A Tale for our Times.
A Psychological Interpretation of the story of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden.
“There is nothing either good or bad,
but thinking makes it so”. Shakespeare.
Introduction.
I have disliked the story of Adam and Eve and the Garden of
Eden ever since I first heard it (quite some time ago now).
I thought that it was highly ungallant of Adam to blame
Eve; that the serpent had a rough time as well; all of them get chucked out of
the Garden of Eden; and what was wrong with eating of the Tree of Knowledge
anyway? – isn’t gaining knowledge what you’re supposed to do in life? God
seemed a bit mean about the whole thing as well; quite vengeful in fact. Why
would I want anything to do with Him? Not to mention hoping I could find a lot
better husband than that wimp Adam.
I also felt the implied blame; that being thrown out of
Eden was the woman’s fault; it seemed to me to be part of some kind of built-in
failure if you were born a woman; a way of explaining why you didn’t count, or
were automatically wrong in whatever way. Men use it as the ultimate reason not
to listen to a woman! This story is told to a great many people! It’s a story I
would have thought that women could do perfectly well without.
So, the years have gone by and even though I forgot about
such things, yet still the questions remained – what on earth was this story
about?
I have seen various interpretations over the years,
although none of them made much sense to me. Could this story make sense in any
way and is there anything that can be learnt from it?
My aim is to look at this story in a natural psychological
manner, and try to unravel what the words are saying while remembering that
these concepts are translations from a different time and culture.
The story.
The story really begins with God making the world in 6 days
and His seeing that it was All Good. It then turns to the making of the Garden
of Eden, with Adam being made/formed ‘in the image of God’ for the purpose of
to ‘till it and keep it’. There is also the strong implication that Adam is
important for the Naming of all things. He is expressly commanded not to eat of
the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil (TKGE), with a warning that he will
surely die.
Adam’s female partner is formed from Adam’s rib, and Adam
names her Woman. The bible specifically states that they were naked and not
ashamed; they neither knew nor noticed whether they were covered or not; they
accepted themselves as they were. They were quite un-selfconscious as is any
young child or animal.
The serpent tells the woman, the fruit of TKGE is good to
eat, and it will make you ‘more like God’. So she eats it, gives it to Adam,
and then their ‘eyes were opened and they realised they were naked’, so they
tried to cover up (aprons of fig leaves). This was the first decision that they
made that they were not alright as they were.
God comes walking in the garden and can’t find Adam,
because they are both hiding from Him.
[So, if God is all-seeing and all-powerful, and knows
everything all the time, how come he couldn’t find Adam? I was brought up with
the implication that God could stick his finger on you, no matter where you
were in the whole wide world; in other words ‘you can’t hide’, and so you had
better be good. In this story, God has to call out ‘where are you?’, so, can
you hide, or not? Does God see everything, or not?]
So then they are found out, and there’s a lot of blaming –
no-one is going to take responsibility here. Eve blames the snake and Adam
blames Eve.
God curses the serpent, then the woman, then Adam;
apparently comprehensively and thoroughly. There’s a lot about getting back to
the dust – “you are made of dust”.
The story then moves on.
Adam names his wife, Eve. [Rather a change in pace here.]
God gives Adam and Eve clothes, [which seems quite kind of
him?]
Then God throws them out of Eden and then makes sure that
they can’t get at the Tree of Life (TL) by guarding the garden with cherubim
and a flaming sword; which seems a bit ‘dog-in-the-manger-ish’. But before that
he says ‘the man has now become like one of us, knowing good and evil. He must
not be allowed to eat of the TL and live forever.’
So now we start asking questions.
What is the Garden of Eden?
We don’t know, but for most of us it has the quality of
Heaven on Earth; a garden
of God. A divine garden
that’s beautiful; it’s warm, and the weather’s perfect, and everything we need
just drops into our hands. So, we don’t have to do anything do we, even
though we are supposed to ‘till and keep’? It’s all there - how nice. But why
do we need a heaven on earth as well as a heaven above? This would mean that there
are 2 of them. So…
What do we think Heaven is, and why do
we want it?
I think most people would consider heaven as a place where
everything is comfortable and ‘lovey-dovey’ and nice, and we don’t have to do
anything, (no body, and so no work) and it just stays comfortable and nice and
most of all safe (no ‘bumps in the night’) forever. This is a terribly
long time, which gives a very static quality. Would we get bored if we only
played harps forever?
I suspect that we do carry an unconscious idea of what
Heaven is, and I suspect that that is what we expect/wish that Life could be,
especially in the Garden. Somewhere where we do not have to do anything,
and it all just drops into our hand when we hold it out. Instead we find
ourselves out of the Garden and that Life on Earth is not very heavenly at all.
Heaven thus becomes taught as ultimately a Reward for suffering or
enduring/coping sufficiently with life as lived on earth (once!?); i.e., we
need to be good; thinking and doing the right things to make sure we get back
in.
Another way of saying the above is that for us the ultimate
reward for our Life is to get Off Earth as fast as possible, without committing
suicide, (because that is ‘cheating’). We are using and following
religious/spiritual/’heavenly’ creeds as a way of coping with the fear we have
of living on earth.
We also assume/are taught that God lives in heaven, and
therefore, not on earth. But when we are in heaven there is also the quality
that although we are ‘in the house of God’, He is not really accessible to us.
He is a long way away; the boss, and no relationship except perhaps being told
if we are ‘good or bad’, and other people/beings help us with that.
What is the Difference between the
heavens?
So, what were Adam and Eve doing in Eden that they would not have been doing in
Heaven? Adam has been placed there to ‘Till/Work it and Keep/Sustain/Care for
it’. Adam will have to do physical work if he wants to eat. Keeping implies to
me that we are in charge of ensuring that all God’s creations are kept very
alive and very well to keep them going, as in, sustain and protect them. I take
this as the primary instruction for humanity. Look after the garden and the
animals for man’s own sake. (In the process of learning to look after God’s creations,
we learn to look after ourselves as well.)
The problem here is that looking after one’s body, and
tilling and keeping a garden and staying alive and well involves physical
effort. Perhaps we are supposed to actually do something after all.
What then is the difference between
being in or out of Eden?
We are not specifically told that Adam talked/communed with
God, but the implication is there because they (A&E) hid after eating the
fruit. Thus, in Eden,
we are accessible to God/Life and He to us. ‘God comes walking in the
Garden’. This does not happen in Heaven, and it does not seem to happen out of
the Garden either. Talking/communing implies relationship and equality and the
Garden appears to be the only place it can happen.
Also, in Eden,
although they are ‘naked’, they don’t notice the differences between their own
and other bodies or animals. They were not ‘ashamed’ of their bodies. Once
having eaten the fruit, they consider themselves naked and cover themselves
‘down there’, (aprons only, not the breasts), and are afraid of God, so they
hide and become inaccessible to God, who wanted to and still wants to (?) talk
to them. They then have to be thrown out of Eden to stop them from eating of the Tree of
Life.
Well, then, what are the animals doing that’s different
between being in Eden
or not? The answer here seems to be that there is no difference. In the wild
(whatever actually remains on earth currently) animals eat and are eaten and
Life flows on, maintaining its extraordinary beauty and balance. The birds in
my garden hunt for food every day, but all still have to keep a watchful eye
for predators. The animals have not been thrown out – they are still there.
Neither do the animals need warning not to eat of the TKGE. They will have eaten
the fruit and can, with no consequences. So, the problem of being thrown out of
Eden is man’s
alone. If animals have no trouble with the TKGE, and humans do, then the
problem lies with our being made ‘in the Image of God’. So, why and how?
What IS the Image of God?
Man alone has been fashioned in the image of God, so what
are these qualities that distinguish us from other forms of life.
Our mind has 2 parts which are split.
The mind of man has 2 parts; the Conscious and the
Unconscious. (We know this because we can think about our thinking, as in,
‘what was I thinking?’.) The Conscious is that inner part of us of which we are
somewhat aware, and the Unconscious is basically all the rest. It’s estimated
that the Conscious is about 10% and the Unconscious 90%, so there is a very
large part of ourselves that we know nothing about.
For most people the Unconscious is almost not there; it is
UnReal to us and we barely take it seriously if at all. We don’t know what is
there inside us and we ignore it and yet we are ignoring such a very large part
of ourselves. It’s as if we owned a very big house, but only occupied the
servant’s quarters and never explored the rest, so we have no idea who/what is
there. We don’t know our selves or our potential. The 2 parts of us do not know
the other part. They are separate.
God’s mind is not split.
God is built the same way, by definition, but He does
know His Unconscious because he uses His creation/manifestation of Life to make
his Unconscious Real to Himself and His own Conscious. Life is made when
the Conscious is unified with the Unconscious, which is called ‘making the 2
one, ie Unity’. He is Realizing His Unconscious by giving Life to an-other and
another and so on…., and He really likes doing that. This is Creation. He is
using the process of giving Life to tell Himself about Himself.
It is very powerful and amazing to be able to do this, and
we want to do that too (because we are built the same way) and being alive on
Earth is the way for us to find out how.
But, using both parts of our minds in synch, ie
Unity, (making the 2 one) cannot happen if we are busy ignoring our
Unconscious. Turning our awareness to the external world and judging what we
find short-circuits our own quest for Unity and we won’t be able to ‘be like
God’. Hence God tries to warn us not to eat of the fruit of trying to ‘know’
everything ‘out there’. We can’t do it, and we’re looking in the wrong
direction to boot.
This puzzle of how we can work out how to be and do God is
a strong drive for human beings whether we know it or not, and it is why the
snake was able to ‘tempt’ Adam & Eve by telling them that eating the fruit
of the TKGE would make them ‘more like God’. Remember that A&E are all of
us as human beings.
It is important to remember that animals are Unconscious,
so the TKGE is not going to affect them. They are not trying to control
anything out there; they are learning about living through their sensing and
their experiencing and the snake’s advice to us is actually useful to us as well
as it. It is us humans who get into trouble with that tree.
However, another of our ‘talents’/proclivities seems to be
Naming.
Naming. Adam is also there for ‘Naming’. Can we
humans assume that animals don’t Name things? I do not know, but I do know that
we simply continue naming and labelling forever. Most people would not be able
to not name something for an hour; we cannot not name/label things. Naming
identifies our own experiences to us for ourselves. The implication of the
story is that God wants us to name what we find. The trouble is how/what we
name things, and the names/labels we use, because ‘naming’ implies
identification which implies contrast/comparison. We need to be careful about
our comparisons.
Naming is very important and I think it is easy to miss.
The story goes ‘out of the ground (earth) God formed
(makes/creates) every beast of the field and every bird of the air, and brings
them to the man to see what he would call them’, and that became its name. The
only way I can ‘get at’ this concept is to imagine what it would be like to
have made all these fantastic and wonderful things, and then just hand them
over to my child to name them whatever it pleased, with the instruction to look
after it. This is a tremendous gift as well as a great delight in whatever
the child does with it.
Being able to think about our thinking, wanting to be like
God, and labelling our experiences, are the attributes that equip us to
learn about who we are through our experiences, but notice that these inbuilt
‘tools’ that we have can be used incorrectly as well as correctly.
To me, the implication of all of this is that God wants us
to have the physical experience of Life and He wants to know what we make of
it. It delights Him. He knows that it is all good. We are the ones who are not
very sure about that bit. But it is also clear that Life on Earth is a Gift,
and we’re not sure about this either.
So then we turn to….
What is this Tree of Knowledge of Good
and Evil?
The bible story specifically refers to the tree as the Tree
of Knowledge of Good and Evil. Wikipedia tells us that the words should have
been translated as the Tree of Knowledge of Everything or the Tree of All
Knowledge.
Any explanation/interpretation will have to encompass both
concepts.
The name is commonly shortened to the Tree of Knowledge. We
admire knowledge; we think it’s good to know lots, and we admire those who know
lots; we can let them tell us what to do. Yet how does knowing everything lead
to the effects outlined in the story, naked, afraid etc.?
What then, is this ‘Everything’ we think we want to know?
Everyone has their own ideas about what everything is. It is not possible to
know everything, and we kind of know that and keep wishing we did. We think
knowledge of everything might help bring control (of fear). Maybe we would be
more powerful and know what to do to manipulate life to give us what we want.
There are 2 things that we don’t notice here.
One of them is that this ‘Everything’ that we want to know
about is all that is in your life that is external to you. It is not
knowledge of you; it is knowledge of everything but you.
The focus of your attention has become external to you. You
are now ‘looking out’ rather than a ‘looking in’. It is a focus on the world
rather than on your own self, and then we start trying to know everything about
the external world using our inbuilt naming and comparing.
The other thing that we don’t always notice or remember is
that there is a difference between knowledge as a concept or information about
whatever, or what you think you know, and the actual ‘Knowing’ that
comes primarily from your own experience through your body’s senses. It is the
difference between theory and practice, and we have to be careful about which
is which. In this story the TKGE is about our concepts rather than the
actuality/reality of our own experience.
Eve and the Snake
Eve has been formed from Adam’s rib. She has Adam’s
abilities because she is made from him. She has come from inside him. This is
often taken as a weakness on her part and a potential depletion of man, but I
suspect that she is more able to feel or sense into another’s internal state.
That’s where she ‘comes from’ so to speak.
We are not told what she is doing, but I would imagine she
was observing and getting to know herself, her surroundings and the creatures
in the garden. And she would be ‘sensing in’ which is a skill used by all
‘primitive’ peoples. I also imagine that she observed animals eating the
fruit of the TKGE without any ill effect. But Adam has already told her
that if they eat the fruit they will die, so she would be immensely
curious as to what was going on here.
If she was ‘sensing in’ to the snake, it would be saying,
‘sense everything, feel everything, touch everything, know everything,
experience everything. This is what makes all of us Know Everything (in our
world). For the snake, Knowing comes through the senses of its body; its
experience, and the snake is the very closest to the earth. The snake doesn’t
have the self-awareness or the labelling that humans have. It simply
experiences All of it with no judgement in terms of avoiding doing things in
case it might have a ‘bad’ time. It still goes out and does ‘snaky’ things. As
with all animals, it uses all its senses, resources, and skills, and it has to
be careful and wary to be successful and stay alive. It is using all its senses
all the time to survive.
She will have tried the fruit through the snake’s example
and advice which was correct for it.
We continue to consider the snake as a dreadful beast that
lied to us, but what if its advice is correct for people as well as animals?
The actual problem is the difference in understanding between animals and
humans; there is a difference in attributes. The snake is not talking about the
knowledge of good and evil that will help us have a more ‘heavenly’ or easier
time; the snake is telling us something completely different. It is talking
about the knowing that comes through its own senses and experience, because
that is all of what it knows. It is we ourselves who confuse trying to know
‘everything about everything’ as ‘being like God’. It is our own attributes
that are getting us into trouble because we are using them incorrectly when we
label concepts/things as ‘good or bad’, and think that we know about something
when we actually do not.
Eve does not notice any effect on her, and she then offers
it to Adam. Adam has the choice of eating it or not. He can listen to Life or
listen to Eve. However, curiosity and exploration, particularly of forbidden
fruit, appears to be built in to us humans, and there’s a certain inevitability
here.
The Temptings
We are tempted by the fruit of the TKGE. We want to know it
all. Not only do we wish to be like God, but I think we really do not like not
knowing what will happen next. If we have knowledge of everything then that
should help us navigate Life, and in particular help us keep the ‘good’ bits
and avoid the ‘bad’. We are thinking that if it makes us ‘wise and God-Like’,
then we will be able to direct our lives as we want them to be, and be gods in
our own world.
But what actually happens is not what we expect.
Eating of the Fruit of the TKGE.
Specifically, eating of this fruit leads to..
- We become aware of our nakedness (we begin to compare - to
what?).
- We feel a need to cover ‘down there’ (from whom? and
why?)
- We run and hide and then…
God can’t ‘find’ us.
In steps then;
Firstly; our attention which was internal to us and
un-selfconscious while in the garden has turned its focus to the world out
there. Animals are completely un-selfconscious. They do not spend their time
comparing themselves to ‘anybody’ else at all. ‘Self-conscious’ means looking
at ourselves from an-other’s point of view, ie external to self. And then,
We try to encompass this with our comparing, judging and
naming, and notice above all that we are an animal. And then, we decide we’re a
pretty fragile looking animal; just skin and no covering and feeling very
exposed (naked), and then,
We try to make ourselves feel more secure. The fig leaves
are an attempt to cover the base chakra which is concerned with our connection
to the earth; (security; feeling safe), and then,
We take fright, (the coverings are not enough) and bolt off
to hide as fast as we can – it is overwhelming.
Being alive on earth as an animal is pretty different from
‘heaven’ after all and now highly unsafe. We are now hiding from life and God.
Nakedness is a comparison word which is looking externally;
skin versus fur or feathers. Adam’s use of the word ‘naked’ told God what had
happened.
If the purpose of Life on Earth is for us to learn about
ourselves and our capabilities, then we need to learn the difference between
Knowledge (told stuff) and the Knowing/Understanding that comes only from
experience (we have to do stuff and find and realize things for
ourselves).
This focus on the external and the consequent fear,
judgement and avoidance makes us ‘die’ to the risks in life, and we can no
longer be naturally ourselves or engage in Life/living. We are not going to
welcome experience unless we know beforehand what’s going to happen (we are
judging it) which defeats the whole purpose, and we are not going to grow in
self-awareness. We are afraid of Life and living, and we hide when God comes
walking in the garden. It is possible to hide from God, and He can’t find us
when we do.
This is what happens when we have eaten of the fruit of the
Tree of Knowledge of Everything or of Good and Evil. We start judging
everything.
Then why is the TKGE in the garden?
Thus the next question is why is the tree there in the first
place? But All of life has to be there. If we are of God/Life, why do we need
something different from God/Life?
God can warn us about it, and has, but we have choice, as
always.
I suspect that, once again, we are assuming that if God
says it is All Good, that means that it is all heavenly, but in heaven we are
dead (static and knowing only theory), and God wants us to have Life, and the
experience of being part of it, and I suspect also that Life has to encompass
All things. It is the so-called ‘good’ that teaches us about ‘bad’ and vice
versa. All of it is in fact a duality, and it is these contrasts that awaken
our awareness of ourselves; ‘consciousness loves contrast’.
The cursings
These follow after Adam and Eve have hidden and then, when
found out, have blamed others rather than themselves.
Thus, the cursings follow their blamings. So, what is
blame?
Blame holds decisions and judgement. Its use
can be of self or others or whatever. It ‘feels’ easier and better, because it
helps us keep a distance or detachment from our own feelings of guilt or shame
at our part in this situation.
Thus it….
·
Implies
something should be different from what it actually is and indeed that you know
what that should be. You can’t accept the reality and prefer denial. We will
also wish to control the situation in some manner if possible and wish/demand
that the situation be changed.
·
Disempowers
us – we’re not going to look at our own part in this, and hence we become
powerless – it’s not my fault, I’m a victim, so I could not avoid this – you
made me do it, and so on. Its use shrinks us – we cannot grow.
·
Builds
a barrier (or even enmity) between ‘blamer’ and ‘blamed’ – the guilty person
should ‘pay’, which may suit me very well. There is a disconnection.
·
Prevents
any further information/dialogue between the parties, or any real partnership,
or shared endeavour. Thus, it ends relationship.
…All of which lead to increasing fear and greater pain.
God ‘curses’ the serpent/snake first, then the woman, then
the man.
For the snake, he says ‘on your belly, you shall crawl’
which has led various people to wonder if it used to have legs. I’m not sure
about such things, but the gist of it is that the snake shall be the lowest of
the low, and that is how we think of snakes, so much so that it is supposed to
be symbolic of Satan. Yet other cultures do not think of snakes in such a way.
The woman’s attitude to the snake as the ‘cause’ of her distress puts tension
and distance between them. There will be no befriending or potential sharing
because there is blame. In blaming the snake, Eve now fears it and she is
disconnecting herself from a major symbol of feminine energy in other cultures,
and from close connection with the earth.
Similarly, Adam’s blaming of Eve puts distance between
them. Guilt is painful; trying to ‘make it up’ with someone who wants to keep
blaming us is painful, Eve will suffer more pain. The distance between them
will mean that neither will be able to fully utilise each others’ skills, or be
really in equal partnership.
However, notice here that God does not actually ‘curse’
anyone or anything that He has made because He knows perfectly well that He is
only cursing Himself. So, if we humans think of it in this way, we will be
getting it wrong.
These ‘curses’ are actually the natural consequences of
blaming others, and for Adam, of having eaten the fruit, which has changed his
attitude to Life and being in the Garden of Eden, and his connection to God,
because of the change in focus regarding the self from internal to external .
When you focus on the external, Name/label/judge/decide
things as good or bad, and baulk at exploring and experience because you are
afraid, you are always thrown out of the Garden. You are dying to Life.
Thistles can be a dreadful weed or a medicinal herb, or
information about the state of your soil. Your attitude is your decision is
your choice.
Is working the soil, and eating what you grow, a blessing
or a curse? It is nothing but your thinking/naming/’knowledge’ that makes it
so. [Hence the quote from Shakespeare at the beginning of this piece.] What you
have ‘made’ of Life (i.e. decided about it) is making your life.
There is also much about dust. We are made of dust and
return to dust. Dust is earth without water. We are made of earth and so are
all other living things. It is our mortal ground.
Being told we are made of earth/dust and will go back to it
is not a ‘be-littl’-ing as we tend to think it is. It is actually an instruction
that with such a direct connection with the earth, we can consciously connect
to Earth as we think about it/her and desire to do so. Thus, we can use Earth
as a source of energy for ourselves whenever we want, and doing this
will help us feel safe. God was trying to tell us how to feel safer and
therefore less frightened.
The aftermath
Then, after the ‘curses’, God says ‘man has become like one
of us knowing good and evil…’. This sentence puzzles all of us, but it may
simply be a reference to understanding the things that tempt man. Man has got
what he wanted, but it isn’t good for him, and he is now in great danger of
being able to access the Tree of Life. I take this to mean that ‘living’ while
‘dying to the reason for being alive’ is not the way to go.
God gives them clothes, drives them out, (they have, of
course, driven themselves out) and protects the garden with cherubim and a
whirling and flashing sword in the East. What are these?
There is little in the bible about cherubim, but it appears
to be a symbol of ‘realized’ man; a man who knows all of himself, which is
quite something.
The sword is also a puzzle, but I can think of one flaming
sword that few people will face, and that’s the burning fiery discomfort in the
gut from guilt and shame that occurs when we are faced with our own part in the
things that happen to us, and the consequent dent in our self-concepts. Many
people would die rather than face this sword.
CONCLUSIONS. WHAT’S IT ALL ABOUT?
What are we left with?
I think we are left with a clearer understanding of
·
How
we get thrown out of the garden, and
·
How
we get back in, and
·
Why
we want to be there, and
·
What
we’re supposed to do when we’re in it,
all of which seems to me to
be quite handy really.
We can even hypothesise about the Reason for Life, and what
we and God might be wanting.
Therefore, in order….
How do we get Thrown Out? By eating of this particular
tree.
When we focus on Everything but ourselves we are ‘looking’
the wrong way. There is too much for us to cope with. Fear, judgement and
avoidance overwhelm us. The External focus debilitates us.
The irony here is that usually we try to cope with this
fear by trying to eat even more of this fruit of the TKGE.
Almost every aspect of our current media is a focus on the
external. All opinions are about external things. Remove your focus from the
external and stick with yourself and what you know and find for yourself. In
particular, practice suspending judgement, and try seeing what happens when you
remove blame from anything, including yourself, as in, simply work with what
is.
How do we Get Back In? Stop wanting to be ‘above it
all’; hiding from life and wanting to get back to the ‘safety’ of Heaven. We
are of earth and we are an animal, and here to learn about ourselves through
experiences. (Notice that all animals need clean air, clean water and clean
earth.) Develop your senses, skills and capabilities, and take pleasure in what
you achieve, create and realize. (Developing your senses includes refraining
from deafening your hearing and ingesting vast amounts of sugar.) Keep your
attention focused internally. In fact, a primary commandment appears to be
‘Know Thyself’ as in, realize/remember/recognise all of you.
Take responsibility and understand your own part in all
of your experiences, particularly when you would most like to blame anyone
or anything else. Face the flaming sword.
The greatest changes in the last 25 years include the
access to ‘alternative’ information/ideas about life, and the modern
development of tools to face your own judgements and to learn about yourself
and your uniqueness (All your own Good and All your own Bad).
However much these tools remain under the radar of public
awareness, they are not far away, but they are certainly not part of our
standard institutions.
Realized woman is able to stand up and be herself before
and with God/Life.
Why do we want to be there? I suspect one of our deepest
wishes is to ‘talk with God’. In the Garden of Eden (where our focus is internal)
we are not afraid or self-conscious and we can welcome and embrace Life and be
in partnership with it. It is in this way that we can become truly safe. The
implication in this tale is that God/Life has never stopped wanting to talk to
us. It is we who are afraid and hide.
What are we supposed to be doing when
we’re there?
Doing what God/Life does. Learning about who we really are and creating,
wonderful, beautiful, useful things. Notice that, as we create, we learn about
ourselves. That’s pretty good, so create more. Our children are brilliant at
telling us about ourselves; we are just not always sure we want to know.
Children are of course, not the only way. Having fun, learning about ourselves,
playing with our children, making things of earth, looking after all the other
animals and ourselves so that we are all vibrantly well and happy (Tilling and
Keeping it). Coming into equal partnership with all Life/God so that it can
talk to us and we can talk to it so that we learn about ourselves and others.
It is in this partnership with God/Life that we can find a security that is
much greater and more use to us than being safe because nothing can happen to
us. It is the security that needs no security.
We learn to treat all as sacred because God/Life is in
everything.
And make friends with the snake; its advice was correct.
Get close to the earth and feel it; experience, experience, experience and find
out for yourself.
Share what we have found in our own uniqueness with others;
come into relationship. We are not meant to be islands. We build through shared
resources.
And I suspect that this is the reason for it all, and I
suspect that this is what we both (God and humans) want. The actual Getting
back into the Garden is an individual task. The only person who can work on
this is you. Start when you want.
And specifically..
To Adam.
Stop blaming Eve for your choices, or your feelings of
insecurity or lack of control in life. (Whole religions may come apart at the
seams here.) You can find security for yourself if you are able to give it to
another. Are you able to use your natural masculine abilities for the purpose
of protecting/keeping life?
You have much to gain from coming into equal partnership
with women, and learning to appreciate her skills which are different from
yours.
Till and keep the Earth together. We only have one.
To Eve.
Stop blaming the snake and go back to making friends with
it. Listen to whatever else it has to say. Go back to all Life – the natural
living world as much as you can, rather than the man-made world. ‘Sensing in’
is a woman’s inheritance. How do we use it? It needs peace and quiet and time
(how much of these have you got?) to blossom and develop. Remove your energy
and attention from Adam; you are not guilty and never were. Wait for Adam to
come into partnership with you first, otherwise he’s not going to learn, and he
may not be worthy of you. He’ll ‘rule over you’, as in, take no notice of you.
[For a marvellous description of a realized Eve, read the
Anastasia books.]
To both.
Partnership brings more when together than 2 single people
can do by themselves. We know that.
Earth needs all the skills of both men and women together.
And above all – Know Thyself, which means know all of
yourself including what’s in your Unconscious; (this is a bit like finding out
who else lives in the rest of that large house you own). This is the Reason for
Life. We are part of God and God likes knowing Himself and does it through
everything that He has Created. We do this ourselves when we learn who we are
through our children and we delight in their learning (hopefully).
Make beautiful and/or useful things.
The more you know yourself, the safer you will feel. There
will be less fear in your life, less need to hide from God/Life, and you will
be able to listen to Life, and what it has to say.
Life is a gift. Gratitude can help us realise this.
‘Talking’ to God/Life.
I have used God/Life throughout this discussion as a way of
‘getting a handle’ on concepts such as ‘Talking to God/Life’.
When I was growing up my concept of being spoken to by God
included trying to be ‘good’ enough to be spoken to, and then I might hear a
booming voice ‘telling’ me what to do. However, not only has this not happened,
it is not what I call partnership. My reasoning for using God/Life rather than
simply God goes…
·
If
God/Life is an energy much greater than I am, and
·
God
creates all Life, as in, this energy/breath is in us all, then
·
All
Life is a manifestation of God energy and therefore any manifestation of Life
(rocks, plants, animals people and circumstances) can ‘speak’ to you, as you
can ‘speak’ to God, if that is what you want.
So what is this ‘speaking/talking’? All Life has a
resonance; that is the energy. Some things will ‘resonate’ with you, and some
not. The ‘resonating’ is the ‘speaking’ (loud or soft; nice or nasty). It is
your business to not only notice this resonance in you for yourself, but to
then work out what it means to you. You get to develop your own style. This is
how God/Life ‘speaks’ to you, as you ‘speak’ to Life through your own
resonance.
I imagine this is the basis of most nature-based religions.
All Life is sacred, including you. Treat it with proper
respect.
In sum.
This is what I think that this story is trying to say, and
as you may have guessed from the title, I think this story is very relevant to
today. No-one will be more surprised than I was at what I found through this
inquiry. I have found it very useful indeed, and hope it may be of use to you.
Anastasia.
There are 9 ‘Anastasia’ books written by Vladimir MEGRE, (Russian)
translated to English by John Woodsworth, edited by Leonid Sharaskin, and
published by Ringing Cedars Press, 2004 on, and are available in Australia. (and
also available through Nexus magazine)
The title of the 1st book is ‘Anastasia’. They
are just lovely.
Cathryn Speck
November 2013
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