A Course of Meditation

by
Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan
Inspired by the vision of
Hazrat Inayat Khan
 
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Welcome
Jewish Wailing Women
Rudra Vina
Rudra Vina 2
Turkish Call to Prayer

Allegri
Miserere

Abed Azrie
Murmur of the Breeze

Johann Sebastian Bach
Fugue in F major
Magnificat
Partita No. 1 in B
  minor

Prelude in F major
Prelude to St. John's
  Passion

Sonalast Partitas
St. John's Passion,
  Lamentation


Ludwig von Beethoven
4th Piano Concerto

Pandit Kashinath Bodas
Raga Komal Rishabh
  Asavari


Johannes Brahms
4th Symphony

Max Bruch
Kol Nidre

Deuter
Nada Himalaya

Choying Drolma
Tibetan Chant

Ghazal
Traces of the Beloved

Lama Gyurmé
Lama's Chant
The Tsok Offering

Sha heedi
Sâghee
  Nâme (Sufi
  Nâme)


Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan
1st Jhana
2nd Jhana: The
  Thinking Behind the
  Universe

3rd Jhana: The Emotion
  Behind the Universe

4th Jhana: The
  Consciousness
  Behind the Universe

A Transfigured World:
  the View from Within

A View of the World;
  Satipathana and
  Jhanas Stage1

Absorbing Light,
  Radiating Light

All Pervading Light
As a Promise of
  Resurrection

Attachment and Pain
Attuning to
  Glorification

Awakening the Glance
  of the Dervish

Being a Being of Light
Beyond Consciousness
Breathing from Within
Buddhism and Sufism
Cleansing the Emotions
  with Light

Clues in Our Psyche
Consciousness Becomes
  Infinite

Converging the Light
  of the Stars

Dervish Heart
  Meditation

Developing Light in
  the Eyes

Espy the Thinking of
  the Universe

Everlastingness and
  Eternity

Filtering Impressions
  (2 Immune Systems)

Finding Freedom from
  the Constraint of
  Impressions

God-consciousness
Image of the Pendulum
Image of the Vortex
  Energy Practice

Imagining an Archangel
  of Light

Impact of Situations
  on the Self

Impact of the Self on
  Situations

Keys to Meditation
Light in a Secondary
  Chakra: Eyes

Light in the 1st Chakra
Light in the 2nd Chakra
Light in the 3rd Chakra
Light in the 4th
  Chakra: Heart Center

Light in the 5th
  Chakra: Throat
  Center

Light in the 6th
  Chakra: Third Eye

Light in the 7th
  Chakra: Crown Center

Light in the Chakras:
  Introduction

Matching Latencies
Muhasibi: What Do I
  Value in Life?

Observing Yourself
  (Muhasibi / Jhanana
  Darshana)

Our Purpose is
  Awakening

Palace of Mirrors
Perception and Desire
Reflections
Seeing Beauty
Shifting Perspectives
Starry Sky Meditation
Steps to
  Transcendence:
  Seeking Nirvana

Steps to Turning Within
The Bounty of Life
The Glance, 1 & 2
The Glance, 3: That
  Which Transpires

The Glance, 4:
  Purifying the Glance

The Glance, 5: The
  Eyes Through Which
  God Sees

The Glance, 6: The
  Divine Glance

The Glance, 7: Shahid
The Process of Ta'wil
The Vortex
This Become Does Not
  Lead to the
  Non-Become

Thrust into Existence
Universe as Beings of
  Light

Visualizing the Body
  as a Crystal

Watch Your Body
Watch Your
  Consciousness


Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan
Watch Your Personality

Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan
Watch Your Thoughts
We are a Condition of
  God


Light Shows
Kirlian Photography
Fractal Journey
Impressions of the
  Cosmos

Sun Rises

Nathan and Joseph
We Shall Be Healed

Rustavi Choir
Gregorian Chant

Saki Lee and Shams Kairys
Thy Light is in All
  Forms


Sirin Choir
Russian Chants

Tallis Scholars
Victoria Tenebrae
  Responsories


Tibetan Buddhist Nuns of the Kopan Monastery
Track 13

Andrew Lloyd Webber
Pie Jesu
Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan: 4th Jhana: The Consciousness Behind the Universe            Go back

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Now I get to the next stage. And that is, you see, consciousness, that already happened when you were doing the Satipathana, consciousness is carried beyond the notion of the self. And so, as long as, I think, what am I conscious of? I am conscious of this physical world, I think, at least, actually now I realize that it’s just my image of the physical world. And I’m conscious of having remembered something that happened when I was two years old maybe, or even one year old. But consciousness has been interrupted at my birth. Those are the edges of consciousness. Now if consciousness spills over the edges of consciousness, of the person, then of course I will remember right back into previous, well first of all, into the lives of my grandfathers, grandparents, and right back into my ancestors. I will remember previous incarnations, I will remember the planes through which I passed on the descent, through the physical world, into the state of incarnation. In fact the whole, and not only will I get back the memory of all those things which may have been communicated by, physically, let’s say, by my parents and ancestors, or non physically at the level of incarnation, of reincarnation. But I will remember the whole past of the universe. And what is more, I will be aware of all the planes and the beings in all the planes if my conscious is not limited to my, if consciousness is not limited to my sense of me, my vantage point, then it’s going to extend and encompass the whole universe. And this is the great victory of Buddha. This is the moment that is called the moment of illumination.

At the end of the forty-nine days under the tree, and all of a sudden, consciousness spilled over the frontiers of that man sitting under that tree, that wasn’t, it wasn't important where his body was. He wasn’t enclosed in his environment. Consciousness reaches right out and the whole past, panoramic view of the whole past, and all levels of angelic beings, archangels, the universes beyond universes, the whole breathtaking vision. Not just of the physical universe. Imagine, you know, that you had been thinking, you know you’d been caught in a little environment, little personal problems, personal emotions, and here’s the vastness of consciousness. It breaks through. It includes all beings, all things...

Well it’s so obvious that this is the way out of the prison. And what he sees is universes informed and growing, and proliferating, and then exploding, and then another universe replacing it. So it tallies very much with what we hear in science about the universe expanding, and maybe contracting, and then other universes beyond the ones that we are aware of. Black holes, and beyond black holes, other even white holes and, well there’s no end to it. We just, when we start reaching beyond what we generally experience, we realize that there’s no end. And that’s what happens to the consciousness of Buddha. It reaches into realms that a person caught in his personal consciousness could never dream of.

And he gives even the clue. He says all you have to do is to identify yourself with the level, with the reality, the mode of reality corresponding to the level that you want to reach, and then you experience that level, for example, if you identify yourself with a body, wherever you go, you are going to see bodies. People are bodies for you. If you identify with your personality, wherever you go, you will communicating with personalities of people. People will be personalities. You will enjoy their personalities, or your communication with their personalities. It you identify yourself with your thinking, you will communicating your thoughts to people. But if you identify yourself with a being of light, everywhere you go you will be seeing the light. The reality of light, the mode of light behind the physical aspect of things. You will discover the worlds of light.

And Buddha recognizes nine different levels. But that’s, I suppose that’s what the disciples make a system out of, from their genuine experience. Because the experience reaches beyond what one would call existence, into non-existence.

For example, what we call existence is, for example we say, are there beings in outer space? Well, those beings would have to have a body made out of carbon, and oxygen, all those things that we, hydrogen and so on, all those things that we are aware of in our universe. We think that those are the criteria of existence. So any being who didn’t have such bodies, we would say, how could he exist? And Buddha speaking about realms which are beyond what we think can exist. Beyond existence.

And then he goes on beyond consciousness. For example, we are conscious of a physical object, and we are conscious of a thought, and we are conscious of a cause. But, so there’s duality. There’s duality in the consciousness in the object. But when we were in samadhi if you remember, there was no dichotomy between a subject and an object, there was just awareness. If you remember, there was awareness without an object. Well those are the realms beyond existence.

So Buddha includes the state of samadhi in his experience. But he does not exclude the physical universe in this vast panoramic experience.

When he has done this then he says, and these are the final words before he dies, and he says, “That which had to be done has been done.” A stage when you have overcome the whole process of fulfillment. And then he says, this is the cessation of the determined. Like, you know, your body is determined, your mind is determined by the environment, but when you reach the stage of awakening, you have overcome causality. And that means that you are totally free.

© 2002 Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan