2014 demo ebook fmw thebiggestobstacleofenlightenment
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Transcript of 2014 demo ebook fmw thebiggestobstacleofenlightenment
Frank M. Wanderer
The Biggest Obstacle to Enlightenment
How to Escape from the Prison of Mind Games?
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No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in
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including photocopying, recording, or by any information
storage and retrievel system, without permission writting
from the publisher.
Publisher / Editor: Ervin K. Kery
(www.kerypublishing.cf , [email protected])
Author: Frank M. Wanderer
(c) Frank M. Wanderer (dr. Ferenc Margitics),
Ervin Kery ( Ervin Keresztes-Kato), 2014
The Ego
The Ego accompanies the Seeker along the first segment of
the Journey. In the following we intend to discuss this, as
being familiar with the functions and games of the mind
with an Ego is indispensable for identifying whether we are
on the right track.
What is an Ego?
That is the first and foremost question. Ego is we ourselves,
the person we see, think and feel ourself to be. Ego is the
central figure of our personal history, based upon the past
and looking into the future. Ego is the deepest dream of the
Consciousness. A sign of awakening is when we realize that
the state when we identify with our Ego is of very low
order, very poor, and there are more significant mysteries
behind our existence.
How Did the Ego Emerge?
At birth, we are all innocent; we do not have an Ego. Our
Ego emerges as a conditioning from our parents, culture and
the society we live in. Ego is the result of a cultural
hypnosis, the result of a common entrancement when, as a
result of our upbringing, we believe that we are what our
parents, teachers, priests said we had to be.
The truth is that we are the embodiment of Life, we are born
into this world as a result of a miracle, and later we are lost
amidst the multitude of teachings and dogmas. After
identifying with our beliefs and convinctions we forget who
we really are, who the person born in us into the world in
order to experience existence and get acquainted with all the
teachings.
It is necessary that an Ego emerges in us, otherwise we
would not be able to separate ourselves from our
environment, our individuality would not develop, though
these are important for the Consciousness in its process to
wake up to itself.
Ego is therefore a social product, a cultural hypnosis,
programmed into us by those living around us, by telling us
in our childhood who we are, what our name is, how to
behave well, how to meet the expectations of others. As a
result of an unconscious process, we start to identify with
this artificially created center, our mind with an Ego, that is,
our Ego.
The Ego is a Small Part of the Personality
If we wish to understand how the Ego works, we must not
disregard the fact that Ego is only a small part of our
personality. Ego is a part of the personality, and its content
comes from our sensory perceptions and memories (our life
history and knowledge and experience gathered throughout
our life). Ego is the thinking, feeling and sensing part. The
part of our Ego we show the external world is termed by
Carl G. Jung as Persona, the acting personality. That part of
the Ego is foregrounded when we are in the company of
other people. That is, in fact, the collection of our masks.
A large part of the personality is constituted by the
unconscious Ego, termed by Freud as the instinctive Ego.
That is where out most basic instincts (eating, sexuality
etc.) are found, and also the part of the personality
described by Carl Gustav Jung as the Shadow. The
”Shadow” is shaped and developed by society, almost
simultaneously with our role playing personality. Children,
when they wish to meet their parents’–and through them,
society’s–expectations, begin to develop these masks. These
masks are like what environment shapes them to be.
Rejecting certain stimuli offered by the environment
triggers the disapproval of our teachers, so the intention to
reject stimuli is suppressed. That is how our ”shadow-
personality” develops. It does exists within our personality,
but our education relegates it into our subconscious.
Freud believes that the third important component of our
personality is the Superego. It comprises the social values
that the culture in which we grow up finds important. In the
course of a long and complicated process these values are
incorporated into our personality and manifests as the ideal
self (the person we would like to be). These values become
integral, inner parts of the personality, and surface as
opinion and convinction.
The findings of psychological research suggest that more
than 90% of the functions of the personality are
unconscious. Large parts of the Instinct-Ego, the Persona
and the Superego are unconscious. The functions of the Ego
are also largely unconscious.
The Ego is responsible for the integrity of the personality,
for our inner well-being. This is no small task for the Ego,
as it is constantly bombarded by unconscious expectations
from the Instinct Ego and the Shadow, attempting to
influence its behaviour. It generates anguish in the Ego (that
is, in ourselves), manifested as discomfort (we do not feel
all right). The Ego wishes to escape from the anguish, so it
uses also subconscious mechanisms. Such a mechanism is,
for instance, projection. The Ego projects the unacceptable
desires and features coming from the Shadow and Instinct
Ego onto others (e. g. I am not aggressive, you are
aggressive). These subconscious, protective and anguish
eliminating projections are the foundations of several of the
mind games to be discussed later.
The Womb From Which the Ego is Born: Identification
The Ego develops in the course and process of
identification, by our identification with our thoughts,
emotions, body etc. As a result of the indetification process
we believe that here we are this Ego, this mind. In the
previous chapters we saw that the mind, the Ego within it,
and the things we identify with, are shaped by the society in
which we live. Consequently, entirely different types of Ego
have developed in various cultures in various parts of the
world.
In most people, the term “consciousness” identifies with
that socially conditioned Ego. At a number of people this
identification is so powerful that they are unaware that their
life is governed by a socially conditioned mind.
Those who are able to go beyond that identification with the
mind recognize this state of being socially conditioned, and
are also able to leave the social conditioning behind. Such a
person will not identify with the mind but, increasingly,
with the Consciousness (the Witnessing Presence). The
Presence shall, therefore, control the mind to an increasing
extent and will be manifested through the tranquilized
mind.
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The Games Rooted in the Deepest Levels of the Mind
The Ego-dominated mind plays its games in daily life, and
creates the characters and scenarios necessary for the
games. The content of such a scenario is determined by the
individual’s environment and upbringing, that is, the culture
in which we grow up. As a result, entirely different
scenarios are created in the various cultures of our Earth.
At the beginning of our journey, as we have seen
previously, we identify with these scenarios. The scenarios
provide us with the sense of a solid identity. The patterns of
thoughts fixed in the scenarios are manifested in various
mind games during our daily life.
In the course of our journey leading to Consciousness, our
objective should not be creating a positive character, and
thus a pleasant scenario, but finding the Existence behind
every scenario. The first step is examining the scenarios,
these conditioned thought-patterns, in the light of
Consciousness.
Let us first examine some of our most extensive mind
games that are rooted deepest:
Ambition
Ambition is perhaps the comprehensive mind game,
providing one of the deepest roots of Ego.
An elementary endeavour of every Ego is growing: to be
“more”, larger and powerful. They strive to be higher and
higher in the hyerarchic structure of the world, conquering
more and more territory. The individual’s ambitions grow
and grow, reaching larger and larger areas.
Ambitions are planted in a child by parents and teachers.
Parents tend to think of an even yet unborn child as
someone who is going to achieve the parents’ own’s
unfulfilled ambitions.
With the educational means of reward and punishment,
children are conditioned to excel among their peers, to be
the best, strongest, most beautiful, etc. When the children
meet the parental–and thus the social–expectations, they are
rewarded, when not, they are punished. They therefore soon
learn to be ambitious.
These ambitions, though based upon the past, always aim at
the future. All through our lives we pursue illusionary
objectives, spurred by various ambitions. Naturally, it is not
impossible to satisfy an ambition, but it is immnediately
replaced by a thousand others, as there are so many areas of
life where we have not yet reached our ambitions.
That is how we chase senseless goals all through our lives
until we die, when we realize that everybody leaves this
world empty-handed, even those who lived their whole
lives chasing mirages of past and future. Look into yourself
to see what is in you now! See what ambitions are driving
you along on the sea of life and in what direction?
The Seeker in every moment spent awake faces two
alternatives: a choice is to be made between the ambitions
stretching between past and future, or the quiet, simplicity,
purity and emptiness, full of vibrating life, of the present. It
is, however, only the latter that brings to the life of the
Seeker the Witnessing Presence!
The Mind Game of Becoming Something
This mind game is closely associated with the life-long
pursue of ambitions, and reveals the mechanisms of
ambitions.
The Ego at all times strives to achieve something. The mind
creates a mental image, an ideal about it. An ideal means
that you are still not what you are supposed to be.
The Ego projects that idealized image into the future, and
reveals the way leading to the goal. That image generates a
permanent stress, tension and anxiety in the life of the
Seeker. If the Seeker achieves the desired goal, or abandons
it as unattainable, immediately finds a new one, an even
more ambitious, or one that is easier to achieve, and another
one, and so it goes until death, or the moment when the
Seeker realizes the futility of the whole process.
We are therefore constantly on the road, straying from one
mental image to the next, and identify with these images,
and derive our identity from the images.
When we start dealing with spirituality, our mind creates an
image that we need to implement if we are determined to be
successful. The image means that we need to find Presence,
through the way the mind imagines it. The essence of this
ideal is to be permanently conscious, to be Present all the
time, in all details of our life.
The Ego, is however, aware that for most people it is an
impossible venture, so the Seeker often has a sense of self-
accusation and self-depreciation, as the ideal image is
impossible to achieve (the Seeker is not spiritual enough).
This state of mind is, eventually, a good foundation for the
mind game of guilt.
In the course of our Journey we need to realize that we do
not need to become anything, because we are already in
possession of the characteristics that we have been looking
for so far, pursuing an image projected into the future. All
we need to do is shift our focus of alert and conscious
attention from the edge (Ego) to our center (witnessing
Presence). The mind games impede us in that process!
The “I Want Even More” – Mind Game
From all this it is easy to see that the Ego-dominated mind
will never be satisfied, as it longs to achieve more and more
in life. The individual wants to be rich, when they are rich,
they want power, when they have power, they want fame.
When material wealth no longer satisfies them, they begin
to seek “spiritual wealth” and so forth. Once an objective
has been achieved, a sense of relative satisfaction may
follow, but sooner or later anxiety returns and the chase for
more and more starts again.
This mind game takes the Seeker into a psychological time
frame, as the goal to be achieved is projected into the future.
In this way Now, the Present moment is reduced to a
moment necessary for achieving the goal, and the vividness
and beauty of it is lost.
The Seeker is, however, able to suppress the voice of the
Ego: "I no longer listen to this nonsense, your pretension! It
is not an illusory Self that I want to reach. I want to find my
real Self!"
As a witnessing Presence one is able to observe these games
of the mind and is also able to overcome and laugh at it!
What more does one need than what is offered by the
present moment? Once you have learnt how to dissolve in
the present moment, and you are able to enjoy it, you will
have no problem in disregarding the empty chit-chat of the
Ego, the mind!
The “I am Important” – Mind Game
The Ego-dominated mind, way of thinking is, in the
majority of the cases, able to make us believe that we are
important, even if only as a small part of the great universal
consciousness of mankind. Our soul shall live forever, and
the death is only a necessary station in the process of a new
birth. Our soul develops eternally, every bit of new
experience is another brick in the wall of the church of
eternity etc.
Why is the Ego-dominated Mind Able to Make Us Believe
That?
It is partly because the contents of the Ego consists of the
knowledge gathered in our life (read, heard). The individual
who has never read esoteric books or attended esoteric
lectures has an Ego with an entirely different content and
uses different ideas as a comforting source (e. g. let us eat,
drink, make love, as we only live once, so Carpe Diem).
Another reason is that the “primeval memory” lives in
everybody. The “primeval memory” is from our own, long
forgotten internal center, and in most cases it is just a
subconscious desire, a constant anxiety in the soul of the
Seeker. Ego provides a form to that unconscious desire by
directing it to a false objective. The false goal is the idea of
becoming perfect together with the Ego. The Ego, naturally,
intends to achieve it in the future, since we need to develop
so much before achieving the goal.
This is a sincere endeavour of the Ego, but it is impossible
to achieve it on the level of forms and shapes; it is not
possible to make the forms and shapes eternal.
We therefore must not allow this mind game to deceive us.
From the aspect of Existence we are really important (in
that we are not mistaken) in our individuality, as we provide
space for the Consciousness to wake up to its own existence
and flourish through us, through our own form.
Perfection is, however, not to be sought in the future, as we
are fully capable of experiencing it here and now, if we
abandon ourselves into the present moment and allow the
pleasure of Existence take us with it.
The “I am Special” – Mind Game
Every human being is convinced deep inside that he/she is
special. In the course of the Journey the Ego keeps
whispering into the ears of the Seeker: "You are special,
you are great, better than the other people!”
Often the Ego does not declare it so openly, but the desire
to become special is there in every Seeker. It is well
observable in the behavior and actions of the Seeker; all
these are aimed at making the individual better and different
from the rest, to emerge from the average.
When you believe that “I am special, more special than that
man over there,” be aware that it is only the game of the
mind. That feeling reinforces the Ego to a very large extent.
The reality is that every single person is individual and
special. There has never been and will never be another
person on the Earth like you!
You must not forget that when you think of yourself as
special–you really are–you should think of the other people
in a similar way. Everybody is special you meet during your
life, everyone who has lived and lives on Earth.
This recognition reduces and eliminates this mind game.
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The Tricks of the Mind Reinforcing the Ego
The mind has dominated our life for such a long time that
we have forgotten that it is only one of the means of
Consciousness that has started an independent life as a
consequence of our identifying with it.
The Consciousness erroneously identifies itself with the
mind, which has in turn acquired a great power and intends
to preserve its independence and dominance. To that end, it
uses Ego-reinforcing psychological strategies in order to
sustain the separate Consciousness. In the following, some
of these strategies are discussed.
The Mind Game Generating Guilt
During your Journey you would like to bring the Presence
into your daily routine, so you are trying to spend as much
time in the state of the witnessing Presence as possible.
That is a noble effort, but alas, it is soon experienced that it
fails day by day. The question arises, ”What is the reason
for the failure? Why can I not spend a longer period in the
state of Witnessing Presence, when I want to? It is surely
because I am not good enough, and I am unable to make the
required effort. I am unsuited for such a noble task!”
Such thoughts inevitably generate guilt and remorse. The
guilt may, after a time, become so overwhelming that the
individual gives up the desire to live in the Presence in
order to avoid the negative emotions that come with the
guilt.
This is an extremely dangerous mind game! Why?
It is to be recognized that the negative emotions and the
guilt that comes with it is not a part of the Consciousness,
it only belongs to the mind!
The Ego –and so guilt as well–is a social product, created
by the expectations of the parents and teachers as a part of
the mind. How? A small child’s adaptation to the external
world is supported and sustained by the parental
expectations. Whenever a child meets the parental (and so
the social) expectations, the child is accepted, rewarded and
loved. Otherwise some sort of a punishment or rejection
follows. In order to avoid retaliation, the child will
unconsciously meet the expectations.
As long as the child is small, the expectations appear as
external stimuli for the child. The child behaves well,
because mum (or dad) should not be angry, should love
him/her. As the child grows up, these external expectations
undergo a complicated psychological process and become
internal ones, and create the foundations of Ego.
At that time children no longer behave the way it is
expected by the society because they direct environment so
desires, but because it generates an inner good feeling in
them. When they do not behave in accordance with these
social expectations, they experience guilt. That is how
external social effects become parts of the Ego. This
mechanism follows us all through our lives.
At one point of our Journey we meet the teachings of an
awakened teacher, and internally we feel that this is what
we have long been looking for, we want it to be a part of
our daily routine. We are thus able to create some internal
expectations regarding how we are able to do it, what the
fastest way to incorporating Presence into our life may be.
We are, however, unable to meet the expectations, so guilt
appears automatically. Be aware that this is the work of the
Ego, a game of the mind!
What can we do with that guilt?
Several things are to be taken into consideration. One is that
we have been living identified with the Ego (on the edge) so
long that we have drifted too far from the center
(Consciousness, Self, Presence). It is therefore not possible
to get back to the center overnight (the possibility is there,
naturally, as the center is within us, but we do have to make
the effort to reach it). The progress on our Journey towards
the Witnessing Presence initially requires efforts from us.
There is an important maxim that applies to that effort:
every step in the right direction takes us closer to our own
center. It means that moments add up and reinforce each
other.
There are inevitable occasions when one temporarily drops
back into the Ego-dominated state, and these cases are also
followed by a sense of guilt. Once we have understood the
mechanism of the emergence of guilt, and bear in mind
what has been discussed above, we need to realize that in
such instances guilt is not justified!
On our Journey, we should not dwell on the guilt emerging
because of dropping back to Ego-dominated state; instead,
we should celebrate that we are in the state of the
Presence!!
When one is able to rejoice about these moments, instead of
worrying about the next possible dropback, then the
positive periods will be more and more frequent in our
lives. We therefore need to be patient with ourselves, and
look upon our sense of guilt as Witnesses!
The “You Are Worthless”– Mind Game
When our environment does not confirm that we are
special, and in our childhood we often heard from adults
that “You can’t even do such a simple thing!” or “That kid
is so clumsy!” or”This kid must have two left hands!,” then
our Ego begins to whisper into our ears things like "You are
average, you are below the average" and even "You are
worthless!".
This mind game also serves to reinforce the Ego, but here
complaining is the Ego-reinforcing strategy. Complaining,
blaming others or the circumstances or ourselves lead to
negative thoughts that arises and reinforces pain. The result
is guilt or anger against other people, which in turn boosts
the Ego.
If we are able to bear in mind that nobody is average, and
no such thing as the average person exists, we can prevent
this mind game from taking over. That it is not true, and
you know at least ten average people is something that is
only suggested by your Ego. In fact everybody is special,
and everybody should be approached that way. In this way
it is possible to destroy this mind game!
The “It’s Not My Fault!” – Mind Game
The Ego likes blaming responsibility on other people. The
Ego judges life by the specific situation. It is always
somebody else who is at fault: a wife or husband, parents,
children, colleagues, the boss, the economic situation, life
itself etc.
When such a person intends to reach the Presence, he or she
will believe that at the moment change is not possible.
Maybe later, in the future, when circumstances are more
advantageous. Then they may try to live more consciously.
These are, however, only excuses, so that the person does
not have to face the truth: "I am responsible for myself, and
nobody else is!"
From the very moment of accepting the truth that "I am
responsible for my own suffering, and nobody else is!," the
person will be able to put an end to the sufferings and leave
the spell of this mind game behind.
The Comforting Mind Game
The contents of the Ego is the knowledge put together
during the individual’s earlier personal history, what he/she
learnt from parents, teachers, schools, from the books read
and movies saw. This knowledge is, however, mechanical,
as it is not derived from direct experience but from the
thoughts and ideas of other people.
The mind, when playing its games, relies on that knowledge
in order to comfort and lull the individual. The mind is
pleased to answer the great questions of life for you: "Yes,
your body will die, but your soul is immortal!! Do not
worry, you will come to no harm, you will surely get to
heaven after your death."
Depending on the religious upbringing one receives
(Christian, Muslim, Buddhist etc.), this mind game
alleviates the person’s fear of death with tales about the
afterlife or, if the person is spiritual, with those of the
immortality of the soul.
The mind is pleased to supply advice and comfort in every
situation. But these are dead, empty words, as they are
based upon other people’s knowledge, writings, which
those other people inherited from yet other people.
When you really want to find the answers to the great
questions of your life, you need to look for them deep in
yourself. Do not answer from memory, as all such answers
will come from your mind, from your dead memories!
First you must face your own reality in the present, here and
now! If you fail to do that, if you do not obtain first-hand
experience from it, there will be no deep, far-reaching
changes in you.
You must make the Journey along the road, nobody is able
to do it for you!
The Ego-dominated mind always aspires for something
special, and rejects ordinary things. When the mind is
interested in spirituality, then it will long for secrecy and
mystic experience. On its Journey, in the Present and in
meditation the mind is looking for such experience.
This very desire prevents us from getting anywhere, so on
our Journey we are getting farther and farther from our
center, or go in circles around and around at best. There is
nothing special in the Present and in the meditation. The
person simply submits to the present moment. The
individual is present, without any desire for something
special and mystic.
This is the ordinariness of the Present, without anything
special, mystic or mysterious, it simply exists!! One should
live through one’s life from moment to moment, and allow
things happen the way they want to happen. Abandon
yourself into the Present! Be consciously present in every
moment!
“The Future Will Be Different”– Mind Game
In our Journey we have all experienced some pleasure and
joy, and we would like to experience them again and again
in the future. Similarly, everyone has experience suffering,
and we tend to project these sufferings into the future, as we
wish to avoid such situations. In this way, we all have a
vision of future.
Our own personal future is therefore is the patched,
improved, modified version of our own past. Those who
decide to live in the Present, must leave their past behind.
Once past has been left behind, future also disappears!
What is left then? The actual moment, the Present! Living
in the here and now means that we are able to get rid of
time and suffering!
The “I Want to Be Like Him (Her)”– Mind Game
On our Journey we carry the desire from our childhood to
imitate others. Learning by imitation is one of the most
elementary methods of integration into society. We utilize
this method from early childhood. That is how we learn to
speak and learn to use various tools etc.
Later, adults guide us consciously: "Be like your father,
brother, the boy/girl next door, your classmate etc." Then
we consciously begin to imitate others. Even later the
process becomes integral, and we start to make efforts to
match images and idols created by our own.
We thus become imitations ourselves, continually staring at
our ideals to be achieved in the future, or our mistakes of
the past that prevented us from achieving our goals. In the
meanwhile, we simply do not take notice of the present
moment. That is exactly why the mind plays this game with
us.
If we live in the Now, in the Present, we accept ourselves
the way we are, and give up making futile efforts imitate
others, to be imitations. That is the only way of stopping
this mind game!
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The Author
Frank M. Wanderer
(Ph.D, Prof. of Psychology, consciousness researcher,
writer)
The awakening of the Consciousness
leads us from our own personal
history to the pure space of
Consciousness. There we experience
the Miracle, and all personal histories
become insignificant. Despite this, I
would like to present a few pages of
my personal history to the reader, as
every journey on the road starts with
a personal history. That is the only
way it may start, there is no alternative; that is the only way
leading to the awakening of the Consciousness, the
appearance of the Miracle.
Since my early childhood, I have been interested in the
Miracle, the mystery of human existence, the mystery that
summoned us from the Nothing, and the mystery we are
destined to solve in our life.
I still remember my beloved mother’s astonished face when,
after some of my questions, she turned to the others: “Now,
look at that, what that kid is asking!”
The questions did not stop in the later years but, as I did not
find appropriate partner from whom I could expect answers,
the questions mostly remained within the walls of my room,
and I myself attempted to find the answers.
My motivation became even more powerful after the
following adventure: I was at the elementary school (12
years old), walking home from school and suddenly I
experienced the Miracle, the completeness, the experience
of the unity with the Self. At that time, naturally, I was not
able to describe it that way, but the sense of unity and
happiness was what I experienced.
That experience did not result in my lasting awakening, it
faded away after a while, but it left behind a burning
wound, a real sense of want. At the same time, it showed
me the way where to look for it answers to my questions.
There was a long way to go to the second awakening. The
first awakening made me start dealing with esoterica and
find books on the subject.
Leaving the years of childhood behind, in my adulthood I
became intensively interested in human soul, in the work of
the human mind.
As a teacher and psychologist I have met a lot of people,
and had an opportunity to study the ”normal” operation of
human ego, and also its functions that are considered as not
normal. I turned the pages of innumerable books of personal
histories, trying to find the cornerstones that give the
dramas and ecstasies of these personal histories meaning
and sense.
I eventually found that cornerstone in the Miracle, in the
awakening of the Consciousness, which demonstrated the
futility of these personal histories and at the same time it
showed the treasure to be found in them.
The personal histories are futile from the aspect of the
awakening because we identify with our mind and we allow
its unconscious functions to control our life and steer the
boat of our life in one, and some time later just the opposite
direction, depending on the actual desire or ambition
dominating our mind. That is how page after page is filled
in the history of our life until the last page arrives, and we
realize the futility of all that happened before.
Our personal history may, however, have a very profound
meaning if we become more wakeful and alert to these
mind games, and recognize the Miracle, the wide open
spaces of the Consciousness that is beyond our personal
history. That pure consciousness was what I experienced as
a child, and that is what I found again as a result of my
regular meditation exercises that I had started a few years
ago.
We must therefore wake up from our identification with our
personal history, so as to be able to find our identity in the
Miracle, the mystery of the Consciousness, instead of the
world of the forms and shapes.
http://the-awakening-of-consciousness.blogspot.com
Contact me at [email protected]
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Who are you beyond your roles in society? Who is
contemplating the world through your eyes? Who is the one
who experiences the world through your body? Who is
hiding behind your eyes sparkling with life? Who are you in
reality? Jump into your True Self!
View/Buy at Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00L0GUE0Y
The Miracle of Consciousness: Explore your Real Self!
Authored by Ervin K. Kery, Frank M. Wanderer
5" x 8" (12.7 x 20.32 cm), 158 pages
ISBN-13: 978-1499115451 ISBN-10: 1499115458
There is a mysterious human dimension, the recognition of
which shatters all our ideas about who we are, where we
come from and what our mission in this world is. This is
the realm of Consciousness: the final scientific and spiritual
mystery.
This book is about the mysteries and miracles of
Consciousness. About the living spirit in action which,
dressed up in the machinery of your body, discovers itself
and the wonders of the world.
https://www.createspace.com/4756284
The Awakening of Consciousness: Adventures On The Spiritual Path , Authored by Frank M. Wanderer, General editor Ervin K. Kery
6" x 9" (15.24 x 22.86 cm), 122 pages
ISBN-13: 978-1495200557 ISBN-10: 1495200558
We are all on a spiritual journey.
This journey starts with birth and ends with death. Our life
is a link between our date of birth and date of death. A link
that contains all the secrets, dramas, tragedies and comedies
of our lives, and we are so deeply involved in this
performance that we tend to forget who we really are: the
shining Consciousness.
This book is about this spiritual journey.
https://www.createspace.com/4618328
BOOKS AVAILABLE AT AMAZON’S ESTORE WWW.CONSCIOUSNESSBOOKS.CF