MyDoorsAreOpen
Bluelight Crew
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2003
- Messages
- 8,549
What you say about his attempts to demystify some ideas is very much in line with some of the recordings I've heard. He described that a spiritual seeker would be initiated into a mystery school by being made to undergo all manner of ridiculous ordeals and trials. It was only when he realised he'd been made to chase himself in circles that he could finally settle down into the real business of things. Which, if the message was true, would universally be about nothing but embracing the moment. So all these teachers - and indeed he even said this about himself - were running a sort of joke, or even fraud, over their students, in the hopes that the student would see that. Very funny way to look at it.
Watts never speaks about this, but I've heard other writers draw some striking parallels between the little bands children form (think "no girls allowed, keep out the cooties"), and adult fraternal orders. They both deal in:
* pompous and silly titles
* specialized slang (cant, more precisely)
* elaborate and seemingly random traditions
* lurid initiation rituals whose only point is showing how much suffering you're willing to endure for the group's acceptance
* a body of oral history that liberally mixes fact and fancy
* grandiose manifestos and idyllic stated objectives which everyone knows deep down are probably not attainable
* fierce (if sometimes fleeting) loyalty
* rivalries with other similar groups, from friendly ribbing to brutal violence, depending what's at stake
I know that at some point in childhood, it struck me that the only point of putting up with all this mumbo jumbo was to connect with other boys. That was the steak, the rest was all sizzle.
Most modern fraternal orders and civic bodies can trace their influence to underground political movements and occult / mystery religions from centuries past, back when you could easily lose your head for bringing up politics or religion in the wrong company. It's easy to join any institution, really, and get caught up in the little details of how they run, while losing sight of any institution's only real purpose -- to pull people together. Once you've got that purpose habitually in your sights, you don't need all the flaky symbolism anymore, because you've gotten the message it was there to teach you.
I'm not sure if it was Watts, but I once read someone compare Buddhist practice and the entire Buddhist religion to a raft crossing a river. Once you've safely reached the other side, you have no further need for the raft. You can acknowledge the vital role it played, and keep souvenirs of it out of reverence, but you no longer take refuge aboard it for dear life. It has given you what it had to give you and you have received it and moved on a changed person.