Meeting Your Authentic Self
The Lightworker’s Challenge: Meeting Your Authentic Self
In A Sacred Voice is Calling John Neafsy gives insight into the nature of our highest calling, the voice of our spiritual, our authentic self. A standard reading in many theology programs, the book transcends the traditional notion of spirituality as taught in many western institutions and embraces familiar and eclectic examples of spiritual life from literature through Eastern religion. He illuminates the thread of the spirit as unifier among all of us, often using very mundane world examples. In one breath he speaks of Black Elk, and in the next, he shares the lessons of Jiminy Cricket. Above all, he encourages the inclusive spirituality which so many Lightworkers embrace by following that unnamed inner/higher voice.
What is that voice? It’s the “I Am” which beckons us to higher levels of thought and deed, the thump in the heart we know as compassion for all living things. It’s neither prescriptive nor dogmatic. It’s knowing that sometimes we must, without clear reason, forego the avenue we’ve been sold and opt instead for what Frost calls “the road not taken. ” It’s the Divine whisper from within. We see it when Joseph Campbell distinguises between the priest and the shaman: the priest, is “a functionary of society” (schooled, trained, in essence, created from an external institution) whereas the shaman experiences physical and psychological transformation, often painful, from within, hardly a matter of choice.
Neafsy identifies this as the inner voice of our conscience: “the place within us where we face ourselves most profoundly and honestly.” This is what it means to be authentic. We meet ourselves in that solitary, sometimes frightening, and often lonely valley of the self.
This is where we shed the layers and masks we have accumulated in the physical world. and meet the part of us which is inseparable from the Divine. When we meditate, we learn to effectively and temporarily disconnect from the outer world, we meet that self. We learn that the physical world is not the real world, that the temporal is illusory; our consciousness and spiritual selves transcends time and space. Mediums and channelers enter that space easily and lose track of the here and now before they return to normal waking consciousness.
So do artists, musicians, and writers. They access the same part of the brain that reaches the void, feeling frenzied during the composition process, return to the conscious self what feels like days later. Creation is in a very real sense, trance-like. Campbell calls today’s writers and artists visionaries, modern shamans. Neafsy calls them “gifted messengers of God” and appropriately issues this caution: “A call to authentic personhood involves a commitment to continual growth and change…which requires a willingness to undergo emotional and spiritual pain and discomfort.” This is the path of the wounded healer. Trance, meditation, dream – all hold the same magical powers of the spirit.
Through the process, we discover that we are not locked inside our bodies, not locked into anyone’s expectations. But while dreams, particularly, can be scary they can be equally exhilarating. Anyone who’s had a flying dream knows this and would love to duplicate that euphoria at will. These links to the spiritual self show us our true reflection: who we really are, why we came here: to take the lesson of our pain and heal ourselves and the world, even in the tiniest measures. Integrating this into our daily existence remains the Lightworker’s challenge.
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About the Author
Lisa Shaw is an animal communicator, Reiki Master, and grief counselor specializing in end of life and afterlife issues with our pets. She has been an English professor for over 30 years, and an intuitive counselor for 25 years.
Rev. Lisa Shaw, OMTimes Magazine Spirituality Editor, is an animal communicator, intuitive reader, clairvoyant, and Reiki Master working in metaphysics since 1986. She has an M.F.A. in writing and recently completed an M.A. in Pastoral Ministry with a specialization in loss and healing. Lisa is an award-winning English professor and has served as a hospice chaplain. This gives her sacred glimpses into the space between life and death. She devotes her Reiki practice to animals, and specializes in end-of-life issues people face with their pets.