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Buddha at the Gas Pump

291. Chris Beckett

86 min • 10 maj 2015
Until two years ago, my only interest in spirituality was self-improvement. I wasn’t interested in what was true, only to make my experience better. For whatever reason, I just didn’t care. About five years ago I turned abruptly away from any kind of self-improvement. I had felt a shift in my being, and I knew the ‘unknown’ was chasing after me. I intuitively knew that If I explored my experience, I would be broken open and transformed in some way. So I found subtle ways of avoiding myself. I avoided immersing myself in nature which I had previously gained so much nurturing from. At the same time my being began to change where I was shifting into a place where I felt a deep trust in life, even though there was no conscious recognition. I just felt good about life and being alive. So I was very happy with my life, and I felt It was being refined and would only get better. I would have these days or hours where certainty would fall away, but somehow it just seemed natural. Then at the start of Feb 2013 year, a catalytic process began from a single moment. For the first few days, I was fine but after a few more days I had completely given up hope on everything. I knew that I would not get what I needed through my life as it is, and I intuitively knew I was in a process that could not be stopped. I knew I could not escape, so I gave up simply because there was nothing else to do. I remember saying to my close friends ‘I’m dying'. It was the only thing I knew. Then after a week, I had a sense that I had to calm my mind a little. That evening I was sitting on my bed reading a book by Adyashanti called ‘The End of Your World’. As I read a sentence that ended in ‘and you are not your thoughts’, a switch turned on in my being, something fell away, and I just knew I wasn’t my thoughts. I remember I kept saying aloud ‘I’m not my thoughts’ again and again. At some point, I then asked ‘then what am I’ (I’d never asked myself this until now), and in some way, I began to recognize being was ‘one thing’. The experience was In a minuscule way intellectual, it was mostly a physical experience. My body had more energy flowing through it than ever before and felt insight was experienced at regular intervals. At the same time as the opening, a movement arose that knew there was more to fall away. The last two and a half years have been about that falling away, about living a human life from truth. Facebook page. Some of Chris's music. Summary and Transcript of this interview Interview recorded 5/9/2015 YouTube Video Chapters: 00:00:00 - Introduction to Buddha at the Gas Pump 00:04:16 - The Fear of Transformation 00:08:09 - Life Falling Apart 00:11:29 - Recognition of a Deep Process 00:15:07 - Realizing the Unity of Everything 00:19:02 - Experiencing Physical Changes and Kundalini Awakening 00:22:55 - A Sense of Unity and Wholeness 00:27:13 - The Unity of Consciousness 00:30:43 - From Head to Heart to Belly: The Awakening Journey 00:34:06 - The Sense of Enlivenment 00:37:14 - Dissolving the Past 00:40:12 - Deep Sense from the Start 00:43:05 - Falling in love with life more 00:45:45 - A Sense of Intimacy with Others' Difficulties 00:48:37 - The Indescribable Nature of Existence 00:51:57 - The Transition to Honesty 00:55:17 - Being Honest in Interactions 00:57:49 - The Impact of Awakening on Relationships 01:00:24 - Being an Ocean and Feeling the Whole Process 01:03:34 - Intimacy with Your Own Experience 01:05:58 - A Conversation on Reverence and Sensitivity 01:08:30 - The Importance of Openness in Teaching 01:11:32 - Helping Students Overcome Mistakes 01:14:43 - Progression of a Musician from Head to Heart to Belly 01:17:36 - Communicating Through Music 01:20:33 - Confidence and Letting Go in Music Performance 01:23:29 - The Flow State in Learning Hinduism 01:25:41 - Teaching Music over Skype 01:28:33 - Opening up to True Honesty
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