We are all wanderers on this earth. Our hearts are full of wonder, and our souls are deep with dreams.

Sunday, February 03, 2008

Like Riding a Bicycle
7 comments
I finally saw The Celestine Prophecy last night, and despite the buzz surrounding the book and the movie, I can see why its critics roll their eyes. The movie itself is, well, how do I say this nicely? Let's just say it won't win any Academy Awards ever. Gorgeous scenery, though. The acting was, for the most part, pretty stiff, but enough with the armchair movie critic stuff. It seemed to be a kind of propaganda primer for some very basic concepts that actually make sense. Some scenes in particular, using very simplistic imagery and symbolism, held quite profound messages.

In a very condensed nutshell, this movie shows how we can tap into our intuitive guidance system and follow those nudges and hunches and thereby live our lives as we are intended. Also, it explains how to shift one's focus from the very mundane material day-to-day world of power and control to seeing all of life with greater vision, seeing all of it as linked with energy.

I believe we're all born with this internal guidance system, a kind of intuitive GPS, that we are taught, over time, to ignore. We are then taught to rely only on facts, what we can see with our eyes, touch with our hands, and know from "science" and proper research. We're taught that it is dangerous to do things any differently and people who do things differently are viewed as foolish and unwise, or worse, as woo-woo crackpots.

When I was a fundamentalist Christian, I entered the faith through a door that strongly stressed relying on an internal guidance system called the Holy Spirit. Throughout the New Testament there are strong urgings to follow that internal Guide and not to rely on one's own physical senses. But Christianity is rather schizophrenic about this subject. On the one hand, we are told to follow the Spirit, but on the other hand we should "test the spirits" to know whether we are following the Holy Spirit or some other random human or demonic spirit. Some branches of Christianity don't advise any of this at all and instead instruct its followers to just follow what is written in the Bible and don't rely at all on what you feel inside. They believe that we have a human spirit that is corrupt and the Holy Spirit that is pure and because it's often just too difficult to know which spirit is sending messages to you, just rely on what is written to be safe. Then some factor in the influence of the demonic spirits as well, so just forget all that esoteric stuff and follow The Word to bypass confusion. The problem is that The Word urges the following of spiritual urgings and promptings. That's just circular reasoning and it makes one a little crazy when you try to actually live it out.

In some Christian circles, the spiritual promptings are embraced and encouraged. The caveat is that the Holy Spirit will never prompt you to do something contrary to the words in the Bible, so if you believe the Spirit is prompting you to smoke crack or something, it's probably not the right spirit giving you that message. (However, the Holy Spirit did instruct a major Old Testament prophet to walk around the streets naked, so....) Still, they do encourage the development of that intuitive guidance system, within a certain framework. Issues tend to arise when the Holy Spirit tells one person to do one thing and another person to do the opposite and then it becomes a battle between whose intuition is correct.

This Sunday School lesson is all to say that what I found in the realm of Christian practice regarding this issue is like a microcosm of the rest of the larger world. Some people will embrace and encourage intuitive guidance and others are skeptical and will dismiss it altogether. The protagonist's journey in The Celestine Prophesy was encouraged to be done entirely "by faith and not by sight." There was a line in the movie where, after the guy was told to just take off on a motorcycle into the rainforest willy nilly to find a woman who was captured by rebels, he responded by saying, "But I don't know where I'm going!" The reply was, "None of us do."

Think about that. Just take a moment and think about that. Do any of us really know where we are going? Sure, we have plans and goals and may even have a map drawn with the steps laid out to the fulfillment of those goals, but can any of us say what event will happen tomorrow or even five minutes from now? We have expectations that if we do this then that will happen, and it might. Or it might not. There are far too many variables in life that can throw even the finest laid plans into disarray. Ok, so what to do?

Well, our guy in the film takes off and really tries to rely on this unseen guide inside himself. He comes to a literal fork in the road and tries to sense which way to go. One path appeared a bit brighter to him, it pulled at him a bit more than the other. So he takes off on that road and promptly gets captured by rebels and thrown into a crappy little jail cell out in the jungle. Oops! As he sits there kicking his own ass, knowing he effed up and made the wrong choice, it turns out he made exactly the right choice because the woman he was searching for was being held in a cell right there, too.

Ok, aside from the painfully obvious being whacked over your head with rather poor script writing, this was an important point. I know how it feels to follow that flow of intuition and it feels "right" and it gives me a strong sense of hope and wellbeing when I am in that mode. I tend to think ok, I've got it now, I'm riding the wave of intuitive guidance and all will be well. I will see life just roll out the red carpet for me and things will go smoothly and there will be a pot of gold at the end. And then what happens? Something shitty. Uh oh. So then I think, crap, I did it wrong. I must have made the wrong decision there back at that fork in the road. Damn. How can I get myself out of this mess I've made? I'm then tempted to throw all this intuitive stuff out the back door and just go back to relying only on traditional advice. Following that intuitive guidance doesn't necessarily mean it will all be easy. It doesn't mean bad things won't happen to you. But it also doesn't mean you didn't make the right choice. You have to wait and see what unfolds.


Learning to use this intuitive guidance system is a lot like taking an old bicycle out of storage. It's rusty, the tires are flat, and it squeaks and rattles when you roll it out. Tarot is an excellent oil for this old bike. Using tarot encourages the intuitive part of our brains to pay attention and come to the fore. But once you've got the bike all cleaned up and oiled and its tires pumped up, you've got to ride it. That's the real scary but super fun part. Take it for a spin around the block. Follow that intuitive nudge and just go. You don't have to go far at first, but go. Pretty soon you'll be going on cross-country trips on that old bike and the more you ride it, the better your own conditioning will be. You will go places you never thought you'd go in a million years. Some of those places might be scary and uncomfortable, but...this is truly living life, isn't it?

7 comments :

  1. Wonderful story and I am SO in love with your writing style.

    However, if you have only seen Celestine Prophecies, I HIGHLY recommend getting the book. It is WAY better and a precursor to the whole "What the Bleep" and "The Secret" genre.

    The book itself is very well written, you find yourself being pulled into it within a couple of pages. It also has some concepts that the movie just can't get across.

    Of course that assumes you have not read it :)

    Keep on blogging and Podcasting, you are a true joy to read and listen to.

    Don

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  2. You should check out "Gut Feelings: The Intelligence of the Unconscious," by Gerd Gigenrenzer.

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  3. Anonymous5:30 AM

    Ginny~

    As much as I adore your writings on tarot, it's nice to read posts on your life & spiritual learnings as well:)

    I couldn't resonate more strongly with your sharings on the role of intuition in our journeys. Wonder just how many other readers feel the same.

    "Way of the Peaceful Warrior" is another movie based on a classic spiritual novel. It's much better done (Nick Nolte stars) and filled with many goosebump moments and inspirational heart & gut stirrings. When we saw it in the theatre we were the only people there. Actually, the same thing happened with the "Conversations with God" movie. That's another movie that is poorly done but has enough inspiring moments that allow one to look past the cheesiness and appreciate the messages. Ok, I'm rambling...

    Brad J.

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  4. Another inspiring post. I look forward to reading them.

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  5. Anonymous9:35 AM

    Hi Ginny,
    Lovely visual movie but I felt slightly disappointed.....that something was lacking so I think I should now read the book which sounds more promising.
    Great blog - keep it up.

    Lori

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  6. Anonymous10:34 AM

    So if I understand you correctly, what you liked in the film was actually the theme that is particular to the film at all, but has formed the basis of some media, very good to excruciatingly bad, over the last several thousand years. That says nothing in favor of the movie, because what it brings of its own is base metal--it is only what it borrows from others that is gold.

    Have you ever read Apuleius' The Golden Ass? He was an Egyptian priest of Isis, writing in the 2nd century AC, and his book is wonderfully funny, touching, sad, ridiculous, and offers the same truth you noted: that making the wrong choice can sometimes be the right choice, after all.

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  7. That was one of the scenes/messages I liked about it. Is there anything new under the sun? Probably not. I like when I am reminded at just the right time, for me, of something I need to remember.

    I'll have to read The Golden Ass. The title makes me snicker. :) I can be such a child sometimes.

    Ginny

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