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Plane-to-Plane Memorandum

My Beloved Students

Master Djwhal Khul

 

August 2008 Lesson

 

 

 

August 3, 2008

 

Beloved Students:

 

I greet you in the beauty of the natural world, which you perceive

with your wondrous senses: hearing, sight, smell, taste and texture.

What a fantastic world it is, and how wonderful that you can celebrate

the magic of perception in your interaction between consciousness and

that oceanic flow of life force as it moves through all the countless

things you perceive.  Is not life truly a wondrous experience?  Are

you giving thanks each and every day for your opportunity to bask

fully in the perceptive feast?

 

Most of you have heard me say (probably many times by now) that your

life is an artistic creation ­ or has the potentiality to be such.

You, of course, are the creator of that magnificent work of art.  I

would like to give you a bit of a stretch this month by suggesting

that it is both powerful, and appropriate, to think of your life in

this way.  Indeed, your life is much like an educational project

wherein you demonstrate your artistic skills for your final grade.

The "test," if you will, is much like the thesis that is required of

students applying for advanced degrees at the master or doctoral

level.  To attain the best grade, the student must do rigorous

research into a specified area and then generate and defend a premise

that either opens into some creative idea that moves in a new

direction for the discipline, brings together seemingly disparate

levels of the discipline, or interprets a standing body of knowledge

within the discipline in a novel way.

 

In each of these cases, the mind must enter a creative mode to

accomplish the demands of a substantive and well-presented thesis.  In

the same way, each of you is in the process of investigating deeply

the question of what it means to be fully human.  You could say that

the living of your life actually amounts to stating your thesis and

defending it well ­ or at least, that's the idea. In truth, a great

many people either misunderstand the assignment, put it off until the

very end (when there may not be enough energy available to do a good

job), or fail to take the assignment seriously.  I am sure you can

think of situations where you may have watched as someone you knew,

perhaps loved, exited his/her physical life without ever getting

around to completing the thesis ­ in some cases, never even starting

on it.

 

This month, I would like to challenge each of you to think of your

life as some type of musical piece.  Not only are you composing it

right now, you are actually going through many rehearsals of the parts

you have completed, even though you may choose to rewrite some of

those parts.  Stop for a moment and reflect upon how very precious is

the sensation of hearing.  Think back to poignant moments in your life

wherein you now wish you had been able to listen more carefully, or

perhaps listen from a broader perspective than that of your own ego.

Reflecting in this way, I'm quite sure you can all recall situations

in which you now wish you had been more present for the process of

listening, whether for a friend or loved one, or even to a great piece

of music.

 

Consider for a moment the power of music in your own life.  Reflect

back to ceremonies in your culture that you experienced as powerful.

How many had some kind of music with them?  There were weddings,

funerals, and graduations, all of which were accompanied by music ­

even those high school sporting events!   While it is clear that these

events do not always involve music we could call "masterpieces" in the

classical sense, still, the participants counted on some kind of music

to enhance the moment.  Think of all the holiday parades you attended,

or the parades welcoming soldiers home from military tours.  Music is

presented as an attribute fitting the situation, or to set the desired

emotional tone for the moment.

 

    Of all the types of music you have experienced, what kind befits

the masterpiece of your life? Would you like your life to be

remembered as a rap song, or might you prefer your memory to be held

in a soaring operatic aria, or art song sung by a highly accomplished

vocalist?  Would you prefer your masterpiece to take the form of a

symphonic work, or perhaps an inspiring choral work?  Maybe you'd

prefer a marching band or a barbershop quartet.  Whatever calls to

you, please consider carefully just what kind of music might reflect

your life experiences adequately to posterity? Who might you want to

record your masterpiece?  Would it be a rock band or a prestigious

conductor?

 

If you are getting a little flack from your ego as to why I might be

asking you to contemplate on your life as a musical work, please bear

with me yet a bit longer.  The idea here is to get you thinking of

your own life symbolically, but to use symbols that you may not be

used to applying to your life.  It is one thing to see your own life

played out symbolically in any of the great mythological masterpieces

and quite another thing to grasp your life using symbols that are not

built on words or discursive concepts.

 

To a great extent, your creative process here will depend upon what

you have allowed yourself to be exposed to, musically.  If you spend

your day listening to rap music, how you see your life (as well as the

lives of others) is quite literally influenced by your listening

habits.  If you spend your day listening to country western music,

your sense of identity will reflect those musical choices in some way.

 This principle holds true whether you listen to bluegrass, jazz,

rock, elevator, gospel or classical music.  In some way, you are

employing the symbols of "your music" into the creation of your life.

 Thus, whatever your musical preference, make sure you are listening

to (i.e., entraining your neurological system) master-pieces!

 

In last month's lesson, you may recall I stated that I "cannot

emphasize too strongly the value of contemplative skills."  Indeed, I

stand by that statement this month, as well, but I am asking you to

move into another kind of contemplation ­ that of musical symbols.  In

truth, musical symbols vibrate at a much higher frequency than do word

symbols (even though sometimes music uses words to express ideas and

specific conceptual material), and this is precisely why it is

important to contemplate in musical "language" as well as in normal

language.  Learning to think in musical phrases and harmonies is much

more difficult than thinking in words, is it not?

 

Can you call to mind now a phrase of music, or perhaps a particular

timbre of sound, that communicates something about you more adequately

than a mouthful of words?  Can you think of a melody that expresses

love better, or more accurately, than mere words?  Can you think of a

musical theme that draws you closer to the Divine than perhaps a

sermon?  If so, you are thinking in musical symbols.  Now remember, I

am not talking about the words of some song, I'm talking about the

direct experience of musical flow, or the symbolic relationship of

sound and time when set in meter and tonality.  Have you ever played a

piece of music for a friend or loved one and said, "There; that's how

I feel!"  Again, I'm not talking about the words in some song you

like; I'm talking about the music in and of itself.

 

If you haven't tried this kind of communication, I highly recommend

it.  You might be surprised what you can express to another without

any words at all.  Or, you might be surprised about how much you can

understand without all those words getting in the way.  I encourage

you to take some time to share deeply with some other person things

you cannot share with words.  If you think this is an impossible

assignment, you probably need a little work with your creativity!  If

you see value in taking your contemplative skills to a deeper,

profounder level, try "speaking" with music.  Enter into the

fascinating realm of the master musician, the one who thinks and views

life through the filter of musical symbols.  You might be surprised by

the power of direct experience when there are no words to clutter up

the time/space configuration in which two hearts communicate.  Indeed,

you might even discover that the heart prefers the language of music

to the language of words!

 

When you allow your heart to speak in this way, however, please do so

with great masterpieces.  Surely, your heart deserves no less than the

high vibrational communication level.  Do you remember the story in

the Hebrew Scriptures where powerful King Saul was given to fits of

uncontrollable rage?  If so, you will also remember that the only

thing found to soothe his rattled nerves was music played on a small

harp by a shepherd boy named "David."  Here is a clear example of a

situation where musical symbols were much more powerful than word

symbols in effective communication!

 

Please join me this month in contemplating a lecture I recently

recorded for you entitled, Music for Life.  I hope this teaching will

inspire you to explore communicating in new, perhaps more effective,

ways.  In truth, when you communicate through music, you have to

transcend the ego, for even though the ego does find engagement in

music, communicating through musical masterpieces turns out to be a

"para-personal" experience.  May you have many direct experiences with

Reality as you learn new ways to deepen your communication.

 

 

Your loving teacher,

 

Djwhal Khul

 

http://masterdk.com/Message.cfm

 

Copyright 2008, Vajra Flame Foundation, Ltd.

Reprint prohibited without permission.

 

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Reprinted with permission © 2007


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