Truth is the “Sweet Spot” we hit on a moving target!
Lierre Kieth, (author of The Vegetarian Myth), had a peek moment when she began critically examining mounting evidence against vegetarianism. “Having been a vegan for 20 years, this was a radical change.I was accumulating information that fit into my belief system about how life is. Every time I got information that didn’t fit in, I set that aside; so I ended up with gaps in my consciousness. … One of the things about being a vegan is it is not about what you eat, it’s about who you are, and that makes it really hard to examine new information… it is a threat to who you are…”
Listening to her inspired me to critically look at how we decide what is true and how we regulate our lives by what we believe to be true. When we adopt a certain set of “truisms” we could call it a belief system, especially if a group of people hold the same opinions. One of the things about a belief system is that is puts a context in our mind about who we think we are. This can give a sense of identity, security, comfort and community in knowing we are correct in our thoughts and hopefully our actions.
The problem with this kind of comfortable arrangement is that it tends to deter some of us from examining other belief systems and new information. When these paradigms are different from what we believe to be true we may decide to discard it as not true and to ignore new information.
On the other hand, with more and more information and new thought we may begin wonder if what we believe is actually “the truth”. This may lead us to ask; can there be different truths depending on circumstances? This type of questioning can create in us a kind of spiritual crisis; in some cases it threatens who we believe we are. It may require that we make radical changes in our thinking and in turn how we are on our world in order to find that inner balance with our true self.
Should you consider these questions, you may start to recapitulate and examine how you think about things. You may ask yourself “How did I come to this assumption of what I believe to be true?”
As humans we naturally like to categorize things and store knowledge in a certain ways, to form what we conceive to be true. We use already known facts to bring together and form new and innovative thought. We have a memory and the ability to retrieve information; we can come to a synthesis of that information and build new concepts based on what we have learned.
What if the stored information was relevant at the time but it isn’t as relevant now. Could we say that the paradigm of our reality has shifted? Or to put it more clearly, “What was the context of our awareness when we decided that was true? How has it changed?”
For a random example; I might ask myself, what point in my life was I at when I decided “Old women are useless and a drain on society”. Was I twenty and in my prime, raging hormones, intellectually sharp, beautiful and full of ambition? Was it when I was turning sixty-five feeling the effects of aging on the body, working in a world of younger people, not thinking quite so clearly and facing the prospect of retiring? You might also consider; has the view of society changed about this situation, has there been a general paradigm shift and why?
It often seems that what we think to be true is influenced by our environment, social climate, ancestors, belief systems, the specific needs at that time and more. What then is true? Is anything really true, or is truth constantly shifting and moving within our awareness paradigms. What I’m asking here is – “Is truth absolute and unmoving, a final conclusion so to speak or is it something that changes?”
Jean Houston writes: “You have to follow your heart now with all the courage and conviction of a hero, no matter how many dragons and enemies to your happiness you have to overcome along the way! Otherwise, somebody or something else might follow your heart for you, and pass you up in your own journey. Not staying true to yourself is akin to abandoning your own personal evolution to natural degradation and psychic entropy.” – The Feminine Paradigm
Jean Houston is saying that not being true to yourself is abandoning your own personal evolution it’s degrading your self-worth and creating an atrophy of the ability to be uncontrived and natural in the moment.
We know that as time moves on we have an accumulation of knowledge and a record of what happened. That record of what happened seems to be told differently in history, by the winners and by the losers, by cultural points of view and by the ability to communicate.
H.P. Blavatsky is quoted as saying; There is no religion higher than truth. Indeed this is the motto that has been adopted by the modern Theosophical movement.
In the Voice of the Silence (H.P. B) it is said that “the mind is the slayer of the real”, we must practice perfect meditation, slay our thoughts and conditioning, until we see ourselves, who we are, as objectively as an actor in a play. Then it is from this point of observation that we are in our true selves, listening to our true voice within; then we can act in truth at any given moment.
We may not be in this meditative consciousness in day to day life, but if we continue to practice the technique of self observation, we will come to recognize more clearly our true selves, which is the observer. Bringing to the moment, the awareness of unconditioned consciousness; with no preconceived ideas, no ego defence, or social consciousness, we are able to act in a clear way.
What is truth? Can we talk about truth as facts and knowledge or is it something else? I think truth is an active process and has nothing to do with static ideas.
Could it be that truth is actually the “sweet spot” that we hit on a moving target? Is it about coming to the moment with exactly the awareness and concentration required to “hit the right spot on the tennis swing”, or to bring to the moment the exact response required at the precise point in time in any circumstance?