by Tony Parson

It has recently been argued that Traditional Oneness is somehow better
than Neo-Oneness, or even Pseudo-Oneness. The strangeness of this idea
exposes the foolishness of trying to give title to that which is
limitless.

The cunning and manipulative guru mind inevitably objectifies verbal
expression, and out of that objectifying arises a plethora of dogmatic
movements all claiming supreme understanding of that which cannot be
understood.

As a consequence, so-called Traditional Advaita, for instance, is just
another established religion with a proliferation of teachings and
literature, all of which very successfully and consistently miss the
mark. It stands alongside Christianity and Buddhism as one of the many
systems of personal indoctrination promising the eventual spiritual
fulfilment. To quote from The Open Secret "To translate the
inexpressible into the doctrinal is to attempt to transform a song of
freedom into a dogma of limitation. When the bird has flown, the
essence of its song is often mislaid and all we are left with is an
empty cage."

The teaching of "Traditional Advaita" has no relevance to liberation
because it is born out of a fundamental misconception. Its logical and
sensibly progressive recommendations include meditation, self-enquiry,
self-restraint, and to quote "the renunciation of the ego and all
desire". Of course there is nothing right or wrong with the idea of
desiring to renounce desire. However, these idealistic recommendations
and teachings are based on the fundamental misconception that there is
such a thing as a separate individual with free will and the choice to
become.

The belief that there is a separate seeker (subject) who can choose to
attain or become worthy of something called enlightenment (object) is
a direct denial of abiding oneness (Advaita).

Within the hypnotic dream of separation, the prevailing perception is
that of the seeker and the sought. The ignorance of this perception
continues in the search for enlightenment, and inevitably the
dreamseeker is attracted to a dreamteaching which upholds and
encourages the same premise of personal discipline and sacrifice
(seeking) leading to the eventual goal of enlightenment (the sought).

The recommendation to cultivate understanding and refine something
called "the mind" (?) is hugely attractive to the dreamseeker because
it prolongs the very worthy search and thrives on logic, detachment,
complication, endeavour, hierarchy and exclusivity.

Trying to understand oneness is as futile as trying to fall in love
with an inch.

There is no possibility of teaching oneness. However, the sharing can
bring a rediscovery of that which is already known.

If we are to believe recent descriptions of something called
"Neo-Advaita" as being “the forcing of the truth(?) on unprepared
minds" or "advising people to stop seeking" or suggesting to people
that they are "nothing but the mind itself", these teachings, if they
exist, are equally as dualistic as the "traditional Advaita" they were
born out of.

This confusion is of course as much an expression of oneness as the
clarity which exposes it.

All of this silly circus is simply the eternal play of oneness
apparently seeking itself. It is the wonderful cosmic joke oneness
plays on itself by pretending to be an individual seeking something
called "not being an individual".

When it is suddenly and directly rediscovered by no-one that
liberation brings with it the realisation that there is nothing to
seek and no-one to become liberated, then there is much laughter . . 





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