Bunny Paine-Clemes

Creative Synergy


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creators have contacted the “a-field,” the realm of all possibilities. Isabel Allende does a good job of describing the idea simply:

      •It creates happiness.

      The enjoyment created by “flow” occurs when

      imageyour task is likely to be completed;

      imageyou are concentrating;

      imagethe task “has clear goals and provides immediate feedback”;

      imageyou are immersed in the task and removed from “the worries and frustrations of everyday life”;

      imageyou have a sense of control;

      image“concern for the self disappears, yet paradoxically the sense of self emerges stronger” afterward;

      We enter flow when we are mindful: when we place our awareness squarely in the present, detached from past memories and future hopes, detached from the ego, that persistent yammering voice in the head. It is ego that makes us worry whether we are good enough, whether the work will be good enough, whether it will satisfy the gatekeepers in our field or even ourselves.

      Eckhart Tolle has written a profound and delightful exposé of the ego’s machinations. One of its tricks is to resist the present moment:

      For the creator, the ego is an irritant that interrupts the flow state with thoughts of me. Is my work good enough? Will the boss like it? Will the art gallery buy it? Will the publisher give me a contract?

      But how?

      Edgar Cayce’s recommendations are explained by Mark Thurston. Within us is the divine spark (“individuality”). In meditation we seek to join it to the divine (“universal Christ consciousness”) through techniques that raise the energy “through the spiritual centers, or chakras.”169 We prepare the body through bathing; we prepare the mind through “intoning” (chanting), music, breathing exercises (pranayama), and focus on the third eye.170 Cayce defines meditation as “emptying self of all that hinders the creative forces from rising along the natural channels of the physical man.” He defines prayer as “the concerted effort of the physical consciousness to become attuned to the Consciousness of the Creator.”171

      Ken Wilber writes often about identification with the Witness. He defines it as “The self that depends upon the causal line of cognition . . . the Self supreme that prevents the three realms—gross, subtle, and causal—from flying apart.”172 He explains it as the point where “Your very self intersects the Self of the Kosmos at large:”173 i.e., your gem upon the net.

      Swami Kriyananda relates,

      Often I have found, by meditation-induced concentration, that I can accomplish in an afternoon what others have