 Originally Posted by Ctharlhie
As for my mantra, I'm going with 'maya'. When I read Robert Waggoner's 'Lucid Dreaming: Gateway to the Inner Self', the phrase maya struck a definite and profound chord with me. For anyone unfamiliar it's a sanskrit term meaning 'illusion', 'creative power' and 'reality creation' and the implication of it in wider Hindu and Buddhist teaching is that we create the phenomenological world around us. A concept, I'm sure you'll agree, that is directly applicable to lucid dreaming.
It's meaningful on a few levels. Reading 'GttIS' had a massive effect on my lucid dreaming practices, the phrase has the 'weight' of possibly thousands of years of philosophical thinking on dreams and reality, and the word has a nice cadence and overall sound to it. Also, using a phrase that tells me to consider my surroundings as an illusion I have created should lead to lucidity.
So you've chosen to accept a mantra as provided you by a guru...
That's fine in your case, Chtarlhie, because from what I've read in your many posts is that you are heavily involved in this stuff, and that the word "maya" already has deep meaning to you, so its repetition will likely help you.
One caveat for you, though: maya, thanks to its age, multiple meanings, and level of importance in the Hindu and Buddhist traditions, carries quite a bit of mythological baggage that, ironically, could interfere with your WILD dives. In a sense, you run the risk of attaching "someone else's" meaning to your dream, and not your own, or, worse, its meaning will eclipse the importance of your own self-awareness in the dream, and lucidity might be sacrificed for a (albeit likely excellent) maya-based non-lucid...I don't believe this will happen to you, but the possibility is there...try to remember that as you recite maya during your WILD.
Another small warning for the rest of you: Though Ctharlhie likely chose his mantra well because his life is focused in the direction of a mantra like "maya," keep in mind that it is still an off-the-shelf mantra provided by a guru. If no meaning other than "this word is important because important people said it" can be attached to it. Be very careful about using someone else's mantra instead of choosing one of your own, because you might not get what you need out of it. In the end your mantra should be a reflection of you, your intentions, and, yes, your dreams; don't allow it to be a reflection of someone else, not matter how awesome that someone else might be...
|
|
Bookmarks