing.” It is only then that we can recognize the qualiasphere, where ideas and intuition cross from the known into the unknown.

Intuition and ideas are qualiadelic, new beings that continue to develop by laws of their own once we have taken notice of them.

In all animals, the momentary god who appears and saves our hide when things fall apart is acknowledged, but only humans give it a name. Only naming fixes that moment in our consciousness, allowing us to return to it. The attraction and our movement back to it helps us “see” better what compelled us about the original experience. Ritualing makes meaning out of the moment.

Alas, this is a viscious circle. Slowly, by virtue of our ritualing with it, our momentary god becomes visible, embodied, fixed, physical, real, natural, and ordinary. The act of noticing, recognizing the qualiadelic, inevitably and necessarily takes us back to the routine. Life leads us death.

But we wouldn't choose not to have lived! Nor ought we fail to “notice” the momentary gods, fleeting though they may be.

Be Qualiadelic. Be Conscious. Change the routine.





Tony Brussat Tony Brussat Tony Brussat has a Master's degree in Rhetoric and Communication, and he is currently a Registered Nurse in the field of Behavioral Health. Purchase BE QUALIADELIC for $9.95 to learn more about Conscious Ritualing. Visit qualiadelic.com

Abundance Feed ( Full  or Snippet )

Tony Brussat's Feed ( Full  or Snippet )

HTML Ready Article. Click on the "Copy" button to copy into your clipboard




Firefox users please select/copy/paste as usual

Stats:

Total Articles: 11583
Total Authors: 1678

Tony Brussat

Tony BrussatTony Brussat has a Master's degree in Rhetoric from the University of Maryland and a Bachelor's in English from the University of Texas.

Total Articles: 63

Checkout Tony's Site

Find Out More About Tony

Rate This Article


Vote to see the results!

Do you like this article?
  • Yes.
  • Not Sure.
  • No.
By using this web site you accept our Terms Of Use and Privacy Policy | Copyright 2008 - 2010 by Holistic Health Articles. All rights reserved
All articles are licensed under a Creative Commons - No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported License.