Attention
Those familiar with Jacob Needleman's "Lost Christianity" will be familiar with the pivotal role of attention in the process of waking up. E J Gold's views on attention are quite in line with Needleman's and even build on them in some ways imo.
[quote author=EJ Gold]
We will realize that in spite of its higher aims and aspirations, the essential self has no will in the ordinary sense by which it can compel the machine to live according to its higher nature. So we must use what we actually do have in the essential self, the two genuine attributes of the essential self - presence and will of attention - to bring the machine into the waking state.
We must recognize periods when the machine is awake and more importantly, when it is not. We could easily hurt ourselves and others by trying to do something in sleep as if we were awake.
.........
If we know the machine is asleep, we have one foot on the path. If we can sense that the machine is asleep, we have two feet on the path. From then on, at least things cannot get any worse, they can only get better.
We can use a special form of attention called sensing by which we can become intensely aware of the sensations of the machine, to convince ourselves of the sleep of the machine.
Our intellect can tell us that we are awake, but our sensing tells us that the machine is asleep.
Our beliefs may convince us that we are awake, but our sensing tells us that the machine is asleep.
Our vanity may insist that we are awake, but our sensing tells us that the machine is asleep.
Our higher philosophies and religions may insist that we are awake, but our sensing tells us that the machine is asleep.
If we can sense that the machine is asleep, we have taken the first real step toward awakening it. Until then, everything in our lives, especially our work, is imaginary, just fantasy.
..........................
The essential self has no will except the will of attention. It can place its attention on something, it can direct its attention. By bathing the machine in its attention, it awakens the machine. The force of attention of the essential self is slow and subtle. The subtle force of attention is our only weapon against sleep. It is a very effective weapon if we are able to see that because it is subtle, it has to be applied unremittingly, unwaveringly, over a very long period of time.
If someone else uses the force of attention to wake up our machine, the will of our essential self will not develop. An awakened machine is not enough. We also want to develop the will of the essential self so that when the machine is awake , and its will has been vaporized, we are able to exert our will toward our possible evolution.
............................
The additional force which gives us the extra will necessary to fixate our attention on the machine is called adoration.
Adoration is an emotional ingredient, but not the emotion of the machine . It is a higher emotion which can be aroused in the essential self (provided the emotional center is in working condition and not dead or atrophied). It is the only genuine emotion that the essential self has developed prior to transformation.
By intentionally placing our unwavering attention directly upon the machine, and following its every motion with the emotional intensity of adoration, we develop a deeper relationship with the machine.
How can we really observe the machine under our fixed gaze of unwavering attention if we do not love what we are observing? We must follow the machine as a lover unrelentingly fixes his gaze upon his beloved, root our attention wholly upon the machine and not let it drift. We must clearly obtain glimpses of that part of the machine which is lazy and unwilling to work, and gradually separate ourselves from it, work our way out from under its influence.
[/quote]
False Waking State
[quote author=EJ Gold]
There's a state of exhilaration which is a false waking state. It's so close to the real waking state that it's almost undetectably different. However, there is a definite difference between the state of exhilaration and the waking state of the machine.
A good technique will take into account that there is a false waking state - a state of exhilaration, and/or ecstasy, and by taking that into account, will produce the waking state without touching those things which produce the state of exhilaration or ecstasy or both. In other words, good technique does not produce exhilaration, but it does produce the waking state.
[/quote]
Chronic
[quote author=EJ Gold]
The machine's Chronic is another name for the machine's defense mechanism, which acts as a warning that the machine is near or about to enter the waking state and, at the same time defends the machine against the waking state. We would soon see that this defense mechanism which we call the Chronic activates itself automatically, but only when the machine's established routine - which maintains its precarious balance - is threatened by the waking state.
As the waking state is approached more closely, the Chronic will manifest itself more and more dramatically. The barrier between the sleeping state and the waking state is maintained by the Chronic. We actually are quite frequently near the waking state, often bumping into the waking state without crossing over the line. As children, most of us were in the waking state most of the time; that is before the Chronic was developed by the machine to defend itself against the waking state so that it would be able to function acceptably in a social and cultural context.
This automatic defense mechanism against the waking state often takes the form of some Chronic negative emotion such as anger, sarcasm, cynicism, self-isolation, fear, paranoia, hysteria, resentment, envy, pettiness, jealousy, vengefulness, greed, piety, boredom, grief, loneliness, anxiety, helplessness, stupidity, hatred, compulsiveness, and so on, so that the machine can continue to function with significance and importance according to the expectation of others.
If we want to discover our Chronic, all we have to do is go into horizontal sleep and have somebody shake us awake in the wee hours of the night or sometime in the pre-dawn and observe our first reaction. That will be our Chronic.
Although the Chronic serves the sleeping state, the whole of the sleeping state with all its activities, attitudes and aima, also serves to reinforce the Chronic..........It manifests in behavior, in posture, in expression, and even in goals and purposes.
Almost every method of producing the waking state takes advantage of the fact that it is possible to use artificial means to prevent the Chronic to defend itself against the waking state.
This effect can be produced with psychoactive substances, but although the defense mechanism is effectively disarmed, the waking state is severely impaired. But in any case, whether through hypnosis or self-produced efforts, we cannot successfully bring the machine into the waking state until the machine is absolutely convinced of its ability to reconstruct the sleeping state. Part of a school's discipline is to learn several exact methods of reconstructing the sleeping state from the viewpoint of the waking state.
[/quote]
Trevrizent's
post here has further elaboration of Gold's view on Chronic and suggested methods of working on it.