THE DIAMOND APPROACH
by A. H. Almaas
The Diamond Approach is a contemporary teaching that developed
within the context of awareness of both ancient spiritual teachings
and modern depth psychological theories; hence the perspective
of this teaching recognizes the inherent synthesis between the
spiritual and the psychological domains of experience. The spiritual
and the psychological can be separated only in theory, for in
experience they are two dimensions of the same human consciousness.
Recognizing this truth makes it possible to approach the path
to inner realization informed with modern psychological knowledge,
and thus allows the process of understanding one’s psychological
experience to open one’s consciousness to the deeper truths
of our spiritual nature.
This teaching approaches the path by taking into consideration,
amongst other things, the structure of reality, both inner and
outer. It views reality to be fundamentally the eternal truth
of spirit that manifests itself in various dimensions, from the
deepest dimension of absolute emptiness to the physical realm.
The appearance of this manifestation is what is conventionally
known as reality, including the physical universe and all beings
with their minds and psyches. The inner truth of this reality
is true nature itself, pure spirit, which is the ultimate and
real nature of both the universe and all beings.
View of Spirit
The Diamond Approach views true nature to be both unmanifest
and manifest. The unmanifest is totally nondifferentiated and
without qualities, a mysterious darkness and emptiness in which
consciousness is annihilated as it approaches. Yet this nonmanifest
absolute truth holds in virtuality all potential. By manifesting
it creates the world with all its forms and transformations, which
becomes the appearance of reality; but it also manifests its own
inherent perfections and characteristics, which become the inner
truth of reality. It is significant and central to the understanding
and the methods of the Diamond Approach that manifest true nature
possesses a structure, a structure that gives our experience its
fundamental building blocks and capacities of perception and action.
In other words, as the nonmanifest absolute manifests it differentiates
into dimensions and qualities, so what is virtual and potential
becomes actual and experienceable. Spiritual realization is most
fundamentally the recognition and embodiment of these dimensions
and qualities of true nature, as differentiations of the eternal
spirit.
True nature manifests its fundamental characteristics in five
basic dimensions, all infinite, boundless and coemergent with
each other. First is the dimension of absolute emptiness, which
is responsible for the arising of space in both inner and outer
perception. Second is the dimension of pure nonconceptual awareness,
the clear light responsible for our capacity for perception. Third
is the dimension of pure presence, where being and the knowing
of being are the same thing, responsible for our capacity for
discriminating knowing. Fourth is the dimension of pure universal
love, where presence is sweet and appreciative, which is responsible
for the arising of felt qualities and affects. Fifth is the dimension
of the logos, which is the dynamic dimension underlying all change,
movement and transformation, responsible for our activities and
functionality.
These dimensions form an ontological hierarchy, in the sense
that they become more differentiated and knowable and less subtle
as they move from absolute emptiness outward. They are, however,
not a temporal hierarchy and are fundamentally inseparable, for
all dimensions of true nature are coemergent, giving manifest
true nature a structure. Each one of them is true nature, spirit
itself, and not something else that true nature produces. They
are its originally virtual characteristics which by manifesting
display its possibilities. These dimensions function as the ontological
ground of all appearance, all phenomena, and all experience. [See
Diamond Heart, Book IV, by author]
Structure of Spirit
This structure of true nature is reminiscent of the notion
of the great chain of Being that many teachings and philosophies
have developed. Plotinus, for instance, postulated three basic
dimensions, one emerging from the other: the One, which corresponds
to our unmanifest absolute truth; the Nous or divine mind, which
corresponds to our dimension of pure presence; and the Soul,
which corresponds to our dimension of the logos. In our times,
Ken Wilber, in his far-reaching theory of human experience and
development, utilizes the idea of the great chain of Being to
ground his theory in a view that integrates all dimensions of
reality, from the physical to the spiritual. Thus, like the
Diamond Approach, his theory holds that reality as a whole has
a structure based on the dimensions of true nature. However,
there is a difference, for he views true nature itself as always
structureless and nondifferentiated. For Wilber, spirit is always
transcendent and undifferentiated spirit, but for us this is
only the dimension of pure emptiness or/and that of pure awareness.
Using his terminology, for Wilber spirit is either the causal
level, the pure spirit in its total absoluteness and transcendence,
or the nondual level, while the psychic and subtle levels are
not spirit itself but different kinds of dimensions that are
not purely spiritual in nature.
The Diamond Approach sees spirit itself as structured, as we
described in the above discussion of the five dimensions of reality
or spirit. All five dimensions, not only the absolute dimension,
are true nature. This is similar to the five awarenesses of the
Dhyani Buddha’s in Mahayana Buddhism, which are inherent
differentiations that manifest from Buddha nature without becoming
anything else. The rays of the rainbow are all light, even though
of colored light. In individual experience, one of the dimensions
may dominate consciousness, but in reality all the dimensions
are coemergent, and all are differentiations that manifest necessary
characteristics of true nature. In other words, they are all differentiations
of what Wilber calls the causal dimension, for reality is always
a structured but timeless unfolding.
Essential Aspects
True nature also possesses qualities that are the basis of all
spiritual qualities known to humanity, qualities that make us
human, and which make it possible for us to develop spiritually.
Many traditional spiritual teachings postulate spiritual qualities,
each according to its own unique logos. The logos of the Diamond
Approach views the unmanifest spirit as possessing virtual perfections,
inherent but undifferentiated. As true nature manifests its boundless
dimensions, it can also differentiate these perfections, or perfect
qualities. This is a “horizontal” differentiation
of true nature, in contrast to the “vertical” differentiation
of the boundless dimensions. In other words, these differentiated
perfect qualities can appear in any of the boundless dimensions,
by the ground of this dimension differentiating itself into these
qualities. We call these perfections essential aspects, meaning
differentiated aspects of true nature or spirit. Each quality
remains true nature itself, but appears in a differentiated quality
necessary for the life of the soul and for the development of
human consciousness. These aspects include truth, clarity, spaciousness,
intelligence, existence, will, strength, joy, peace, value, love,
personhood, identity, and so on. These are all qualities of true
nature in all of its dimensions, even when it is unmanifest, for
our spiritual nature eternally possesses such perfections. The
important point here is that these are horizontal differentiations
of the causal dimension, and that such perfections can arise in
our experience as differentiated and delineated qualities. They
are not affects, images or responses, but the ontological presence
of true nature itself appearing qualified with one of these perfections.
[See Essence, by the author]
The Soul
True nature manifests not only its dimensions and aspects but
also vital energy and matter, thus constituting all of reality.
We do not include energy and matter in the dimensions of true
nature because they can be experienced from within their own perspectives,
without recognition of their spiritual origins, while the boundless
dimensions and the essential aspects can only be experienced as
the spiritual presence of true nature.
True nature further differentiates its logos dimension into what
we call the souls of sentient beings. More accurately, the human
consciousness is nothing but a soul, an individualization of the
logos that embodies both true nature and the dimensions of energy
and matter. We are each an embodied soul, where our consciousness
is nothing but the consciousness of the logos appearing through
a particular physical body. Our awareness comes from the dimension
of pure awareness; our knowingness, and hence our mind, comes
from the dimension of pure presence; and our heart comes from
the dimension of pure universal love. Our human and spiritual
qualities come from the essential aspects, and our animal characteristics
come from the dimensions of vital energy and matter as they arise
through the consciousness of the soul.
The soul is an organism of consciousness, where the creative
dynamism of the logos appears in an individuated field as a growing
and learning person. It is the consciousness that perceives, and
the matrix or field where all experience takes place. The soul
develops and grows, matures and learns. It needs to go through
this development and learning in order to consciously and knowingly
embody its true nature with all of its dimensions and aspects.
It begins as an organism of consciousness, grounded in true nature,
but dominated by the animal drives of the physical vehicle. In
other words, the soul begins with the potential of both the angel
and the animal, whose characteristics arise in its experience
depending on circumstances and environment. The soul begins its
development through interaction with its environment, especially
with its primary care givers. It is here that the insights of
object relations theory and those of self psychology, contemporary
developments in psychoanalytic theory, are useful in understanding
how the soul grows and develops, since its initial development
is what is referred to as ego development, with its cognitive
and affective components.
Ego Development
Initially the soul grows primarily by internalizing its interactions
with its primary care givers. Such internalized object relations
pattern its experience of itself. It begins as a formless organism
of consciousness, but the images and impressions from these object
relations structure its field of experience, developing it into
a sense of being an individual and autonomous person with a recognizable
identity. The personal history carried by such ego structure contributes
to its particular character and personality. By its nature ego
development of the soul structures its experience through the
development of a mental image of self that becomes the primary
lens through which it looks at itself and reality. This becomes
the basis of dualistic perception and experience, and hence the
primary obstacle in spiritual development. Nevertheless, ego development
is a natural stage of the development of the soul, necessary for
the development of its cognitive capacities and ability to live
in the world.
In fact, the primary ego structures of the self are patterned
according to specific essential aspects; the context of the maturation
and essential development of the soul, these structures are actually
transitional phases on the way to essential embodiment. For example,
the structure of knowing oneself as an autonomous individual is
patterned on the personal aspect of essence, where the soul can
experience itself as a spiritual presence and at the same time
as a person who can relate in a real way to others.[See The Pearl
Beyond Price, by author] The other fundamental pattern of ego
is the structure of self-identity, which gives the self the capacity
to recognize itself and orient its actions. This is modeled according
to the essential identity aspect, the point of light and presence
that makes it possible for the soul to abide in its nature in
self-realization.[See The Point of Existence, by author]
Realization
As an ego self the soul is unaware of its true nature, and its
experience of itself is largely patterned by mental structures
created in the past. However, even these structures reflect and
point to elements of its true nature. By being aware of one’s
inner states, and inquiring into them in an open and open-ended
manner, the soul can begin to see these states for what they are,
soul states patterned by mental structures from early childhood,
with their related affects and memories. Seeing the mental nature
of this structuring can then allow the soul to stay open without
being completely patterned by mental images. This then opens up
the inner dimension of space, which in turn allows the arising
of the essential aspects related to the associated ego structures.[See
The Void, by author] The soul begins to recognize its spiritual
potential as states of presence qualified by the perfections of
Being.
The method of inquiry is a central practice in the Diamond Approach.
Inquiry is a particular application of a manifestation of true
nature that functions as inner guidance. This guidance also leads
the soul to a direct experiential understanding of a situation.
The arising of the essential aspects connects the soul to its
essence and opens it to its inner essential guidance. In the course
of working in the Diamond Approach, the soul learns the appropriate
attitude or inner posture that engages this essential guidance,
which then leads the soul towards deeper exploration of its experience
and life. Other essential aspects arise with the insight and understanding
which arise from the inquiry, until the major ego structures are
finally seen clearly, confronted and understood. This process
ushers the soul into the boundless dimensions of true nature,
which allows the soul to perceive and appreciate a more vast view
of reality. Along with this greater perspective the soul comes
to a more objective understanding of itself, of the relation of
the soul to both true nature and reality. Thus the process of
inquiry becomes a path of freedom and inner realization, leading
to a deeper and more comprehensive realization of true nature.
Diamond Inquiry
In the Diamond Approach, the inquiry through which the soul
explores the self and its experience is informed by the insights
of depth psychology. Here modern psychological knowledge becomes
quite useful to support the understanding and transcendence of
the ego self. The field of transpersonal psychology has articulated
the need for psychological work in the spiritual journey. Ken
Wilber, in particular, has pointed out the usefulness of the insights
and methods of object relations theory in particular stages of
the inner journey.
The method of the Diamond Approach shares this perspective but
makes it more specific and develops it in different directions.
The method uses the insights of object relations theory, amongst
others, not only to see through general conditioning from past
experience, but to specifically understand and penetrate particular
ego structures that are precisely related to associated essential
aspects. It inquires into the structures of experience that ultimately
reflect the structures of true nature. Further, since the primary
barriers to inner realization are the mental and dualistic tendencies
of the self, it explores these barriers directly and specifically,
by inquiring into the ego structures underlying them. So psychological
knowledge is useful for the support of the process of inner realization
not only in general, and not only at certain stages, but specifically
and at all stages where ego structures pattern the experience
and action of the soul. We find that such structures are actually
what patterns conditioned experience at all stages of the inner
journey, where the deeper we are in the journey the more fundamental
and basic are the structures we encounter.
The method of the Diamond Approach inquires into the structure
of reality as a whole, ego structures, essential structures and
the structures of the universe. The entry into the boundless dimensions
of true nature reveals them as the necessary underlying ground
for the true inquiry, which makes it possible to objectively understand
and penetrate the patterns and structures of perception and Being.
This inquiry synthesizes modern psychological knowledge with meditation
practices and attitudes, for the essential manifestation that
guides this inquiry has the capacity to simultaneously utilize
the knowledge of time and that of timelessness.
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