And now we move on to more difficult territory because, instead of
discussing the theory, we have to look at the practice of the esoteric
way in Tantra – of enlightenment through sexual practice – which is
regarded by most Western eyes as either exploitative (because of the
social conditions of the time) or cold-hearted (because of the
‘attitude’ into which the person enters the process).
The
charge of ‘exploitation’ should not be dismissed. It is axiomatic in
the modern world (and an axiom we accept without qualification) that
sexual practices should always be between fully informed consenting
adults. In fact, it turns out that the partners in the esoteric way are
expected to be both consenting and fully informed but more of that in a
moment.
It is a more complex point whether a hired
sexual partner can be a fully informed consenting adult but we would
argue that this is so in any society that is reasonably free and where
the hiring is in a free market where the adults make free choices in
this respect. In the original tradition, the instructors of the cult
were women either as ‘dream creatures’ (goddesses) or as mistresses
trained in the arts (who no doubt had to be paid something if only to
eat). These were selected by the adept much as one might select a
psychotherapist or piano teacher and there are similarities in the
functional relationship between them.
Caste and looks
are specifically deemed to be irrelevant and there is a certain element
of submission to the teacher – this sense of submission to the superior
wisdom of the female teacher somewhat offsets any suggestion of
exploitation although many modern women would consider the ‘muse
complex’ to be just another variant of patriarchy and who is to say that
they are not entirely wrong. Obviously, this traditional mentality is
to all intents and purposes dead in the world and modern attempts to
revive ‘sacred prostitution’ (apart from the fact that such
practitioners are likely to be flung into jail by an increasingly
socially conservative European politicians or in sexually miserabilist
American communities) do not really ring true.
Some,
though not all, feminists would disagree with the ethics of all this but
that is another argument where I come down on the side of the liberty
of the individual and against the imposition of external moral standards
where no coercion is involved,. Let us leave it there: the divide
between authoritarian liberalism and libertarianism of any type, left or
right, is absolute and can be fought out on the revolutionary
barricades at the right time but not here.
The modern
equivalent to Tantric practice is either going to be the ‘dream
teaching’ (essentially accessing the unconscious through masturbatory
techniques well understood by modern Western magickal practitioners) or
the extremely difficult business of finding a like-minded partner who
can strip away the guilt and shame of sexual practice, of which more in a
moment. But let us not let these practical matters get in the way of
pursuing our theme – the translation of Indian possibility into Western
possibility. Modern Westerners can try to mock up the original
conditions for sexual Tantra but that is probably why it has degenerated
into sky-dancing couples counselling or an excuse for free love jollies
amongst the Californian middle classes. The reality is that a revival
that is not private fantasy depends on something we are very far from in
the West – an egalitarian and ‘heroic’ attitude to sexuality that is
based on men and women both ‘getting’ the philosophical underpinnings of
this posting that we have published earlier.
So,
let us move on to the allegation of almost sociopathic
‘cold-heartedness’ in dealing with sexual relations. Here we are on sure
ground but only if we strip away the Western assumption that sexuality
is always to be contained within complex societal and emotional bonds, a
legacy of the Judaeo-Christian communitarian tradition. This is not to
deny societal and emotional bonds freely entered into but it is to raise
questions of why these bonds should be totalitarian in effect and why
sexual expression must always be associated with a convergence of ends
(traditionally marriage and love) and not be seen as an effective tool
for entering into the Self and pulling out what is necessary for further
development.
Indeed, strip away the local social conditions and language as we have been trying to do throughout this series
and the general message of tantra would seem to be permit this
possibility although we also see the same possibilities for change in
artistic expression, playfulness, magical expression and solitude - and
this list is by no means exhaustive. I have done by best to forewarn the
Western liberal and traditionalist that we are not moving into
comfortable territory. I can do no more.
The tradition
itself hedges itself around with negatives – the practice is not
orgiastic in the sense of a seeking for pleasure, nor is it about
creating material new life. It is highly disciplined and termed
‘heroic’, in an almost Nietzschean sense, as a means of self creation,
of self realisation. Of course, the tradition positions this as an
identification with the divine (Shiva) which we do not. We take the process at its word – and refer you back to the theory
– as the ‘realisation of the essence of the Self’ but where,
existentially, we know the essence of the Self will be a transformative
invention of the Self. In a manner of speaking, we have ended up here
with a sort of anti-Tantra, subverting its very meaning in relation to
the absolute in order to return it to a consideration of its
relationship to the means that are required to meet its claimed end, the
knowing of subject-selves through their relationship to object-others.
The
‘heroic’ aspects of the original practice still apply however. First,
the final resolution is wholly dependent on a process referred to in the
tradition as the raising of the serpent Kundalini. Again, taking away
alien analogical traditional terminology, what this means is that the
body turns in on itself and centres itself on itself from base to peak
so that it is integrated with the final sexual union as a whole. The aim
is a flow upwards and a form of balance prior to ekstasis. The control
of perception and thoughts has to be undertaken without anxieties,
doubts or any external guilt or shame and that, in itself, is massively
difficult for anyone today and possibly has always been so. It is a
total shedding of past societal and familial norms in order to effect
the transformation. In this, I would suggest, lies much of the
liberatory effect. This includes, especially difficult for the modern
Western mind, a total detachment from the partner and from the intent to
pleasure and a redirection inwards ‘selfishly’ of attention. Since
‘selfishness’, like ‘cheating’ or ’hypocrisy’, are absolutely core
cultural ‘bads’ in Western thought, we can see the challenge immediately
– how does one possibly become (albeit momentarily in the context of a
whole life and without any suggestion that one acts selfishly in the
world outside the practice) ‘selfish’ even for a moment without guilt or
shame.
For some, this will be impossible while the
habitual sociopath is excluded from the game by their inability to
reflect on their own self in precisely these terms. No wonder that the
tradition suggests that there are few who could even attempt this and
even fewer who would succeed. The idea is that, even in the most highly
excitable of circumstances surrounded by multiple sources of stimulation
(so solitude as such or quiet are not required as in many ritual
conditions), the practitioner can withdraw completely from the actual
excitation and replace it with a very different sort of inward ‘bliss’,
one of self-realisation.
Let us return to the partner –
and I am aware that I am working within a heterosexual paradigm here
although there is no reason why it cannot be a homosexual or even
polyamorous or bisexual relationship – which is assumed to be male
although the more I consider this, the more I see no reason for not
reversing sexual roles so that the primary partner is a strong and
heroic woman. The only reason it should not be is not biological but
cultural and there is no cultural condition that is not reversible
through the exercise of human will. The issue is the desire of men and
women to reverse and play with historic roles and not their ability to
do so.
The process starts with an expression of
respect for the other, the giver of the conditions for enlightenment.
Although she/he is to be treated in a detached way at the moment of
‘bliss’ as tool of bliss, the person who gives this service of
inestimable value is honoured and respected from the very beginning.
They are appreciated in the most fundamental way. It goes without saying
that the honour and respect (and implicit gratitude) continue after the
event as much as before – there is no mistreatment of women or misogyny
here unless you are one of those sour old crones who invest the sexual
act itself with misogynistic meaning and, of course, both parties are
consenting and highly informed. There is no heroism or success in
performing acts in secret on unwitting lovers.
Against
the norms of much formal religion in traditionalist cultures, the
‘other’ (more specifically the female here) is not degrading man through
encouraging his desires simply by the fact of her existing. The
opportunity to provide pleasure is presented as an act of high worth
that can lead to liberation. Of course, we must not get confused here –
the original model is still traditionalist with women assigned societal
roles (as are men) but the roles are honoured and not just taken for
granted. Personally, I am not sure this is much of an improvement
because the roles still de-limit both men and women in a caste society
but the retention or jettisoning of traditionalist societal roles in
itself has no real effect on the process we are writing about.
And
what of the person seeking enlightenment? Well, the character
attributes are pretty tough to meet – there is an awareness of oneself
(‘interiority’), of course, and we have mentioned the need to abandon
societal norms of guilt and shame and be ‘heroic’ against them but
he/she must also be devoid (at least at the time of search) of strong
passions and allegiances and must be bodily balanced.
Of
course, this posting breaks the golden rule which is secrecy. The
original operations of the cult were probably secret because they were
antinomian and disruptive but, equally, we can take at face value that
the system (apart from wanting perhaps not to see a ‘closed shop’ opened
up and professional standards deteriorate) was available only to those
who had dealt with many of the issues of guilt, shame, passion and
detachment by the time they reached the ‘yogini’ and had come to some
sort of positive philosophy of life whose nearest Western analogy is
probably that of Nietzsche. This drive to existential self-realisation
is apparent in the work required as a pre-condition for the more
esoteric (in social terms) practices.
There is at this
point an important caveat, one familiar from Nietzsche – this is not a
Stirnerite breaking away from all restraint as an autonomous individual.
This is heroism but not adventurism. What this means is a reiteration
that the person seeking enlightenment is going to have to do two things
that are self-restraints: ‘purification’ (an essentialist term which I
do not like but which can be reinterpreted as existential commitment);
and ‘humility’ (a Judaeo-Christian term which we should also not like
but which simply means, not abasement before a mysterious God or
authority, but an acceptance that, where it matters, we depend on
another person entirely).
Part of the critique of
‘adventurism’ is a critique of those who mistake the intense kundalini
experience – perhaps also the exceptional orgasm created through
meditative concentration or just good sex – with the critically
different self-enlightenment being spoken of in cultic practice. There
are warnings of what might happen (a descent into hell) without right
preparation but I think we can pass these by.
Now,
after all the preparations and constraints and warnings, the ‘siddha’
and the ‘yogini’ are to meet (perhaps with other such adepts) and this
is cast in terms much like those we have reviewed philosophically – as
sources of energy (yogini) to be transferred to their object-others (the
‘siddha’) in order to effect (in our view, momentary and illusory but
still profound) merger of both so that object-others become
subject-selves together – at least, as they perceive their situation.
The full 2014-2015 text in the correct order - previously on Position Reserved at http://positionreserved.blogspot.co.uk
Showing posts with label Ekstasis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ekstasis. Show all posts
2 August 2015
Tantra IV - ii The Aim Restated
What is the aim of all this practice:
everything that is mundane, time-bound and space-bound, underpinned by
the drives that we recognise as sexual, is drawn from the world and
becomes concentrated as an energy pinpointed in space-time.
The momentary intensity of this energy feels intense and pure, all constraints and anxieties disappear, one's capability for abandonment is understood - the intent is to have all the participants in a state of bliss. And if only one partner achieves this and the associated transformation and not the other or others, no matter - the achievement of the one will be reflected in the others and the situation, if not the persons, will be transformed.
None of this is easy especially as the whole process presumes a will to life and to abandonment, ekstasis. If the will to life is there, the transformation is possible. The orgasm is the change. It is all no more than the life force, the will to life itself to be found throughout existence. It is a state of freedom from the world but one that depends on a will to life beyond the mundane.
It is in the trembling and shudderings of the body at its central moment of emission and engagement that this will is expressed. This is why, rightly, the Tantrics analogise it as a connection with the 'primordial vibration', that which brings all things into existence, that is, the Big Bang in our modern scientific terminology. The individual transforms into the root brute force that is universal, beyond any sense of a material base.
The momentary intensity of this energy feels intense and pure, all constraints and anxieties disappear, one's capability for abandonment is understood - the intent is to have all the participants in a state of bliss. And if only one partner achieves this and the associated transformation and not the other or others, no matter - the achievement of the one will be reflected in the others and the situation, if not the persons, will be transformed.
None of this is easy especially as the whole process presumes a will to life and to abandonment, ekstasis. If the will to life is there, the transformation is possible. The orgasm is the change. It is all no more than the life force, the will to life itself to be found throughout existence. It is a state of freedom from the world but one that depends on a will to life beyond the mundane.
It is in the trembling and shudderings of the body at its central moment of emission and engagement that this will is expressed. This is why, rightly, the Tantrics analogise it as a connection with the 'primordial vibration', that which brings all things into existence, that is, the Big Bang in our modern scientific terminology. The individual transforms into the root brute force that is universal, beyond any sense of a material base.
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