“Why?”
(...)
“The man in the forest walked by that mirror a thousand times but didn’t notice his reflection—maybe he saw glimpses and wondered what it was, and then walked on. So strong was his belief that he was alone in the forest that whatever movement he may have seen, he ignored as a phantom of his overactive imagination.” Uncle paused and shook his head slowly. “The mind can so quickly pave over the attractions of the seventh door.”
“The Sonvertos, they’re here as attractors?”
“As we all are,” Uncle said.
“As I said, it’s different for everyone. The attractions of the Great Mystery clear the bleary eyes of the mind, and open the eye of the heart. When this happens, however it happens, the soul is engaged just like the man in the forest when he finally stopped and noticed his reflection. He’s engaged and walks closer, never turning away until he is looking face to face at his reflection. He might even pick up the mirror and take it with him, so he can see himself wherever he goes, and even show others their reflections as well.”
“But where’s the Sonverto in all of this?” I asked. “I understand that the man in the forest represents the individual, the forest represents the distractions of the Controllers, and the mirror is the attraction of the Great Mystery. But where’s the Sonverto?
“The size of the mirror is the Sonverto. If the mirror is the size of a postage stamp, the man in the forest must be inches from it to notice. If the mirror is the size of a house, the angles from which it can be noticed are a million times more numerous. The forest grows in size and complexity with each generation—if the mirror doesn’t, the seventh door effectively shrinks and disappears for all but the most serious of seekers.”
“How do the Sonvertos enlarge the size of the mirror?” I asked, leaning forward.
“They bring the Creator’s channel to the people.”
I shrugged my shoulders and glanced at Kohana, and then to Uncle. “I don’t understand.”
“Would you seek the sun with a candle?” Uncle asked.
I shook my head. “No…”
“Would you seek the Creator with the mind’s logic?”
I shook my head again, believing it was probably the right answer.
Uncle grunted slightly at my lack of conviction. “These are the methods that the Controllers provide to seek our Creator. Use the mind. Use the logical side of your being for that is reliable, that is real, that is… practical. The only problem is that in the search for one’s Creator, it does not work, and so the Controllers allowed faith to join the search. Faith filled the vacuum of logic.
“Faith and logic are not tools to find the seventh door… they are tools to ignore it.”
Uncle paused and rubbed his hands together. “Sonvertos are a long line of spiritual architects who build channels from the individual to the Creator. They enlarge the mirror by example, through words, through images, through stories, through the beat of a drum called the human heart. They show the delusion of logic and faith, and in their place, they encourage the simple virtues of the heart, the imagination of the heart and mind in union. They bring the concept of the Sovereign Integral to the surface where the mind can see it and the heart can touch it.
“The Sovereign Integral consciousness is our destiny—where we will return when we have no density to cover us. No skins… no masks. It’s not a state of consciousness that can be easily achieved—the Controllers see to that.
“However, the Sonvertos show how it can be achieved, even for glimpses and the thinnest of moments.”
“How? How do they show it?” I asked.
“They provide tools that help people to activate their intuitive and contemplative imaginations. This is how people touch into the Sovereign Integral state. There’s no other way to produce the power necessary to move into this high state of consciousness without the imagination. It is the key. But imagination is like a newborn foal that doesn’t know which way to run with its wobbly legs. The Sonvertos provide the tools to assist with the directions to the mirror or seventh door, and then work with the individual to enlarge the mirror, so it doesn’t dissolve into the distractions of the Controller’s forest.”
“What tools do they provide and where does one find them?”
Uncle pulled out a piece of paper from his shirt pocket. It was folded and was clearly old from age and use. “This is an example of such a tool.”
He laid it out on the ground flattening the edges out. On the paper was a drawing that showed a single, large dot in the middle, around it was six other dots, and around each of those dots were six dots and so on, until the dots became so numerous they became impossible to see or count.
“Each of these dots is a behavior. We call these the six heart virtues, and they’re made up of the qualities commonly known as appreciation, compassion, forgiveness, humility…” Uncle looked at Kohana. “Taku dah-kue?”
“…Understanding… .”
“Ha, yes, and valor.” Uncle looked at me with a smile. “You see what an old deer tick I am? But who cares about the names or memorization? It’s enough to simply practice them.”
He pointed to the centermost dot. “This is the Creator. You see the Creator is the original source of these frequencies we call the six heart virtues. They go out from this centermost source and then connect as the Presence.”
“The Presence?”
Uncle nodded. “This is how the Creator extends throughout the universe. The Presence manifests in physical qualities like light, gravity, space, vibration, and so on, and these are like our human presence—they’re physical. There is also a spiritual presence, one that can’t be seen, but is the cause of the physical. The Presence is both the spiritual and the physical qualities.”
“How does anyone sense this Presence or make use of it?” I asked.
“The same way you sense anything non-physical, you feel it.”
“How?”
“By practicing and raising your awareness until you can feel that a heart virtue you are practicing, like forgiveness, is felt as one continuous behavior.”
“What do you mean?”
“If you practice forgiveness to others, even when it’s not returned, it will return to you from the Creator, and you will feel this in subtle ways, and to feel the subtle, you must seek it. You must open yourself to its expression in your life. You must use your imagination.”
“All of this imagination feels like a made-up experience… like I’m creating the experience… it’s not really happening—”
“What you experience is yours,” Uncle said firmly. “If you choose to create through your imagination, and your world reflects this, you have created your world differently from those who allow the Controllers to create their world. Your imagination is your antenna to the Presence. The Presence is your connection to your Creator. The connection is what enables the Sovereign Integral state to exist within the human state.”
Uncle shifted his position to find a more comfortable posture, and pointed to a dot on the paper in front of him. “This is just a picture with pencil markings, but as I’ve talked to you about it, it leapt off the paper and began to hover in your imagination. It’s being examined there. Your mind and heart are processing this image. They are wondering how it can be useful; what practical value it holds. These are all reasonable considerations, but do you know why you are looking at this paper in this way?”
I shook my head. “…No.”
“Because it’s easier to allow the Controllers to control, than to allow yourself to create.”
Uncle let the words hang in the cool, quiet air of the cavern’s ledge.
“Sonvertos teach how to use the imagination, which is the same thing as expanding the size of the mirror?” I asked.
“In part, yes, but it’s all about creation, and the source from which the creation arises. If the source is of the Presence, the creation reflects this and enlarges the mirror or widens the opening of the seventh door. If it is of the Controller’s worldview, unconnected to the Presence, then it enlarges the forest, making the seventh door a little more difficult to find.
“The creations of the Presence are not merely contained in drawings or words, more importantly, they are expressible. They come through our actions—not just physical actions, but the actions of our hearts and mind. Millions of people on the planet know this and practice this, despite the example set forth by the Controllers and their downstream puppets.”
“What do you mean by the actions of our hearts and minds?” I asked.
“Just as I pointed out to you, this drawing became a constellation in your mind, and when it did, it was also in your heart, because they’re one sensory system. This is an action, and this action goes out to the universe. Contemplation, imagination… these are actions… vital actions. What you can generate in your heart-mind system is without limit. It moves out, connects with others, forms new circuitry, and opens the seventh door where all people can feel the liberation of their spirit self and the connection to the Presence they so richly earn by being a human being.”
Uncle’s eyes were jeweled in the clear liquid of tears, but he didn’t turn away, even as one tear fell down his cheek, a willing victim of the sky’s weight. He was a man that seemed so full of love for humanity that I could only wonder how he came to feel this way. I loved humanity, but as an abstraction. I could just as easily say I tolerated humanity or, worse yet, disowned it at times.
“How do you generate these heart virtues as deeply as you’ve done?” I asked.
Kohana smirked a little and caught my attention. “He’s not going to tell you that. One of those virtues will hold him back, but I won’t be so easily silenced.” Kohana grinned. “I’ll tell you a story, with Uncle’s permission.” He paused and looked at Uncle, who casually raised his right hand and nodded slightly.
“There was an anthropologist who came to our rez about ten years ago. She was interested in our sacred sites and ceremonies. She wanted to write a book about our spiritual beliefs. She approached me first, because of my leanings into the White Man’s world. I agreed to let her come to the rez, and I offered to introduce her to the right people—Uncle being one them.
“She and I came on a cold night, and Uncle was not feeling well that night, but I didn’t know that. The anthropologist I could sense was kind of scared, driving out in the middle of nowhere with a big Indian, and she knew I was taking her to meet a real authentic medicine man. Not something most White People do comfortably, because they expect to see a wild-eyed, rattle-shaking, smoke-blowing, deerskin- clad crazy man.” He glanced at Uncle. “No offense.”
“There are times that description isn’t too far off,” Uncle said.
Kohana began to roll up his sleeves on his shirt. “When we arrived at Uncle’s place, I could sense that Uncle was not his usual self, but he never complained, and offered us warm pillows to sit on next to his woodstove. The anthropologist started with her questions, and they were all over the map, and I could tell Uncle was having a hard time navigating her questions—probably not helped by his physical state.
“Any rate, he held up his hand at one point, in the middle of one of her questions, and a hush fell over the room for several seconds. Even the fire was quiet. And then we heard this sound of a wolf howling in the distance. It was this beautiful, plaintive cry that just spilled out and found its way to our ears. We were all transfixed listening to it. Uncle kept his arm raised the whole time as if a reminder to remain silent.
“When he put his arm down, the anthropologist gushed about how Uncle had known the wolf was going to howl, and Uncle held up his arm again, and the anthropologist stopped talking, and we all listened, but there was no sound. A full minute passed in complete and somewhat uncomfortable silence. When Uncle put his arm down he spoke. He told the anthropologist that he had listened to her spirit. It had told him the same story that the wolf had.
“She was lonely. She lived in fear. She was tired of being depressed. Her spirit was waiting to be seen. To be rediscovered. To be allowed the chance to love again, but there was a blockage. The anthropologist was not able to release something. It was something related to a man who had mistreated her …a relationship that had begun with such perfect hopes and then slowly descended into mistrust and fear.
“Uncle stood up and gathered the woman’s hands and pulled her to her feet. By this time, the anthropologist was awestruck at what Uncle had said and confirmed in her expression that he was correct. He had taken her hands and folded them over her heart, and told her to close her eyes, and imagine one thing, one simple thing when she was a child: her mother’s touch when she had forgiven her as a child. The anthropologist did as she was instructed, and soon I could see her body trembling. Uncle told her to take this feeling and give it to the man that had wronged her, and to feel as if the wrong, no matter how cruel it had felt at the time, had been resolved.
“After about three minutes, she opened her eyes and she gave Uncle a huge hug. She laughed nonstop that night as we talked unscripted from that point forward. She wrote her book, but the book wasn’t about Lakota spirituality. It was all about the importance of forgiveness in relationships. She had asked Uncle for permission to write about him and what he’d done that night, but Uncle politely declined.
“The book, last time I checked, had sold hundreds of thousands of copies, was translated into about twelve languages, and our anthropologist was writing more books on the subject of the heart virtues.
“About three years later she called me to ask if she could visit Uncle again… as a friend. I told her I was going out there in a few months, and she could come along if she wanted. During that visit she explained to Uncle what had happened to her from that one experience and asked if he knew. Uncle nodded. She asked if he understood how many people her book had touched. He nodded again. She was trying to say how huge the ripple effect had been from her one meeting, and Uncle was downplaying it like it was no big thing, and I think it was kind of bothering the anthropologist. I could sense it, and I knew that Uncle could, too.
“At the end of our meeting, I was getting ready to go, and Uncle took her outside, and they went on a little walk. They were only gone for about thirty minutes, and when she came back she was all different. When we got to the car and started to drive away, I asked her where Uncle had taken her, and she told me that they had gone to a sacred site to thank the Creator for sharing.
“She explained that the whole trip to visit Uncle was designed to show her gratitude to Uncle. To thank him and show how much his actions had meant to her. He had taken her life and put her on a whole new trajectory, but when she had come out to deliver the message, she had felt snubbed by Uncle—not that he was rude; he just didn’t make a big thing about it.
“She told me he had taken her to a site where the wolves gather some nights to howl. He told her that the wolves deserved her gratitude, because they carried the initial message, he’d simply elaborated on it, just as she had done in writing her book. It was the wolves that had brought her story to him.
“She said that Uncle had shown her how to contact them and to send them a prayer of thanks. They, the wolves, were connected to her, and she would understand in time.
“About a year later I got a call from her, and she had told me that she’d used some of her book proceeds to help fund two animal shelters in her city—she lived in Philadelphia at the time, and that these shelters were the way she felt the wolves wanted her to show her gratitude.
“Only a few weeks after her first shelter had opened, someone had turned in a mangy half-wolf street dog, and when she heard of it, she immediately went to the animal shelter and adopted him.
“She loved that half-wolf like no other person probably could, and the wolf was her constant companion. She sent me pictures—beautiful animal, but the reason I tell you this story is so you can see why Uncle cares so deeply… it’s because the universe cares, because the Creator cares. When the universe and the Creator care so deeply, and you see this care, this expression of the Creator’s heart, you’re happy to be a part of it, knowing you’re only that—a part of it.
“People are just too busy, too distracted by the Controller’s world to take notice of how the Creator works through all channels to bring the virtues of the heart to all people, but people need to be focused on the seventh door to see this. That’s all Uncle was saying. It’s easy to care deeply when you see the Creator caring deeply through all things. You have to be able to interpret the behaviors of people through understanding and compassion in order to see this care of the Creator, and then expand it, adding your human touch.”
I had been absorbed in the story. I had even forgotten my thirst and pain.
Uncle touched my knee gently. “You see, Sonvertos must view the world not as a tangled forest owned and operated by the Controllers, but as a place of mirrors that awaken those who pass by. The circumstance that brings people into your world may seem to be one thing, when it is another.”
“What do you mean?”
“The anthropologist came to write a book on Lakota spirituality, and what she really came to do is to help people learn to forgive and build better relationships as a result. I understood this, because her spirit told me. It was like two different people were meeting with me, one, an academic, hoping to make a name for herself, and the other, a deeply spiritual person who wanted to share her heart with humanity and improve our understanding of forgiveness in the world. This is the case with almost everyone you will meet. They are two different people. There’s the one who is dimensional, conditioned by the Controller’s world and seeking to achieve something.
And there is another one, spiritual in nature that is seeking to live their life as an add-on to the Creator’s world of love, understanding, compassion, forgiveness and all of the bounty that lives in the heart-mind system.
“It requires that you look past the surface dimensional to see—”
“Excuse me…” I interrupted, “but what’s a surface dimensional?”
“I call humans who are attentive to the forest… dimensionals. Surface dimensionals being the first layer—the mask’s people wear. It’s this mask that prevents them from seeing the mirror. Surface dimensionals believe they have freedom and knowledge and success and that this will carry them. These things are enough, and all they need to do is to achieve more of these things and live a good life. For some, this is enough, but most, when they come to me, their spirits want more.”
“More what?” I asked.
“More meaning. More profound feelings. A greater sense of connection. More love. More intimacy. More insight into what is happening in their lives—at the deepest levels. They want to yield to the soul that lives inside them, to get out of its way. To let this soul assert itself in their life.”
“And how do they do that?”
Uncle grabbed a small stick and drew a square in the dirt. “This is the surface dimensional—Kohana calls it ego-personality, and I’m sure it has a thousand different names, but it lives as a result of the Controller’s world design. It is a reflection of this.” Uncle drew a larger square around the first square. “These are dimensional distortions.
These are coverings. These obstruct the light.” He pointed to the two squares with the stick. Then he drew a small circle inside the smaller square. “This is the heart.” Then he drew another circle outside of the two squares. “This is the soul.” Uncle then drew a line between the two circles. “This is the imagination. The heart must imagine the soul!