We continually talk about the bliss, joy, and ecstasy of deep meditation, but I feel there are not enough topics on weeping. I say weeping because it goes beyond traditional sadness. Yes, we are sad when a loved one dies. This hurts our being, and we wish they are okay, we wish we had done things differently. Weeping is something more than tears we might cry. It is an action of despair, one which saturates our being with no hope in sight. We here are more aware of our bodies and our minds. We here don't shy away from internal sensations, memories, or other charismatic phenomenon. We take it on full force because we know we can take on the challenge and overcome them.
Then, as our equanimity improves, what we weep for changes, deepens, and becomes more refined. Our awareness has improved, and where loneliness might have been unpleasant before, now we experience loneliness free from contact with the senses. We are truly alone. We weep. What arises with stronger equanimity is now beyond the capability of most other people to understand. We ourselves might not even understand what it means. Others might understand part of our grievances, but they do not understand the depth. They do not know why we weep. We are even more alienated than before. We weep. Worse than being alone, now our ability to connect with others has diminished.
The world starts to change as we ourselves changes. What was once solid, something to centre ourselves upon is now not there. We are empty. We weep. How do we fill this void if there is nothing? We weep. The next challenge has brought itself. The fear over seeing a new part of ourselves and the universe slowly dies, and we become stronger. Equanimity improves. By this point we may have become better people. We start giving more, smiling more, and loving more. We are truly becoming living embodiments of God.
Then the next challenge brings itself. Reality starts to become deconstructed. Ideas and experiences we might have had piecemeal before now start their energetic process. We begin to weep, but why? Awareness is deeper than before. Equanimity has improved. We might have started having dreams when we did not before. If we did dream before, now our dreams are lucid. We might be experiencing the blackness of sleep. We might be travelling on the spiritual planes. With increased equanimity, now we cannot ignore ourselves. We cannot ignore our sufferings.
The next challenge presents itself. We weep, but we don't know why anymore. It is like we are weeping for God. Equanimity and awareness are deepening quickly into areas we never thought possible. The world stops feeling real. We weep. What is wrong with me? We weep. Am I becoming mentally sick? We weep. As equanimity improves our fear of opening up new realms of existences fade. We become stronger. Then, the next challenge presents itself, and weeping will continue its process until we improve our equanimity once again.
We talk lots about bliss, joy, and ecstasy of deep meditation here, but I don't feel there are enough topics on weeping. It is part of the process, one that shouldn't be ignored, and one that should be nurtured until we reach our salvation and enlightenment.