| What
is satsang?
SATSANG IS sitting with a fully realized teacher who
transmits silence and realization. Anyone can speak the words of satsang.
My teacher, Papaji, used to say you can teach a parrot to speak the
words of satsang. And since the words are so powerful, they will have
an effect. But the words are only pointing to what is beyond the words.
The true teacher is satsang, not the words that are spoken.
I have been with very powerful teachers who had very strong shakti
(spiritual power), but they were not transmitting freedom. When I met
my teacher, his living presence was the emanation of silence. His words
were used to cut through the false identification of mind. So both the
transmission of silence and the intelligent insight into the condition
of the human mind are the two sides of satsang.
Hui Neng, the 8th Zen Patriarch, said you must have both samadhi
and prajna. Samadhi means the bliss of diving into your self
and prajna is the discriminating wisdom to see the finest,
most subtle distinction. The great trap of the egoic mind is to believe
that awakening means that everything blends together into a mush of
oneness, that a fog obliterates distinction. This foggy thinking is
the avoidance of true insight.
In the clarity of insight what is revealed is the truth that is prior
to time and space. The distinctions of time and space do not blend together;
in fact the distinctions become more sharp and clear. Only after the
phenomenal world is completely left behind through intelligent inquiry
can it then be seen from the other side for what it really is.

Who you are is already immortal intelligence. To realize it directly
is the goal of life. In the past it has been the rarest event that was
reserved for saints and holy souls purified through lifetimes. This
rare event was celebrated and remembered for generations. Now it is
possible for everyone to wake up. Merely having a human incarnation
is enough.
When you wake up your life may not appear like a saint’s. It may
continue to appear as a completely ordinary life, except that you will
know the truth and radiate silence to all you meet. In this way you
will be a secret agent of truth and silence. My teacher said that the
bird of freedom flies with two wings: love and intelligence. So take
flight. The time is now.
How to be silent in the midst
of noise and turmoil?
If you get hooked or your buttons get pushed, this is your teacher pointing
back to your identification as a somebody trying to do something. Then
it is not about ignoring it or justifying it or saying it doesn’t
matter, or “just dropping it.” If you just drop it you miss
the lesson of insight into your present condition. So everything is
useful. Everything either reveals your true nature as intelligent empty
love or it reveals your identification with ego. Either way everything
is useful if you are willing to investigate it.
How can we be in a relationship and live in wisdom? Many
people think relationship is an attachment and incompatible with freedom.
Many people have asked my wife, Gangaji, and me about our relationship.
We met when I was 28, in 1975. Those were very wild days of sexual acting
out. What kept us together was our commitment to truth. If it meant
the end of the relationship, truth came first. Her integrity
in this was so rare to me that I was willing to stick it out. She felt
the same way. There were many times when it seemed easier to leave.
Whenever one of us was ready to go, the other would not budge from truth
until it was clear. In this, our commitment to truth and being willing
to never leave has kept us together through all the madness we both
went through.
When we met, I was her teacher. At a certain point she became my teacher.
At first I made the money and supported us. Later, she made the money
and supported us. All of our roles changed, everything that was a prop
was knocked out so that our only support was truth and love.
In this, our relationship supported freedom. It was what made it possible
to meet our final teacher. But I did not seek a relationship and did
not expect a relationship to fulfill me. It appeared. If it appears,
it is useful. If it does not appear, this is also useful. So a relationship
is neither necessary nor a hindrance.
If you are chasing a relationship you are missing the point. If you
are running from a relationship you are also missing the point. Stop
where you are. This is the perfect moment and the perfect environment
to realize freedom.
How can the discriminating intelligence of the Enneagram
help one to understand oneself and become free?
My teacher said the first requirement for a seeker of truth is discriminating
wisdom. The clarity of pure intelligence is necessary to uncover the
false identification and to tell the real from the unreal. Without this
requirement, final realization is not possible. Without discriminating
intelligence you can have great experiences of bliss and great highs,
but they will not last. The bliss will be shallow and narrow in duration.
Without true insight, nothing is possible.
Everyone is already pure consciousness, and therefore intelligence itself.
However, intelligence becomes clouded by mind waves of desire and fear.
When the mind is still, when it is not chasing anything and not avoiding
anything, this stillness reveals clarity and wisdom.
In our time, the Enneagram has arisen as a wisdom mirror for seeing
the subtle, subconscious, latent identifications. It increases intelligence
by giving insight into the deep structure of ego.
People tend to live on the surface of things. Events and people are
woven into a fabric of experiences to support the belief that you and
your environment are real. The Enneagram gives the underpinnings, the
deep-rooted structure that is actually running the show.

For example, someone does something that you perceive as betrayal. All
the evidence supports the story that they betrayed you. In fact they
may have betrayed you. But what is unexamined is the prior belief about
who you are, what betrayal really is, and your own self-betrayal.
With the insight of the Enneagram, the experience of betrayal, instead
of triggering the egoic response of vengeance or flight, submission
or false independence, can be the thread leading into the deep recesses
of sub-conscious identification to cut the egoic identity with the one
who feels betrayed. In this way the egoic fixation becomes the vehicle
for intelligent inquiry and the ending of egoic identification.
The great gift of the Enneagram is that it clearly shows that what you
thought was completely original and unique and “you”
is merely a pattern of stimulus response triggers that are predictable,
mechanical, and common. Who you are is pristine silent awareness. Who
you subconsciously identify yourself to be is a pattern of mental, emotional,
and physical waves arising from the sea of emptiness. When the waves
are identified as such they lose their magical hold.
When you see your patterns of attachment and are willing to end suffering
you are willing to stop grasping and rejecting. When these movements
of mind stop, the stillness reveals your true nature. You cannot make
realization happen, but you can stop the attachment to the waves of
confusion, desire, and fear.
When you are willing to stop everything, the Enneagram is a gift for
seeing the more subtle waves just beneath the surface. When even these
waves stop, your true heart, which is calling you home, will come and
take you down to the depths to realize your true nature. When you have
cut free of egoic identity and have been taken to the other side, you
realize the truth of who you are and what is truly real. Then your life
will be a fresh unknown expression of love and silence in the service
of love and silence.
©
Eli Jaxon-Bear, 2004
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| ABOUT
THE AUTHOR
Eli
Jaxon-Bear was
born Elliot Jay Zeldow in Brooklyn, New York, in 1947. His eighteen-year
spiritual path started in 1971, when he was a federal fugitive during
the Vietnam War. In 1978, Kalu Rinpoche appointed him the president
of his dharma center in Marin County. In 1982, he was presented with
a Zen Teaching Fan at ChoShoJi Zen Temple in Japan. After studying
many traditions and practices, his path and his search ended when
he traveled to India in 1990, where he met his final teacher, Sri
H.W.L. Poonja.
Confirming Eli’s realization, his teacher sent him back into the world
to share his unique psychological insights into the nature of egoic
suffering, in support of Self-realization. He currently meets people
and teaches through the Leela Foundation, an organization he established,
dedicated to world peace and freedom through universal Self-realization.
Eli is the author
of The Enneagram of Liberation: From Fixation to Freedom. His new
book, Sudden Awakening into direct realization will be released in
bookstores this fall.
To learn more about Eli's work, or to purchase any of his books of
audio/visual offerings, visit www.leela.org.
This interview first appeared in Connections Magazine.
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