Dark Night of the Soul by Jason Augustus Newcomb

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Dark Night of the Soul by Jason Augustus Newcomb

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Original post: Son of a Montage

Most of us spend the bulk of our time feeling crappy about one thing or another. We find ourselves in disagreements with others, feeling indignant, wounded, or angry. We feel that our lot in life is quite different from the path that we would like to be on. We don't make enough money, we don't have as many things as we'd like, we don't get the love that we need and deserve. All this comes into play every time we find ourselves at odds with others, and we feel righteous about our own anger. However, very rarely do we take the time to really think about any of these feelings, contenting ourselves with the miserable state we're in by denying that there are any other choices in life.

The simple fact of the matter is that everything in our lives -- including all the crappy things -- is a choice that we have made for ourselves. That is a difficult fact to face for most of us, since it's much easier to blame random circumstances in our lives than to accept responsibility for our own actions. The first step toward inner and outer peace is accepting responsibility for our lives.

Take, for example, a banker who often gets angry because he had always dreamed of being a country-western singer, but in the course of his life, he never bothered to get on a country western stage at all. Still, he blames his parents, for discouraging him and for sending him to business school, and the country western music community for never noticing his talent. He blames society for "making" everything so expensive that pursuing your dreams is nearly impossible from a financial standpoint. He blames his wife, for getting pregnant when they were only 21. However, the banker is the one who decided not to pursue his dreams, and any blame must end there.

Taking responsibility for our lives is not just a matter of our work situations. We must take responsibility for everything in our lives -- from the greatest to the smallest detail. No one and no thing is capable of effecting any change in us that we do not allow them to make.

If someone tells you that you have a big nose or a flabby stomach, you may feel hurt. However, you must recognize that this injury is one that you are inflicting upon yourself. Even if someone is intentionally trying to hurt you, you are still the only one capable of causing the injury. It is your feelings of inadequacy that come into play. If someone told you that you had a big nose, and you liked your nose, the comment would have little effect. So, in essence, the only injuries that can be inflicted upon you are those that you allow.

Every man and every woman is a star, a unique individual, self sufficient and perfect in their own way. Holding ourselves to any standard but our own is both injurious and impractical. We are each perfect in our own way.

This perfection is not subject to comparative analysis, but merely a fact of manifestation. All structures in the universe are in balance, moving harmoniously from unmanifest to manifest and back, in a cyclical motion. This state of balance and invulnerability is the natural state for all human beings. Invoke it, and you can live it.

To make the statement that there is something wrong with you is to claim that the universe made some sort of error in your creation. Your perfection is unknown to you as long as you deny it. If you insist upon injuring yourself with your perceived inadequacies, you will not be able to fulfill your own perfection.

The next time you find yourself in conflict with someone, instead of placing blame upon the other person, look at yourself in the situation. Look at yourself and remember that there are no wrong feelings. Forgive yourself in advance for whatever you may find. Notice how you are feeling. At first, you probably won't even know how you are feeling, or you may think it is anger. In a few moments, if you look deeply within, you will find that what you really feel is fear.

You probably won't even know what you are afraid of, but when something in life upsets you, it is a manifestation of your fear. It is just one of those four elemental forms of fear, creeping into your consciousness. Anger is a form of fear. Sadness is a form of fear. Loneliness is a form of fear. Still, even recognizing this, it is not easy to let go of that fear. You feel afraid right now. You were taught fear, and you have been fearful for so long that any other condition seems almost impossible.

Avoiding Habits

In your day-to-day life, you spend nearly all of the energy at your disposal on a set of routines. These routines are so implanted that you consider them to be you. They are more than the way you drive to work each day or the brand of soap you buy -- they are the way that you fundamentally interact with your environment. Everything that you think about, every aspect of your life is just a routine, a conditioned response. For the most part, you live in the past tense, comparing everything that comes along in terms of something that came along before.

It takes a lot to maintain these routines. Every time you react to a circumstance in a typical way, you invest your energy in that direction. Let's say you dislike airplanes, and someone offers you a ride on an airplane. In considering the offer, you reinvest energy in your opinion about airplanes. You assure yourself that you still dislike airplanes, and politely refuse the offer.

However, going around and trying to do all of the things that you normally don't do won't help either, because in your current state that would only do harm. You would invest even more energy in trying to overcome your routine reactions and end up worse off than you began. This is the reason for secluding yourself -- so that you do not have to invest energy in these routines. By ceasing to react to the world in a routine way, your overall energy levels increase to the point where even things you never believed were possible can occur.

The problem is that these routines are so insidious that you will probably find it hard to recognize them. True, cigarettes, alcohol, and drugs can all be habits or routines, but they are really just the tip of the iceberg. The time you like breakfast, your favorite socks, your thoughts on international politics, how much you love the sunset -- these are all merely routines. You may think those are the endearing parts of your personality, but you probably picked them up from other people. You imitate your parents, your friends, your enemies, and your lovers. Have you ever noticed yourself saying some phrase or using some gesture that your current sexual partner always uses? You're probably not even conscious of when you began to do it.

It will do no good to battle with these habits. Instead, recognize that you are adhering to a routine, and you will diffuse its power by being aware of it.

The Dark Night of the Soul

Sooner or later, you will have to face "the dark night of the soul." This phrase, first used by St. John of the Cross, refers to a condition that occurs in the mystic process in which you feel totally devoid of spiritual ability or any sense of inner light. It usually refers to an experience that you have after an extended period of doing your practice, once you have started to feel some kind of positive result. Suddenly, the positive results disappear, and you begin to feel lost in darkness and spiritual dryness.

Miguel de Molinos states that this darkness is actually God's way of drawing you in. He believes that it is necessary for the ideas and personality of the aspirant to withdraw so that God may do the instructing. "So in the beginning, when God intends to guide the Soul by an extraordinary manner into the school of the divine and loving notices of the internal law, he makes it go with darkness, and dryness, so that he may bring it near to himself."

There is an old saying that the first step on the spiritual path is one into pure darkness. That is because the spiritual path leads you into your internal world and the darkness that you find there is the chaos of your own mind. At first, you may be so enthusiastic about your practices that you will not notice any darkness. It may seem as if your Angel is only inches away, as if you are almost done before you have really begun. Very quickly, this enthusiasm will falter, and you will doubt everything. It will feel as if you have lost not only that spiritual light you thought you were getting so close to, but all of the light in your life. All of this is the dark night of the soul.

This is a totally natural process. Any activity that you undertake will have this dark phase. Whether you are invoking your Holy Guardian Angel, starting to exercise, or writing a play, after a short while you will find it acutely painful to continue. Only by suffering through this darkness and letting the things that are holding you back drop away can you succeed in completing your project.

The darkness will usually manifest as a loathing for the project, a feeling that you are getting nowhere, and doubt that there is really anywhere to go. You may feel as if you are losing your mind. You may feel like you are actually becoming a much worse person than you were when you started off. What this darkness truly consists of is all of your internal conflicts and fears that you have kept quietly at bay by building a wall between yourself and the universe. By looking within yourself, you are forced to confront these fears, and if you do not approach this operation with all of your will, you will be consumed by these fears. Only by quietly facing each of your fears, doubts, and delusions with intelligence, perseverance, courage, and silence can you succeed through this critical stage.

You may not recognize that you have entered the dark night of the soul until it completely surrounds you. It may begin as a mild boredom, or a creeping doubt, but quickly it will turn into panic and perhaps even a feeling of madness.

This is just part of the spiritual growing process. At some point, we each have to go through a period of tribulation. It happens in mundane situations too. Any learning process involves this period of dryness and anguish. Think back to when you learned the multiplication tables. At first, maybe it seemed fun, then horrible, like a looming beast, and then you were its master.

There is another old saying that once you take a single step onto the spiritual path you are compelled to walk its entire length. This is also very true. If you abandon your practices in the middle, before you complete the operation, you will remain subject to all of the mental chaos that you've unearthed. Eventually, you will most likely manage to force it all back down into the shadows, but you may never take another step on that path. Once you begin this operation, you must succeed, or you may never succeed.

Just remember that you are seeking your Holy Guardian Angel. You cannot force this Angel to come to you; you must just be patient. Allow your fears and doubts to enter your consciousness, because you will face every one of them in one way or another before your Holy Guardian Angel will appear. Forgive yourself for having these fears, and let them quietly slink away. Eventually, they will not trouble you any longer, and you can be assured that your Angel is only moments away.

Image
This article was excerpted from 21st Century Mage, ©2002, by Jason Augustus Newcomb.

Reprinted with permission of the publisher, Red Wheel / Weiser, LLC,www.redwheelweiser.comInfo/Order this book.

About the Author

Jason Augustus Newcomb is an aspiring screenwriter and artist, a certified clinical hypnotherapist, and a lifelong student of the Western Mystery Tradition. He lives in Los Angeles.

http://innerself.com/Creating_Realities/newcomb_jason_02014.htm

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Dark Night of the Soul by Jason Augustus Newcomb

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Original post: Specktackular

Hey, lookee there! Adam Weishaupt!

21st Century Mage annoyed me because... it's the same old thing again. A modern version of the Abramelin operation, which is apparently so damn difficult in the first place that few attempt it. So, how many will attempt this version, I wonder?

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Dark Night of the Soul by Jason Augustus Newcomb

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Original post: Radiant Star

Well Son of a Montage, that is the first time that I have ever read anything about the Dark Night and felt that I understood it a little.

I was only talking about this and the Abyss (which I also donâ??t understand) this morning.

The way I am reading this is that it is something big that happens once. Is it an ongoing thing or does it come in lots of little episodes?

I ask this because when I was a church-goer, every so often when people werenâ??t coming to church so often or they had become lapsed Catholics, there would be whispers about â??oh well, she is going through the Dark Nightâ?Â

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Dark Night of the Soul by Jason Augustus Newcomb

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Original post: Watcher

Really it seems to me that its both. If the HGA is the wholeness and unity, the sum of all good (and I mean the older meaning of sustaining) and the discordant parts of the personality are out of alignment with it. Then what happens is a clash, the individual pieces wish to keep their inertia and autonomy and make problems. To me this shows the nature of the â??viceâ?Â

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Dark Night of the Soul by Jason Augustus Newcomb

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Original post: Gryzlgreedigutt

Well the first one is a doozy but I have experienced a few 'Dark nights'. When I first began performing the LBRP I literally had to force myself sometimes. I would rather not do a ritual then do one devoid of feeling. I found myself having to force myself to do it sometimes. When I'd start, everything would be great. But there was (Is) a side of me that wants no spiritual light. Nowadays, I notice if I don't do it negativity reigns. Nightmares become common and my sense of self becomes askew. This is normal turns out but its still something I struggle with. What is it inside a person that runs hissing from the light?

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Dark Night of the Soul by Jason Augustus Newcomb

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Original post: Ludi
Most of us spend the bulk of our time feeling crappy about one thing or another.
I'm glad I'm not the bulk of us!

:D

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Dark Night of the Soul by Jason Augustus Newcomb

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Original post: Son of a Montage

Check out this too.

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Dark Night of the Soul by Jason Augustus Newcomb

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Original post: Son of a Montage
[QUOTE=Radiant Star]
I am trying to understand these things as they seem to get talked about so much in certain circles and they are clearly important milestones.
Anyone?
[/QUOTE]
I personally believe it to be a form of temporary depression or confusion. I don't think there's a need to associate it with spirituality of any sort, as that only complicates things and can lead down more permanent paths. This is a state of mind which is susceptible to viscious dogma(uls).

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Dark Night of the Soul by Jason Augustus Newcomb

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Original post: Specktackular

Manly P. Hall's "Dark Night of The Soul" is a decent little book.
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/de ... 5?v=glance
Book Description
Here Mr. Hall interprets an extraordinary work by St. John of the Cross. Written over three hundred years ago, it deals with Christian symbolism on a mystical level. Its early insights are invaluable for modern man's continuing growth.

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