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FRITZ WILHELM: DANCING WITH MAYA PAGE -471-

CHAPTER 7 SHAKTI-MAYA-BUDDHA

7.1 INTRODUCTION
In rare instances during the history of Mankind the mystery of What Is has been seen.
Unsurpassed depths of insight were reached by some of the mystics of the Upanishads, like for
example Yajnavalkhya, the author of the Brihad-Aranyaka Upanishad who realized that the deepest
truth cannot become conscious knowledge. His statement Neti, Neti expressed the insight that no
concept could ever adequately describe the truth of What Is. This was Maya, the creating and
disguising power of the universe and everything in it.
As we have seen in earlier chapters, the underlying actuality and truth of What Is cannot be
conquered even through the certain rational methods of science. Quantum theory actually confirms
the insights of the Upanishads in the sense that meaningful and rational science is only possible
because of an underlying matrix of non-certain intelligence, freedom, and Oneness; and that
domain is not subject to science.
With the beginning of early civilizations in Sumer, the mysteries of the essence of the human
being, of meaning, of truth, and of morality, became questions for intelligent human speculation to
be answered in mythological terms. The result of this thinking is contained in the rich mythological
traditions of the East and the West. Unfortunately, the intelligent meaning of these stories tends to
get lost through time and repetition, or rather through the imperceptible change of realites. The
psychological, philosophical, and spiritual meaning of mythological tales dies over time, only the
form remains, which is interpreted according the prevalent reality. Timeless meaning must be
reawakened through new language which corresponds to the current realities but is able to refer to
the underlying spiritual source.
Throughout this book I have used references and illustrations taken from the Asian Indian
treasure chest of mythologies, which can be seen to be very close to ancient Greek and Germanic
mythologies. It seems that the Indian and particularly Tibetan ideas are fresher and more immediate
than the Western mythologies which have come to us in their translations and interpretations through
Christian and Islamic filters. Particularly in Tibet ideas were preserved which go back to Dravidian-
Indo-Aryan times of more than four thousand years ago. They entered Tibet about fourteen hundred
years ago, where they were allowed to unfold practically untouched by Islamic and Christian
influences until the beginning of the twentieth century.
The dialectic and complementary nature of reality and actuality, as well as the struggle
between female and male energies in their various forms and manifestations are themes which
permeate Indian and Tibetan art, philosophy, and religion. Their deeper comprehension is the
ultimate goal of what can be called an enlightened clarity of human thinking, sensing, and acting.

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Modern physics tries to lift the veil of the mystery behind these energies, only to recognize,
as we have seen in the preceding chapter, that there are veils upon veils upon veils.
The first syllable 'phy' in the word physics (which is a Greek word) refers to an action and
a growing, just like the first syllable of Shakti, namely shak.' Shakti is the Goddess of action. The
original Greek word 'physis' for nature implied a living essence of and in all things, a wholeness and
holiness. According to Schadewaldt, this sense of holiness of What Is, including all things and
appearances, was felt by the Greek people still in the time of Aristotle377, with whose teaching the
concept of rational science started. It appears that the same sense of Oneness prevailed in India and
Asia much longer. In the West we have developed a reality which is characterized, since Ren
Descartes, Francis Bacon, and Isaac Newton, by the two opposing notions of 'res cogitans ' and 'res
extensa,' thinking matter and extended matter, respectively. Those two areas were not anymore seen
as one and the same movement. A useful pragmatic differentiation deteriorated into an absolute and
fragmentary separation. An absolute dualism replaced an older sense of Oneness. The same
struggle between dualism and monism has been going on in spiritual thinking much longer and much
more intensely. In previous chapters I have tried to shed light on this struggle by using philosophy
and science as the predominant tools of investigation. In the current chapter my approach puts
emphasis on the mythological ideas of India and Tibet.

7.1.1 TRIADIC THINKING AND TRIMURTI


It seems that in mythologies of ancient civilizations we find again and again the most direct
representations of the mind projected into the transcendent world of Gods and Goddesses. The
triads of Gods and Goddesses as well as their powers, their births, deaths, and reincarnations are
like holomorphic images of thinking with its peculiar powers of freedom and creation, which I call
suspending powers.
In one of the famous orthodox Indian sculptures, named Trimurti, three Gods, Brahma,
Vishnu, and Shiva, are fused together into one: One body with six arms and three heads. The heads
represent the three basic energies of the universe and of the human mind. Brahma is the subtle
energy of creation, Vishnu the intermediate energy of generation, and Shiva the wild, mechanical
energy of preserving and destroying. Vishnu, according to some accounts, lives in a trans-real, yet
reality embracing solitude, sustains and continues it, and on occasion descends into its turmoil. The
wives or female personae of these Gods are Sarasvati or Savitri, Lakshmi, and Sati or Parvati.
These are uncertain ciphers and beacons for the meditative mind, interchangeable form and idea, just
one level removed from the ideas of oneness, nothingness, and betweenness. Consistent with the
inexhaustible depth of cipher the importance of the three male divine manifestations changes during
the long Hindu tradition. I emphasize here characteristics which illustrate and support the basic triad
of human thinking as developed earlier378. I interpret the three aspects of the God as the three
mechanical, generative, and creative movements of SAT. Each movement has its dialectic or
complementary counterpart, represented by the female manifestation of the Gods, i.e. their spouses
or lovers.

377
) See Schadewaldt, WS 202-203.
378
) See section 1.4.5.2 on page 73.

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Similar representations of Gods and Goddesses with three complementary functions can also
be found in the ancient Greek pantheon: The German philosopher F.W. Schelling talks about the
three aspects of Dionysus and the corresponding three female Goddesses in his Philosophy Of
Revelation379.
The Trimurti triad is a rather recent representation of the Hindu pantheon. The Goddess that
is hidden in this picture is Shakti-Maya, the neolithic Goddess who has been around since the
beginning of human consciousness of record.
Heinrich Zimmer writes of her:380
"This dream power - this cosmic stupor, the ever lasting divine drunkenness of the dream
of universal organism - suffusing all and everything, brings about the unfoldment of the cosmos, as
well as its perpetuation and, at last, its end. This, in fact, is the power that is effective in the Trinity -
Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva; for all opposition, as well as identity, stems from Maya.
Great Maya is wisdom and increase, stability and readiness to assist, compassion and
serenity. Queen of the World, she is alive in every nuance of feeling and perception; feelings and
perceptions are her gestures. And her nature can be sensed only by one who has comprehended
that she is the unity of opposites. This queen produces the round of mortal delusion; nevertheless
the same power throws open the way to release. She is wisdom and ignorance in one - self-
illumination in intrinsic luminosity. And all women are her self manifestations, but especially the
two great goddesses, Lakshmi, consort of Vishnu and the patroness of fortune, and Savitri, goddess
of the glowing words of the wisdom of the divine revelation and tradition - the latter is Brahma's
spouse."

In this ancient story it is told how the first woman Dawn emerged out of the meditating
unconsciousness of the creator god Brahma.
She is the incarnation of all female beauty, indeed of anything beautiful. She is Maya.
Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva are three of her functions, male representatives with their female
counterparts, Savitri, Lakshmi, and Parvati, respectively. Vishnu is blue-black, his female persona
Lakshmi is white; on the other hand Shiva is white and Parvati is black. They are of course all one
in the incomprehensible underlying Nothingness-Oneness, which in the moment of becoming object
is Maya. The following story tells how she creates herself out of herself through Brahma, who also
does not know her mystery, or his own:381

"Brahma, sinking still deeper into the limpid darkness of his own interior, struck a new
depth: suddenly the most beautiful dark woman sprang from his vision, and stood naked before
everyone's gaze.

379
) Schelling, SPOW, volume 1, page 464.
380
) See The King A nd The Co rpse, ZKC, page 265.
381
) See also section 1.4.4.5 on page 70 an d section 5.2.5.1 on page 366. From The Involuntary Creation, ZKC, page
243. Translation by H. Zimmer of the Kalika Purana.

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She was Dawn, and she was radiant with vivid youth. Nothing like her had yet appeared
among the gods; nor would her equal ever be seen, either among men, or in the depths of the waters
in the jeweled palaces of the serpent queens and kings. The billows of her blue-black hair were
glistening like the feathers of a peacock, and her clearly curving, dark brows formed a bow fit for
the God of Love. Her eyes,
like dark lotus chalyxes, had
Figure 71
th the alert, questioning glance
Parvati, 2, 15-16 century, ZAIA II plate 419
of a frightened gazelle; and
her face, round as the moon,
was like a purple lotus
blossom. Her swelling
breasts with their two dark
points were enough to
infatuate a saint. Trim as
the shaft of a lance stood
her body, and her smooth
legs were like the stretched-
out trunks of elephants. She
was glowing with little
delicate pearls of
perspiration. And when she
found herself in the midst of
her startled audience, she
stared about at them, in
uncertainty, then broke into
a softly rippling laugh."

The contemplation
of this strange, puzzling,
beauty causes another
similarly involuntary
emanation of Brahma's
mind. This time it was the
beautiful young m an
known later as Kama, the
irresistible God of love. On
his request his mate was
created, the irresistibly
beautiful Rati, delight, the Goddess of desire and lust. Kama is given powers by the great God
over all creatures, including the Gods Vishnu, Brahma, and Shiva themselves. To the point
that even Brahma, Dawn's involuntary father, burns with carnal desire for his daughter and
is scolded for this transgression by Shiva. Kama and Rati are of course the symbols of the
major attributes of Maya. As Dawn, she thus starts the whole process of creation in the

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universe. She is Maya, the supreme irresistible force, Shakti, of the One, Brahma-Vishnu-
Shiva.
In Indian subconsciousness she is omnipresent, and revealed in myths, temples, sculptures,
and paintings as the ultimate power of the universe. She is the energy that is before there was time,
space, or matter. And she is the energy that gives life to the other Gods, and also to the human mind.
The same energy which allows the human mind to
comprehend the universe, understand the world and Figure 72 Shivalinga, Trimurti Cave,
reality, and have insight into truth are the divine Mahabalipuram
energies of Vishnu, Shiva, and Brahma, all energized
ciphers of Maya.

7.1.1.1 BRAHMA
Brahma382 as the creative aspect of the divine
substance, he is fully entitled to the Lotus throne; for
as the first-born of the timeless waters, he is a
masculine counterpart of Padma, the Lotus flower,
represented by Shakti-Maya. The Goddess Dawn,
Maya, Parvati springs out of his deepest creating
meditation. But according to the tradition of Brahman
philosophy and mythology he is also the highest being
itself in its pure, spiritual, and transcendent nature; an
anthropomorphic symbol of Brahman, the essence of
the universe, the cosmic, anonymous Self. The idea of
Atman is very similar to that of Brahman. In the West
we would call both ideas the soul, the absolute
imperishable essence of What Is. In the human being
these forces become Atman-Shakti, the moving
energy of a human being.
In India the idea of the human soul is not
personalized or individualized. Brahman dwells
within all beings as the supranatural kernel of their
nature. Brahma, therefore, is equal to Vishnu and Shiva; he personifies and connotes, beyond his
role as Creator, pure being itself, supreme reality, transcending change, time, and every limiting
qualification. At some point in the mythological past he is the spouse of Sarasvati, the important
river Goddess of learning, arts and wisdom, even creator of all reality.
Thus, the in-separability of Shiva and Shakti-Maya and their actual oneness is affirmed
once again. For a more abstract interpretation one can say that the deities Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva,
and Shakti-Maya are historical personifications (or deifications) of the idea of Oneness-
Nothingness-Betweenness, unfoldments, called reincarnations, at various stages. Brahman and
atman are corresponding philosophical, metaphysical notions. In Mahayana Buddhism the
Nothingness concept is highly developed as an abstract idea of Sunyata and Sunya-sunya. In Tibet
it is supported by manifestations of Buddhas and their female counterparts in erotic union.

382
) Heinrich Zimmer, ZAIA, page 168.

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The linga-yoni and Shiva-Shakti symbolism is older and deeper implanted in the Indian soul
than Brahma or Vishnu and the metaphysical concepts of Brahman and Atman. This comes clearly
to light in the picture Trimurti Caves dedicated to the three Gods. In this Trimurti cave of
Mahabalipuram in South India, Shiva's linga is clearly the dominating power.
The picture shows the Trimurti cave in Mahabalipuram in South India. In this cave the three
Gods are shown separately. However, the central sculpture is Shiva carved from the rock of the rear
wall of the cave. In the center of this cave is the linga, the holy male symbol of creation, whose
female dialectic opposite is the yoni, represented by Maya-Shakti. The linga in the yoni represents
the deepest mystery and force of the universe, the opposites in one.

"The simple form (of the linga) represents the divine life force of the
universe, its all-comprising, all generating essence. The glossiness
of its surface is due in part to the offerings of water, milk, and oil,
that have been poured on it.383

"The symbolism ranges from Atman and Brahman, to Shiva-Shakti,


linga-yoni, Yab-Yum.
In the Brhadan-anyaka Upanishad (800 B.C.E.), for example, we
read: "Just as a man, when in the embrace of a beloved wife, knows
nothing within or without so does this being, when embraced by the
Supreme Self, know nothing within or without."

Here we have clearly an early precursor of the later ideas of the union of Shiva-Shakti and
Yab-Yum. In this union Nothingness is One with Oneness.
Brahman, the absolute nothingness-oneness, and Maya are both actual and real. Brahma and
Maya coexist. (In Greece the opposing forces Dionysus-Aphrodite and Apollo became irreconcilable
enemies.) Maya is the continuous self-manifestation and self-disguise of Brahman, its self-
revelation, and its multi-colored, concealing veil. She is the active erotic energy which drives Man
into reality and governs him and her in that reality.
All things on all levels are permeated and sustained by Brahman. One might call it the
intelligence of nothingness-oneness, out of which everything emerges. The same Brahman, the
same soul, is shared by all things and beings, hence their dignity. There is no thing which could be
disregarded as just dead matter, or just an animal without feeling and soul. The sum total of all is
worshiped as the Highest Goddess, Mother and Life-Energy of Gods and Creatures, under the
formula, Maya-Shakti-Devi.
What is fascinating in these ideas, beyond any religious context, is their power to order our
thinking. As long as we treat such ideas as non-certain ordering principles, they can be extremely
beneficial for human thinking and human sanity. This human sanity is probably the intelligent source
behind any such ideas. The human mind asks questions which cannot be answered with certainty,
ever. The questions of the human soul, of human meaning, of the purpose of the universe need
answers in terms of metaphors and ciphers which are embedded in the knowledge of a rational
reality and science but always go beyond them.

383
) Zimmer, Z AIA volum e I, page 23, volum e II, plate 289.

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7.1.1.2 SHIVA384
Vishnu and Shiva appear in modern Hinduism as gods of equal stature, the destroying and
maintaining masks or attitudes of the Supreme. Vishnu in his myths becomes Shiva and assumes the
appearance of Shiva, when he brings to pass the periodic dissolution of all things. Just as Vishnu is
also a destroyer, so is Shiva also a creator and maintainer; his nature at once transcends and includes
all the polarities of the living world.
The main symbolism associated with Shiva is the linga or penis; just like the yoni represents
the female creativity represented by Shakti, Padma, Lakshmi, Shri, Parvati, Uma, so represents
the linga the male aspect of creativity in Shiva. Shiva and Shakti are one in their dialectic
dualism, the most fundamental dualism of male and female, which is the basis for Maya and
all reality, actual or illusory. In the origin of the attraction between linga and yoni, their
ultimate oneness, lies the mysterious complementarity of Yab-Yum and Yin-Yang, the
Oneness of Sameness and Difference as shown explicitly in the figures of Samantabhadra and
Samantabhadri. Together they are the driving energy of the universe and of human thinking,
sensing, and acting. Such complementary opposites attract and repel, they are one and yet
different, they create action, they enfold and unfold each other in an eternal dance.
In the Hindu myth of the origin of the linga, Shiva is the lord of the linga, the force supreme
of the universe.
Shiva is the triad of Shiva, Vishnu, and Brahma, destroyer, maintainer, and creator, as
depicted in the Trimurti statues discussed earlier. Shiva is called the Great Lord (Maheshvara )
when he is regarded as a personification of the fullness of the Absolute.
But Shiva is always also Shakti, and vice versa.

7.1.1.3 USHNISHA VIJAYA


In Tibet this truth of the Three Divine Energies in One, and One in Three, all
maintained by the Goddess' energy of Nothingness-Oneness-Betweenness is further developed
and incorporated in the ideas of Buddhism. In the bronze figure of Ushnisha-Vijaya (or white Tara),
for example, we are looking at a female body with three heads and eight arms. She is carrying all
the symbols of wisdom and compassion, necessary for any beings to become who they are.
Ushnisha is the crown protrusion on her head, symbolizing the cosmic openness of the
consciousness of an enlightened being; vijaya means victorious. The energies of enlightenment
are ultimately victorious over the energies of confusion, ignorance, and deception. That victory is
never in question as the three forces Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva-Shakti represent What Is.

384
) Heinrich Zimmer, ZMS, page 125.

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Figure 73 She holds a Vajra cross in


Ushnisha Vijaya, White Tara, Bronze, 9" her first right hand before her chest,
symbolizing the power of the
Absolute and its unknowable
character. Her other right hands
make the gestures of revelation and
display the subtle interplay of all
manifestations of reality and truth,
represented (in India) by the Goddess
of Maya. This is the energy of
Betweenness, the dialectic link
between reality and truth, or
nothingness and oneness.
She gives or grants all aspects
of her inner nature, i.e. she represents
and gives who we are, the true
Buddha nature of what is,
Brahman and Atman, in Hindu
terminology. That wisdom and
actuality is granted to us by the very
fact that we are self-conscious human
b e i n g s . T h i s t r i a d i c e n e rg y
represented in Ushnisha is for human
consciousness the mystery which
helps us to be thankful that we are not
'lesser' material substance without the
possibility of self reflection.
She grants us the freedom to
think and act as a holomorphic substructure of herself. She allows us to be the tool through which
the intelligent universe, and all that is, can arrive at a comprehension of itself in this particular
human, free way. She lets us be an active and free part of the cosmic play, in which life and death,
honor and duty, happiness, joy, and bliss are the dynamic energies which are one with us, which
guide and challenge us. We are part of her thinking and being, free and yet one with her, separate
and one. She helps us on our way to comprehend this freedom and oneness, so that she herself can
become conscious of herself through us. Thus, she helps us to create our own twilight of the Gods385
and Demons. She helps us to throw light on our concepts of Gods and Demons. This light is our
enlightenment, the intelligence of Nothingness.
We can assist this form of Maya in her quest to comprehend herself, through our
comprehension of ourselves, and join in her dance, or we can resist, and become the petrified corpse
Shava. Whether we call our conditioning knowledge or ignorance, if we don't dance the
uncertain dance of Maya's mystery, we are losing our freedom and our dignity. Or rather we
never become free in the first place.

385
) Gtterdmmerung and Gtzendmmerung in German.

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The second left hand carries the vase of immortality, indicating not only immortality but the
timelessness or eternity of What Is, and of who we are, once we have lived up to the challenge of
our existence in and as reality.

7.2 THE DIALECTIC ENERGIES IN ASIAN ART


The ideas and thoughts contained in these figures try to communicate what the great
philosophers have recognized to be impossible to understand in terms of conventional logic alone.
The thought-ideas of Gods and Goddesses and their representation as sense-ideas try to speak
directly to human intelligence, between sensing and thinking. The passage of ideas through the
forms of reality is necessary for communication, but the forms are never what they appear to be.
Their meaning points beyond them and their forms. In any of these attempts to learn, to clear away
the contaminants of conditioning and confusion, to help us set ourselves free, we see the
unresolvable dialectic struggle between a fixed understanding and a living but non-certain truth.

7.2.1 REALITY AND TRUTH; SHAKTI AND SHIVA


This relationship between Reality and Truth, its tension and mysterious energy, is very
ingeniously portrayed in stories, symbols, paintings, and sculptures throughout Asia. Some of the
most fascinating ones are the Chinnamasta (Divine Mother, Shakti) paintings in India and Tibet, the
Yab-Yum sculptures and Shri-Yantra symbols of Tibet, and the Shiva-Nataraja sculptures of South
India. Some of these I have already introduced at earlier occasions. Here is on overview of these
symbols in the context of the ideas of Oneness-Nothingness-Betweenness, and the various modes
of mechanical, generative, and creative sensing, acting and thinking.

7.2.1.1 CHINNAMASTA
In the painting of Chinnamasta, the Divine Mother, we see a central female red colored
figure as Maya-Shakti (the great magician Maya) holding her own head in her left hand.386
At either side of her there are two blue dark colored women, her daughters or other personae,
looking up adoringly at the central mother figure. All three women are naked except for necklaces
of human skulls and some jewelry as waste bands, bracelets, and pearls around the neck, in addition
to snakes. From the gushing wound of the severed head of Maya Shakti three streams of blood gush
forth onto the tongues and into the mouths of the two dark women at her sides, as well as into the
mouth of the severed head, who joyfully relish this water of immortality.
All heads and souls are thus nourished by this life giving red energy. The two dark sisters
or daughters of the central Shakti carry a bowl (in Tibetan versions a skull bowl) filled with blood
and brain pieces in their left hand. In their right hand they carry a pair of scissors symbolizing the
cutting off of the ego from the self. All three women stand on a white colored couple, again
manifestations of the same Maya Shakti. Maya Shakti lies on top of Shiva in sexual union.

386
) Cf. supra, section 3.5.1.1on page 209 connection with the Greek Moira and the Fates, Goddesses of fate.

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She is giving life to Shiva, who


gives life to Shakti. They enjoy together
Figure 74 the dance of Maya, who is life, sex,
Chinnamasta, 2, from PRT Plate 22, Gouache on illusion, destruction and creation. Actually
Paper 30 x 20 cm, Cankra 18th Century the head of this Shiva wears the same
crown as the severed head of Shakti. They
are one and the same, meaning that any
human being who lives in a harmonious life
between wisdom and compassion has
realized the same nature or soul of the
mystery of What Is. For this to become true
all aspects of Chinnamasta must be
realized.

In this version of the union between


Shiva and Shakti, the Shiva is not a corpse
(or Shava) like in many other illustrations
which allude to the necessary life giving
forces of Shakti.387 Here, both lovers enjoy
the bliss of their union with each other and
with the forces of the whole universe. The
lovers Shiva-Shakti rest on top of a Shakti
triangle, inside of a circle, contained in a
Lotus blossom. Underneath this blossom
one can see the green murky waters of the
earth. In the background the sky and the
ether of the universe are visible.
This whole scene is a worship of
the creative energy and an appeal to it, to
What Is, from the spiritual realm of
ideality to the material realm of reality.
Maya-Shakti permeates everything with
the juices of her life, her blood and her
spirit. She is Atman and Brahman, the
energy of the Absolute; she is Vishnu, Brahma, and Shiva. She is the mother of all Buddhas,
Tara, and Ushnisha Vijaya. In abstract philosophical terms this means that What Is, is Energy-
Intelligence-Movement, ideas which are slightly more concrete than Oneness-Nothingness-
Betweenness.
I look at this painting as an illustration of the movement of thinking in its process of
unfolding and enfolding consciousness. Unknowable thinking negates itself (cuts its own head off)
and re-creates itself as two separate forces of generative and mechanical thinking, who together

387
) Com pare the story of Vishnu on Garuda in 3.2.5.2 on page 189; see also Ideas and Chan ges in section 3.5.1 on
page 208.

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create the self. Both movements are sustained by the dialectically opposed forces of Shiva and
Shakti, who again need to be one, in order to maintain a harmonious universe and self. The life
giving energy or blood comes from the body of the whole which has sacrificed its wholeness to
create and nourish its parts. The many skulls hanging from the necks of the three women indicate
the difficulty of the task. To put the ego in its place, and to comprehend the individual self as a
display of Maya, is like cutting one's own head off. So, this whole image of Chinnamasta, though
looking gruesome at first sight, represents the blissful state of human consciousness, having insight
into its own true nature, and being able to separate the illusion of Maya from truth.

A similarly blissful representation of this insight is given by the image of the sexual union
between Shiva and Shakti. In the picture of Chinnamasta the loving divine couple represents the
foundation of reality lying blissfully inside of the yoni of the universe, the Shakti triangle inside the
Lotus flower. In Tibet this very image became the central idea of the many Yab-Yum representation.
There, the scissors are replaced by the vajra-chopper, the skinning knife.

7.2.1.2 SHIVA-SHAKTI AND YAB-YUM


In the Yab-Yum figure we see the Buddha Vajrasattva388 (Truth) sits in the Lotus position
with his Shakti, the Buddha Vajrapani (Reality) on his lap.
He represents the highest meditative creative energy of the universe but also of the human
mind, an energy which if it finds a receptive reality will transform and recreate it.
She represents the con-ception of truth and action in reality, of the universe and of the human
consciousness.
Truth (he) acts inside Reality (her), and Reality (she) acts around and outside of
Truth (him). They are one in love or compassionate wisdom, which creates true perception and
true action in the whole of the two which are one. The essence of this union is the freedom of
either one and their oneness. Nothingness and Oneness in loving embrace. There is a
harmonious energy and tension between the two, encompassing love and lust, passion,
freedom, and bondage. The false comes in through the artificial separation of the two, which
are dialectically one.
It is also the symbolism of creation, in which one spermatozoon enters an egg; both negate
their individual existence and become some entirely new creation, which in turn can create.
Thinking can do this in a constant process of growth and creation, and thinking can become action,
in which some new reality can be born. The self can suspend itself to the benefit of a new creation
which is freer and wiser. In this negation there is complete freedom and trust in uncertainty. In the
case of human procreation this uncertainty is of course totally covered up by the illusion that one's
offspring will be like oneself or even better. Furthermore, it is truth that acts in reality and on
reality, reality does not act on truth. Truth has an effect on reality only if reality is ready for
change, i.e. conception and transformation. Like a spermatozoon creates new life only if there is an
egg ready for fertilization.
When the creators of Yab-Yum symbols used the symbol of sexual intercourse, they saw that
the role of human sexuality (beauty, bliss, happiness, desire, pain, heartache etc.) is as complex,

388
) Please refer to the figures of V ajrasattva, alone, Figure 53 on page 338, and together with his co nsort, Figure 58
on page 358 and Figure 81 on page 500.

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deep, and volcanic as the question of truth and reality. This was a thousand years before Sigmund
Freud! The volcanic power of the forbidden and suppressed emotions connected with eros and
mythos must have been known to anyone capable of observing the human psyche. The practice of
inward looking without judging or prejudice is at the center of Tantra meditation. Nietzsche said in
The Twilight Of The Idols (1888) that art requires intoxication and the best and oldest form of
intoxication is that of sexual excitement. This is the same Dionysian or Shivaist life affirmation
which we find in Tantra. It is the dance with Maya.
The reptile brain of man and woman was there when reality and truth were born as concepts
with the consciousness of Man. Emotions of love are deeper and older than the rather immature
products of the young human brain. Truth and reality, just as love and sexuality, are dialectic and
dynamic, and emerge from beyond rational thought. Both will for all times give cause to all human
emotions and actions from the extreme good to the extreme evil. We can only trust that their
dialectical oneness will ultimately guide and direct human action, because we are of that same stuff.
Matter is mind is mother is creator is intelligence. Shiva is Shakti is Vishnu is Brahma, all is Maya.
Time, space, consciousness, the self are her recent spinnings.
Truth and Reality as well as their correlation arise from three distinct movements of the
active mind. This distinction of three different movements of thinking, which can be observed
through and in thinking itself, is not primarily based on the product or content of that thinking but
on the qualitative differences of its movement: The movement of thinking is the relationship
between the thinker (subject) and the thought (object). It is also the uncertain internal
dynamics of thinking, in which subject and object are yet to be created.
This whole movement of thinking is in a holomorphic relationship to That Which Is, and
therefore also with all that it can get in touch with either in a subject-object relationship or in
mystical oneness. Thinking is a microcosmos of the macrocosmos of What Is. One might also say
that thinking is the creative space which is between thoughts and before them, just as physical space
- including creative physical space - is what is between objects and what is before their existence.
We see space, time, matter, and thinking merge into one creative power, which in poetic terms is
Shakti-Maya.
What is before thoughts and before physical objects can be adequately labeled an
unknowable nothingness, which is evidently without any 'otherness' and which is therefore also a
oneness, thus a nothingness-oneness. A similar distinction of three modes of consciousness is that
of the waking state, the dream state, and the deep sleep state. In Indian philosophy these three states
are represented by the letters A-U-M which together form the sacred mantra OM. A fourth
movement of thinking is contained in this syllable which is the silence, or unknowable nothingness-
oneness behind and beyond any manifestation. It is the thought-less-ness corresponding to the
speech-less-ness. Our mouth drops open when we are confronted with the sight of beautiful Maya-
Shakti-Shiva; our mind empties itself of all conscious thought when confronted with the idea of
Nothingness-Oneness-Betweenness.
Only after thoughts and time, objects and space, have been created out of that intelligent
nothingness-oneness is there a consciousness with its thought-objects. Or, these processes may
occur simultaneously: Thoughts, time, space, matter, consciousness, and things in space. It is this
consciousness which then feels compelled to explore its essence, or the essence of things, which are
its projections and reflections on its own space time structure. Consciousness comes up with notions
oscillating between nothingness and oneness. It then seems that we must say that the essence of all

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things and thoughts, the essence of all thinkables, is neither nothing (the mind before awakening to
consciousness) nor one (the mind after awakening to consciousness, the self), but an emanation of
itself on itself. Our consciousness and its objects may therefore adequately be called a betweenness.
As there is no absolute separation, the content of consciousness must be between the oneness and
nothingness of the self. This can only be a non-exclusive betweenness. The relationship is a
correlationship. Falseness is introduced when thought forgets its origin and creates the illusion of
separation. Still, to explore difference and separation as qualities of thinking seems then to be an
unavoidable first step in the classification of thought.
The goal is for the mind to truly comprehend its own nature and the products of the mind as
such betweenness. This comprehension requires more than reason. Our consciousness vacillates
between the certainty of fixed thought and the non-certainty of self-reflection. To remain on one or
the other side of the middle path fosters illusion and deception.

7.2.2 REVIEW OF THE THREE MODES OF THINKING389


Depending on its dominant mode of operation, an observing consciousness may see thinker
and thought related in different ways, with different degrees of self-deception, entanglement in the
web of Maya:

! As being totally separate, (I am in complete control of my


thoughts);
! as being totally one, (I am one with the beloved);
! or as being dialectically separate and one, or dialectically
neither totally separate nor totally one.

The modes of separation correspond to degrees of certainty. The more a thinking


consciousness is separate from the content of its thinking the more this consciousness can be
certain of that content, and can imagine to be in complete control of its thinking. The more
consciousness is one with the content of its thinking the less is its demand for certainty. Certainty
(security or fear) has no meaning for a holistic consciousness. A holistic "consciousness" sees itself
without another. It is all-one, enfolded in itself. Yet, where there is consciousness there is Maya. The
self and ego are merely more rigid forms of consciousness. Rationally, the self can see that it is the
sum total of all of its thinking.
It starts to see that without thinking there is no self, there is no reality. What Is, when there
is no thinking, is evidently no reality and no thing, both of which are products of thought. However,
this state of nothingness excludes reality, and is therefore also limited and not holistic. The mind can
move from one state to the other to some degree. It is the flexibility which maintains the health and
creativity of the mind, the middle path of dialectic freedom, between Tat Tvam Asi390 (this is you)

389
) Cf. infra section 1.4 A CLASSIFICATION OF THINKING on page 49.
390
) Chandogya Upanishad.

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and Neti, Neti391 (neither this, nor that). The state of mind when thinking appears to occur without
the self is not absolutely separate from the thinking self. Otherwise, there would be no access, no
memory, no reference possible to it. We cannot abandon the modes of operation of rational thinking,
if we want to communicate.
We can classify the movements of separation between thinker and thought according to their
effect on thinking and arrive at three qualitative differences (Refer to page 73):

(1) Mechanical thinking is a thinking in terms of fixed rules. It preserves traditional and
habitual thinking and can be mechanically described as a movement of thought based on cause and
effect, which may be imagined or real. This thinking can be correct and certain within a limited area.
On its own this movement is in Hindu terminology called maya, also avidya (ignorance but also
active contribution to the mechanical web of conditioning). This is not wrong thinking per se but
logical thinking which closes itself off to the transforming powers of change as contained in the non-
certain modes of thinking. It is also in its purest form comparable to the state of waking
consciousness, the letter 'A' in the sacred syllable AUM (Mandukya Upanishad).

(2) Generative thinking extends and modifies rules of thinking and thought-forms. It is a
sub-conscious, sub-certain movement between preservative and creative thinking and displays
properties similar to those which can be found in the quantum physical (quantum organic)
description of phenomena. In Hindu terminology this mode of thinking is called dhyana, inner
seeing, contemplative or meditative thinking-seeing-sensing. It is the letter 'U' in the syllable AUM.
Without that this thinking actively participates in consciousness, the mind remains in the state of
illusion of deceptive maya and avidya.

(3) Creative thinking cannot be described adequately, but we can allude to it indirectly
through dialectic metaphors. On this level, the uncertain creation of radically new rules and thought-
forms begins. Creative thinking is part of what I call insight and intelligence. This thinking or non-
thinking is Nirvana, highest wisdom, nothingness and oneness in union. It is the letter 'M,' but also
the silent space and the whole syllable AUM or OM. This means that this thinking does not exclude
the other two states, but embraces them as movements. This thinking is not a thinking which could
be arrived at by the two other movements, or even be described by them in adequate terms. For them
it appears as an empty nothingness or void. The consciousness that advances from mechanical to
creative thinking is that all inclusive thinking already.

7.2.3 CREATIVE THINKING AND SHIVA-SHAKTI-BUDDHA


Thinking which unfolds from mechanical to creative is creative, the path and the goal are
one. In Tibetan Buddhism this positive world view is best expressed in the provocative religious
metaphoric symbol of the naked Buddha in Lotus position with his equally naked female consort
sitting on his lap, embracing him passionately in evident sexual bliss and union, called Yab-Yum,
father-mother in Tibetan. One of these figures shows the Buddha (or Bodhisattva) Samantabhadra
("He who is all pervadingly good") and his female dialectic counterpart, Samantabhadri. If she
391
) Brihad-aranyaka Upanishad.

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carries a vajra-chopper (the skinning knife symbolizing the cutting off of the ego), they are called
Vajrasattva (absolute wisdom and compassion) and Vajradhari. He/she is regarded as the
embodiment of the insight into the oneness of sameness and difference.
The central Buddha figure is the nothingness of creative thinking or nirvana consciousness.
This figure is embraced by the female figure representing the action of generative and mechanical
thinking, the Maya of the world, which presents herself to the waking consciousness as separate.
Nothingness is in loving embrace with oneness. The insight into this truth is the highest attainable
wisdom. The creation of difference and separation is seen as necessary conditions for a reality,
without losing sight of the fact that reality is part of ideality or truth, which is essentially the
unknowable mystery, the Maya out of whose lap infinitely many realities emerge.

7.2.3.1 CONTRAST WITH CHRISTIAN MYTHOLOGY


In Christian mythology the paradise was lost when the "evil" snake seduced Eve to seduce
poor old Adam to eat from the tree of knowledge. Ever since, women were blamed for the pleasure
they gave men. The more pleasure they gave the more they were vilified. The more beautiful,
seductive, and intelligent they were, the closer they were to the devil. What a twisted and corrupt
logic! The symbol of Yab-Yum, on the other hand, is a guide to the tree of knowledge and self-
comprehension, not away from it. The reward is the union with paradise which we have never left.
One should recognize here that both the serpent and the tree are much older positive 'pagan'
symbols for the creative female powers of nature. The combination of those powers with the powers
of the intellect was indeed the beginning of modern consciousness. The paradise of ignorance was
lost with this powerful marriage, which should not at all be seen as a single act of deceitful
seduction, but as the creative mutual seduction of one vital energy by another. The paradise of
wisdom, on the other hand, was opened from the moment of this sacred marriage. The female
creative power of nature seduced the abstract powers of thinking into her embrace. What was lost
in this union was the world of unquestionable submission to magic powers, the world of blissful
ignorance, but above all the sense of being an integral part of the Nature Goddess. Ever since, the
cognitive mind has made desperate attempts to understand what is going on. What was forced into
submission through this relentless drive to understand what cannot be understood, was the creative
power of the Mother Goddess. From this mythical moment onwards Man had to understand, to
know, had to question everything divine or human. He had to speculate, to reason, and to believe
and fear where he could not know. This is the intrinsic function of a consciousness awakened to its
powers of creating worlds. He had to create a web of meaning to replace paradise lost and to create
the expectation for regaining access to it. Little does consciousness suspect that its loss and its
redemption is its own product. Little does it know that most of Man's realities created in this fashion
were and are cobwebs of its own illusions and lies, masterfully held together by strings of causality.
It is actively and ignorantly trying to cover up its own underlying nothingness, which some people
see.
Thus, in essence, Christian thinking interpreted the mythical moment of awakening of
consciousness as the end of paradise and as a condemnation; mystic thinking generally sees the
potential for a new paradise, in which wisdom and active participation in the universal play of
realities and truth could be united. (There is also in all religions the apocalyptic mystic thinking and
vision. I consider that an aberration and don't go deeper into it.) Christianity rejected the world with

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the hope for heaven and the fear of hell, whereas a mystic view tried to transcend the world, heaven,
and hell, to make room for a life in actuality and without dogmatism.
In modern times Kant and Hegel explained again that all reality is conditioned, through and
through. It seems that Schopenhauer was the first philosopher in the West who understood that the
"Kantian concept of a-priori forms of sensibility and categories of logic are practically
identical with the Hindu-Buddhist philosophy of Maya," of which we heard in the West reliably
only a few hundred years ago.392

The essence of Buddhist thinking is in my terminology to overcome the illusory certainty


and security of a mechanical world view. This world view is avidya (ignorance) or Maya. The Hindu
term Maya has the clear connotation to the active principle of creating a mechanical world through
restrictive mechanical thinking, which is actually void and empty in addition to being utterly
destructive for all living beings. Avidya and Maya is not the lack of knowledge or deceptive illusion
alone, but the separation by consciousness of a oneness into a fragmented world of separate things,
thoughts, individualities, which have the appearance of being absolutely independent from human
thinking. It is the goal of true thinking to see the danger and destruction arising from mechanical
thinking. The mechanical self and ego must be overcome, i.e. understood and transcended. Nirvana
is creative thinking and the comprehension of emptiness of the self, it is the opening of the mind to
its own unconditioned creativity.
In this comprehension the empty self, a negative concept, is transcended to a oneness-
nothingness, sunyata, a positive concept. The empty self is controlled by fear and the desire to fill
its emptiness with the eternal diversion of the day: power, money, pleasure. But there is no self or
individual which could ever reach nirvana, because the concepts of self, nirvana, goal are themselves
part of Maya. There is no goal to reach, no river to cross; samsara is nirvana. This is why it is
impossible to talk about creative thinking or enlightenment, or any spiritual matter, without entering
a world of thinking which is characterized as dhyana : meditative, dreamlike, mystical. Not
surprisingly, all these notions are subject to derision and confusion for rational thinking. Not
surprising also that so-called religions have been created around these notions which entrap poor
believers in ever deeper dependence, ignorance, and deceptive illusion, the horrific aspect of Maya,
Kali.
The Buddha's basic recommendation was: "Stop ignorance, stupidity, and insanity."
There are three major areas to this recommendation;
1) Simple ignorance which can be remedied by a good educational system, i.e. good schools;
accurate knowledge about things and history.
2) Self and ego controlled ignorance which comes about in great part through the
conditioning in a particular socio-economic and cultural environment. In a free modern society much
of this ignorance can be dispelled through accurate information together with psychological and
possibly medical treatment.
3) The profound ignorance of a thinking process which cannot reflect on itself. This is where
meditation, dhyana, and creative self reflection must come in. This is the thinking which does not
address content, but the mode of thinking itself. In some ways this could be described as a thinking

392
) Josep h Camp bell, Creative Mythology CCM , page 338.

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about no-thing in which there is neither thinker nor object of thought. It is what Aristotle called
"nosis noseos " the thinking of the Gods.
All reality is Maya in Vajrayana Buddhism, and therefore the legends do not insist on the
human character and earthly births of the Buddhas. The biographies, interspersed with popular
miraculous features, represent illusory displays of the transcendental divine essence in the field of
the intellect and the senses. "The Buddha life has become an unsubstantial reflex on the mirror-plane
of phenomenality"393. "The Unfolding of the Playful Illusory Manifestation of the Buddha on
the Earthly Plane." (Lalita vistara sutra)
The aim of Vajrayana Buddhism is pedagogical394, not penal as in occidental religions. The
aim is not the satisfaction of a supernatural father, but an awakening of natural man and woman, and
all other sentient beings, to truth. This is possible in any one's life. One can have insight into the
workings of the mind, and that insight clears up the obstructions to clear perception, thinking, and
acting. The content of Vajrayana Buddhism, from bronze figures, to yantras and mandalas, from
mantras to chants and exercises consists of pedagogical devices with the purpose of showing the
illusory nature of the self, or rather its Maya nature. This should lead ultimately to the ending of
ignorance through the self-comprehension and self-suspension of the self or the ego, caught in the
web of comfort, fear, security, and hope, caught between the desire of indulgence in reality and its
rejection, caught in religious systems and philosophical schemes. The ego is the self caught in
deceptive and self-deceptive illusion. Confused thinking leads to and maintains the ego. Insight into
this confusion counteracts the inertia of self-deception and allows for freedom and intelligence to
play predominant roles.

7.2.3.2 FURTHER EXPLORATION OF THE YAB-YUM SYMBOLISM


"We see Samantabhadra in the attitude known in Tibetan as Yab-Yum, in union with his
shakti, who represents the energy of his essence. The word shak means "to have force to do," "to be
able." Thus an adequate translation of shakti' is 'energy.' This is the representation of maha-sukha,
highest bliss.
He has his hands folded in his lap holding a bowl. She has her arms wrapped around his
head, the left hand carrying the skullcup, the right hand wielding the vajra-chopper. Both are
completely naked, without any ornaments, indicating their complete freedom from reality, the cipher
language for their Oneness with Nothingness which is also Oneness. The Buddha figure is indeed
Mahasukha, who, often encircled by a ring of flames, like Shiva-Nataraja, embraces a lovely and
beloved female being, who sits on his lap, enclosing him lovingly with her arms and legs. This
posture is the common one and was derived from the earlier archetype of Shiva and the Goddess,
who usually lies atop of Shiva in their sexual union.
Allegorical interpretation: The male and female principles in eternal embrace represent, as
in Shivaite iconography, the coincidence or union of opposites. The divine couple are both the goal

393
) Heinrich Z immer, Th e Art O f Indian Asia, ZAIA volume 1, page 173.
394
) Josep h Camp bell, Oriental Mythology, COM , page 310.

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and the way: fulfillment and the means or process of attaining it; enlightenment and the doctrine or
way to enlightenment - including all the stages of imperfection, approach, improvement, near-
perfection, and the ultimate attitude of the Wisdom of the Far Bank, which is, finally, a timeless,
static repose beyond the flow of
Figure 75 time, beyond events, beyond all the
Samantabhadra and Samantabhadri, 1996 qualified, differentiated, and
limited moments and realizations of
the realm of life. For in the secret
insight of the Enlightened One the
two apparently antagonistic
principles of time and eternity are
one, just as husband and wife, God
and his Spouse, constitute one
figure and are one sole being. The
dual appearance is but a
phenomenal mere appearance.
Nirvana and Samsara, then
are fundamentally not different
from each other, but represent
contrary phenomenal aspects of the
one, selfsame, transcendent reality,
which is beyond both. Therefore, as
long as enlightenment (nirvana ) is
posited as something apart and
different from the sphere of
ordinary life (samsara ), true
enlightenment has not been
attained: though perhaps, conceived
of, in an intellectual way, it has not
yet been realized existentially. For
if the notion exists that there is
something to be reached, or
anything to be forsaken, that there
is a real process going on, leading
from ignorance and suffering to
sublime indifference, aloofness,
and bliss (a notion of dynamism, process, time, differences, individual beings, or states that really
are), the candidate is still caught in a subtle form of ignorance, a kind of entanglement in the meshes
of his own intellectual striving. This whole dualistic sphere of thought, discourse, and experience
must be transcended if the realm of utter reality is to be reached: the Far Bank of transcendental
truth.

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Metaphysics and dialectics, the preliminary means for teaching the inexpressible, point to
the truth but do not contain it. They are mere road marks, and if thought to be real they become the
most exquisite and dangerous snares of ignorance. The accomplished philosopher of metaphysician,
therefore, who clings to his own processes of exposition, is a perfect example of the most sublime
failure on the way to the palace of wisdom.
There is no such thing as enlightenment
or nirvana. That is one of the reasons why the
historical Buddha refused, again and again, to Figure 76
describe or define it. And that is the attitude of Green Tara, Sitting
not being caught by the antagonistic notions of
ignorance (samsara) and enlightenment
(nirvana), or by any other pair-of-opposites in
the realm of thought, is characteristic of and
fundamental to all esoteric circles of advanced
candidates for Bodhi (wisdom). What then are
Vajrasattva and his Shakti? He is the Way and
she is Nirvana; or conversely, he is Eternity
and She is Time; each is both, and both are
each; and the two are one, and both are No-
thing, this is Prajna-Paramita, highest
enlightened wisdom.
Apart from the Yab-Yum symbolism, in
Tibetan Buddhism the synthesis of the two
ideas is also contained in the beautiful and
sensuous Goddess figure of Tara herself, the
mother of the Buddhas. Her symbols are the
Lotus flowers behind her shoulders and below
the right foot. She is of course also seated on a
Lotus throne. In Hindu contexts she is the
Mahashakti, or Maha-Kali (the Great Dark
One), the mother of the universe. She is perfect
consciousness and bliss, wisdom and
compassion, experiencing both pain and
pleasure. Here she is Tara, the nature of the
ultimate.
Here she sits at ease with the right leg
swung out wide and its foot resting on a Lotus pedestal. She draws unabashed attention to the female
center of creation. The left leg is folded under in the contemplative position. Her left hand holds the
stem of a lotus flower which floats over her left shoulder. Another lotus, fully opened, floats over
her right shoulder. She is dressed in a gauzy skirt, which clings tightly to her legs. A blouse leaves
her breasts uncovered. Over them she wears a garland together with beautiful necklaces and
bracelets. Tara is depicted as a ravishingly beautiful woman at the age of sixteen as described in the
Vajra Buddhist text "Tara Tantra," going back to the eighth century C.E.

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All Buddhas in Tibetan bronze statues are seated on the Lotus throne, the Lotus being
Maya-Shakti and Tara, and even the support of the Shiva-Nataraja statue rest on such a
throne. She is the common ground of all reality and truth.395
The Goddess Lotus is Maya, Tara, and Avalokiteshvara, the male and female Buddhas
in one. She is the dialectic struggle, which is intrinsic to all life, the ambiguity yet joyful and blissful
participation in all life; she is the validation of the Buddha's first Noble Truth, "All Life Is
Sorrowful."
In the transcendent realization, the struggle is identical with nirvana, since samsara and
nirvana, time and eternity, the Buddha and his shakti, are ultimately one. Hence the lovely goddess
Lotus, who is the essence of this mystery, being herself that living process which is known on the
one hand as strife and on the other as eternal bliss or the bliss of eternal being.
Without her there would be no revelation, since she is the field in which the revelation
appears; and without the Buddha there would be nothing to reveal, since he is what appears. The two
are the ultimate terms of that dialectic which is the gate to wisdom, and equally the return gate
through which the wise regard the world. And in essence the two are one.
The Buddha figure in Yab-Yum is compassion, she is wisdom. But, he is she, and she is he.
He is sitting in the immovable lotus position, she sits on his lap. She has aroused him and embraces
him. And she is in charge!
This provocative symbol shows in all its power how different Tibetan Buddhism is from
Judeo-Christian beliefs. Can a devout Christian imagine the virgin Mary sitting on Jesus Christs
lap, both lovers doing what all lovers of the world do in this situation? Not even the combined image
of Maria Magdalena, the whore, with Maria, mother of Christ, comes close to the complexity and
power of Maya-Shakti. Actually, in all these Buddhist Yab-Yum symbols it is the Vajravarahi396,
the Shakti, the Maya who is the active lover. But Shiva is in deep meditation. There is never an
individual consciousness present to begin with. He is like a corpse without the fresh blood and
passion of his Shakti. In spite of his erection his nothingness is not perturbed, but rather, it is
complemented to a full oneness in the blissful embrace. When lovers have sex, they lose all
consciousness in the moment of orgasm. The French call this moment appropriately "la douce
mort," or "sweet death." The ecstatic bliss annihilates the separation between the lovers. Evidently,
Tantra Buddhists (at least some of them) were very much aware of the rejection and suppression of
sexuality and its pleasures. Carnal pleasures were anathema to any spiritual organization. What
better symbol then to use the physical union, the great orgasmic moment, the attraction of the sexes,
to represent the union of the God with his Shakti. After all, the world, with all its sex and pleasure,
and torture, and horrific atrocity is the creation of the Great God and his Shakti, or vice versa, or is
it?.

The supremacy of Maya Shakti to which even the Gods have to bow is well described in the
earlier story of Vishnu on Garuda. One can see that all hierarchy stops with oneness-nothingness.
Whatever a normal consciousness finds repulsive in one reality, another consciousness might find

395
) Heinrich Z immer, Th e Art O f Indian Asia, ZA IA, page 2 30.
396
) See the picture on page 367.

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attractive. This is not moral relativism. But any choice of the conscious mind is a play of the Maya.
This should be cause for humility and joy, not for despair and suppression. Without Maya there is
only immobility and death, emptiness instead of nothingness, rigidity instead of oneness. The mind
is nothingness and oneness at the moment of bliss in sexual embrace, pleasure, pain, the world are
being transcended. This incestuous, sacrilegious symbol says exactly this. The real world of Maya
is not the world of school masters and monks who are overly concerned with decorum and worried
about correct and proper
language. Maya-Shakti is a Figure 77
warrior, lover, and creator. Samantabhadra and Samantabhadri, Faces
Shiva (the earlier Hindu deity in
love with his Shakti, who in
Tantra Buddhism becomes the
Buddha with a much richer
philosophy) and Shakti do love
each other in every sense of the
word, no four letter word being
excluded. It is in ecstasy that
the brain can let go of its self-
images and the fixed images of
the world. The most extreme
opposites must become one, our
grandstanding ethical images
must soften. What better image
to use than the shocking love
making of our holiest deities,
who in most religions would
come down with thundering
punishment, fire and brimstone,
to destroy and punish the evil
thinkers and fornicators, and throw them into deepest everlasting hellfire.
But if all reality is essentially "The Unfolding of the Playful Illusory Manifestation of the
Buddha on the Earthly Plane." (Lalita vistara sutra ), the concepts of sin, ethics, morality and so
on, in their religious and sociological definitions become questionable and suspect. The concept of
the self who would fry in hell for eternity is merely another point in this tapestry of illusion.
If there is no heaven, no hell, no sin, no god, no devil, no
saint, then what? Will all hell break loose on earth? Not
necessarily, but then again, it has already broken loose.
Hell is the normal existence in illusion, would be the
Bodhisattva's answer.

The Yab-Yum statues of Tibet are teaching devices which can help the mind through shock
and meditation to loosen the rigid reality, to unite body and soul, nature and spirit, matter and mind,

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sensuality and spirituality. The unification of the opposites gives the proper reference for human
action. But they cannot be unified in reality.
The female's face shows the ecstasy of pleasure, pain, and horror to which the participating
motions of lovers of the world, of all conscious beings, lead to with necessity. Sex is the most wide-
spread and common of activities of all sexual life-forms.
It is synonymous with participation in the world, with the creation of thoughts and things,
from the first stone axe to the latest computer. Any such activity must lead to pain and pleasure,
pleasure and pain, and sorrow, ultimately death. This is the wisdom of the energizing, life giving and
life taking, unpredictable, creative and destructive Maya, the Shakti (Sanskrit: creative energy and
force) energy of the whole universe.
The participation in life needs the wisdom and the blessing of Maya, the mother goddess.
But this wisdom alone is not sufficient. It leads to blood and human sacrifice, unmitigated horror
of existence, which drinks the blood of its children and skins them alive, without mercy or justice,
without meaning or remorse. Not even the wisdom of the Maya, nor her appeasement with sacrifices
and prayers is sufficient. The participants in life must not only comprehend the Maya of the outside
existence, no, they must also comprehend the Maya of this comprehension, which is wisdom. The
Self must realize its own illusory insubstantiality.
Shiva or Buddha is the certain, immovable, secure, vajra like, state of total insight in the no-
thingness of being. The attributes to this state are beyond conscious comprehension, ultimate not-
knowing and total insight. This state alone is also still under the spell of the separated Maya. She,
Lakshmi and Shri (prosperity, fortune, beauty, virtue) Shakti, Padma (Lotus), Aphrodite, Isis
represents the beautiful, sexy, graceful aspects of nature and the human psyche but also all its
opposites. She is the seducer, the best allegory, metaphor, and cipher of the erotic seductive powers
women have over men. Of all the maya: powers, illusions, and temptations the greatest one is
woman. She drinks their blood and skins them alive, and men are bewitched by her. She copulates
with them, deceives them, cheats them, maims and kills them. She, Maya, is the essence of human
illusion, lust for power, pleasure, fame. The maya of having prices to gain, things to accomplish,
pleasures to experience, goals to reach, is the greatest illusion there is. And the realization of this
illusion by the Self is the maya of Maya, the almost perfect illusion. To realize the illusion may be
another illusion.
Evidently, male and female are psychological and mythological terms referring to attitudes
present in every man and every woman. The physical forms are allegories.
It is only in the ecstatic union of this absolute unshakable Maya security of Shiva, with the
never resting, always moving, always acting Maya, that the maya state of both is transcended to the
plane of compassion and wisdom, a moving play of no-thingness, when both are one, both are
nothing, and all there is. This is the eternal moment of compassion and wisdom, which is the only
true movement. The ecstasy of this union is the oneness-nothingness from which forms, apparent
substance, can be created. Existence and transcendence unite. The union transcends existence which,
if alone, is Maya and absurdity, and transcendence which, if alone, is Maya and religious fantasy.
Together, Maya-Shiva finds comprehension in herself, and is free to participate with wisdom and
compassion in her own play.
When consciousness and space and time and the world 'return,' compassion and wisdom of
the loving embrace between Shiva and Maya have transformed the world, the world as the

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experience of the conscious mind. Now there is the seed of compassionate wisdom planted in
consciousness.
Maya produces the world; she is the mother of our swiftly transitory lives. Though these
lives of ours are caught in the cycle of births and rebirths where everything fails at the end, filled
with suffering and guilt, shortcomings, ridiculous infatuations, nevertheless they are the
manifestations of divine energy. Whatever we may perceive or experience, and no matter how we
may perceive it, everything, including ourselves, our world, the unknowable actual world and the
world as we perceive it, in so called objective or subjective fashion, is a revelation of divine energy.
Hence the divine sanctity of Maya, whatever she may be, or mean, or not mean to our consciousness.
The absolute, disguised as and by Maya is around us in everything. It includes ourselves, our
consciousness, our subconscious, and unconscious mind which are closest to the mystery.
In Tantra, the Hindu and Buddhist version, Maya can be seen as simply the dynamic
aspect of the Absolute. Hence, all and everything is a revelation, a manifestation of the one and sole
divine essence. This amounts to such a wholesale, indiscriminate sanctification of all and everything
on the earthly plane, that there is no need any more for yoga, for sublimation through asceticism.
Life with all its features and experiences, the universe in its decline and strife, though screening the
divine Self in us, is holy and divine. Just beneath the veal of Maya, the magic mirage of the
universe, dwells the Absolute. And the energy of Maya is precisely the energy of that Absolute,
under its dynamic aspect.
Religion, therefore, which etymologically means that which obliges or binds together, is in
its most fundamental sense the recognition that the world is an Order, of which each man, being, and
thing, is a part and to which each man stands in a definite, established relation; together with action
based on, and consistent with, such recognition, and in harmony with the whole cosmic activity. In
Tantra God is worshiped as the Great Mother because, in this aspect, God is active, and produces,
nourishes and maintains all. Shiva is the God. Shiva is the unchanging Consciousness, and Shakti
is its changing power appearing as mind and matter. Shiva-Shakti is therefore Consciousness of
What Is and Its Power.

7.2.4 SHIVA-NATARAJA AND YAB-YUM


The same positive idea, the unity between contemplation and action, between truth and
reality, is represented in the dance of Shiva. Shiva's facial expression shows the serene aloofness of
the mind immersed in nothingness. His copious hairdo, on the other hand defies asceticism. So does
the whole body of Shiva dancing ecstatically the female dance of the world, celebrating
creation, action, joy, and exhilaration, all reality. He stomps down on the dwarfish figure,
representing the repressive forces contained in both asceticism as well as in overindulgence, stomps
on the doctrine of expulsion from paradise. That little figure, the confused self, the ego, symbol for
mankind, tries to do things right by throttling the forces of nature represented by the cobra, to no
avail of course. This diminutive figure is in terrified awe of Shiva and his dance on the razor's edge
between exhilarating life affirming action, and the unfazed meditation of the mind which is one with
the whole creation. He is expelled from paradise, and tries to subdue the dragon, dutifully obeying
the rules of the castrated priests, having it all gotten wrong.

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There is a clear parallel between the Tibetan bronze figures of Yab-Yum together with the
figures of the wrathful deities dancing on the corpses of ignorance and ego, and the figures of Nata-
raja.
Shiva symbolism delves deep into the mystery of two-in-one in close parallels to the explicit
bronze figures of Yab-Yum in Tibetan Buddhism.
Shiva-Nataraja represents in one dynamic bronze figure the essence of Hinduism and Tibetan
Buddhism in their most advanced and profound forms. The oneness-duality mystery, the oneness-
nothingness, of Shiva and Shakti, Shiva-Shakti, OM. And Shiva represents all the forces separated
in the three figures of Vishnu, Brahma, and Shiva, as discussed earlier.
The mystery of life and death, human suffering and joy, ignorance and release, have found
an ingeniously inspired and masterly
Figure 78 executed artistic representation in this
Shiva-Nataraja, 2, Bronze 14" bronze figure. The dynamism, mystery,
a n d t r a n s c e nd i n g p o w e r o f t h i s
masterpiece are breathtaking and have
hardly an equal anywhere or at any time
in the world of magic, art, or philosophy.
The three dimensional figure tells a
dynamic endless story. It is the story of all
human life as the dance of and with
Maya-Shakti-Shiva. This artwork draws
the spectator into its meditative dreaming
but explosive truth and makes him or her
an active participant. It represents the
insight of the mystic and offers to become
one with the enchanting dream of Maya.
It is a masterpiece at a par with the
meditation Buddhas and sculptures of
Tibet and Tantra Yoga. In some sense this
should come as no surprise, Shiva being
the lord of yogis and also being one with
his Shakti, the beautiful and sensuous
Goddess, which later in Buddhism
becomes Tara and the loving consort of
the Buddha.
Shiva dances the dance of Maya,
the dance of the universe and the dance of
illusion. He is Shiva, the unshakable truth,
but he dances the dance of Shakti, action,
because the greatest illusion and dance of Maya-Shakti is woman. The whole dance is ecstasy,
trance, and magic. Like the universe, or human perception thereof, it is unknowably dynamic,
mysterious, impenetrable, yet luring, enticing, promising like the sensual Shakti or the equally
sensual Shiva. Whoever enters the ring of fire must join in the dance, at the risk of being burnt to
ashes. Nataraja, Shiva as the master of dance, performs the cosmic dance of Maya-Shakti on top

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of the little insignificant dwarf, who represents Man in his ignorance, forgetfulness, and
heedlessness. This corpse is our lot if we try to understand the world by staying outside of the
unpredictable, uncertain, unknowable ring of dance. At another instant he dances on top of the Bull,
see page Figure 54 on page 346.
Mere intellectual understanding, scientific or religious, which claims to be perfect
knowledge, is a non-participating deadly illusion, the lowest form of Maya, on which Shiva dances.
The dwarf looks up to Shiva in utter bewilderment, trying with his right hand to fend off a cobra the
symbol of the creative waters which are ultimately the life creating juices of Maya-Shakti.
This little ignorant being attempts in vain to please the God or Goddess by squeezing and
suppressing his desires, his fears of the serpent, his longing for sexual bliss and fulfillment, his
horror of the earth and water forces, the chtonic energies, death. This poor Man is in utter awe of
the incomprehensible other, represented by the crazed dancer above, who abolishes all norms of
morality and decency. This is Nietzsche's bermensch, man-woman-god-goddess, who has
seen the conditioning of reality, and who dances with Maya as Maya as Shiva.
And yet, this little bewildered, stressed out human being, in the deepest recesses of his mind,
hopes and fears that this DANCER is who he himself might be.
The little dwarf, flat and ridiculous lying on his stomach, does not at all understand this in
his fruitless battle against the forces of life and death, which are one.
So, Shiva dancing the wild ecstatic cosmic dance, fully embracing and being the sensuality
of Maya Shakti, affirms life and the full participation in it. The whole dance is similar to the ideas
expressed in Tantra Shaktism and Tantra Buddhism.
And he/she dances on top of the ignorance of human beings, who want to live against the
forces of Maya, desperately trying to ignore her, rationalize her away, or ban her into eternal hell
fire.

The conquest of the demon, the self-conquest, of ignorance lies in


the attainment of true comprehension of reality. Therein is the
release from the bondages of the world. By participating in the
dance, under the guidance of Shiva-Shakti or any of his/her
numerous disguises, we break the magic of the maya, we become
one with the dancer-creator, one with the maya, suspending the
world, while living in it.

Actually, we never break Mayas magic. We can see it sometimes, comprehend and touch
it occasionally. But that is the beauty of life, our awakening, and happiness. It is to see Maya, from
the beauty of a butterfly to the beauty of the stars above us, from the idea and fact of love, to the
compassionate acts towards creatures of the universe. Love is the active embrace of Maya and the
dance with her, be in the form of Shiva or Chinnamasta. And we must not overlook the misery in
the world, the ignorance, stupidity and horror. It is our task, given to us by Maya, not to sit back
and lament maya, maya, illusion, illusion. There is illusion that calls for its destruction through
insight, and there is illusion that calls for admiration. To know the difference and act accordingly
is dancing with Maya. Maya gives us intelligence, freedom, creativity and insight, not to be passive
observers of the world spectacle, but to be her active dancers and doers. Freedom and intelligence

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are the highest aspects of truth, of Maya herself, given to us because: We are her, and we dont
know. This is Mayas dance, and Shivas dance:

Heinrich Zimmer describes Shivas dance: In his hairdo to the right the God carries a
flower of the datura plant, a hallucinogenic plant used to induce ecstasy. At the front the descent
of the river Ganges to earth is depicted as the diminutive figure of the Goddess Ganga, and a skull.
The skull is the common crown jewel of many divinities. The image of Ganga is a reminder that
Shiva is the greatest and
powerful of all ascetics and
yogis, who agreed to catch the Figure 79
mountainous floods of the Shiva Nataraja
river Ganges on his head so
that they would not flood and
destroy the earth. His
t o we ri n g pow erful hai r
received the falling water
cascades and slowed them
down, as to lessen their
destructive power in the
labyrinth of his beautiful hair.
T h u s , t h e f l o o d s c ou l d
meander down the Himalayas
and peacefully enter the vast
and dry planes of India,
bringing life back to them. To
the left a crescent moon is
implanted in his hair
representing the element of
water and the primordial
s o u n d t h a t c r e a t e s t he
universe, and also
representing the female
principle. The crescent moon
is the symbol of the innocent
babe Shishu.
One is reminded here
of the four transformations
Man has to go through as
expressed in Nietzsches
Zarathustra, another ecstatic
dancer, namely the camel, the
lion, the dragon, and the
child. According to Nietzsche's fable the camel is the beast of burden carrying all the duties and
morals of the ages on its back. The camel must transform into the lion in order to slay the dragon

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of society's conditioning. But only the child is capable of creating the world anew. Shiva's dance is
an invitation to become this creative child, the Maya of the universe, and to join in the dance
between birth and death.
Shiva's face is emotionless and turned inward, representing the male aspect of Shiva-Shakti,
as passive unaffected nothingness-oneness, eternity and conqueror of time and death, Yamantaka.
It is the face of the meditating Shiva, knowing himself in oneness, bodily and spiritually, with his
own universal creative energy, his Shakti, the feminine active principle, the material cause of the
universe and world as Maya. It is the quiet meditating face of the Buddha, as seen later in other
marvelous bronze figures of Tibet and Nepal, displaying the Shakti or Vajradhari (carrier of the
vajra-chopper, the symbolic skinning knife to remove the ego from consciousness) sitting on the lap
of the Buddha in sexual union.
The rest of Shiva's body is the female energy of time and action swinging with the cobra in
a frantic dance of enchantment. Also, Shiva's main attribute, his linga, is not visible, possibly
another indication that his dancing body represents the female dynamism of the creating and
destroying universe. The whole dancer is Shiva and Shiva-linga inside of the ring of fire. Shiva's
face, the face of compassion and wisdom, is united with the world of Maya, they are one. Nirvana
is Samsara, there is no river to cross, no enlightenment to reach. Fire and water and air, all
consciousness is one No-thingness-Oneness; but seen from a consciousness caught in the Maya of
reality, this oneness is illusion, is empty nonsense. And it is this attitude which is the illusory Maya,
the Maya as deception, and enemy, Satan, the devil, in Judeo-Christian mythology. The spiritual
world is one but inaccessible to mechanical thought, therefore no-thing. As all sentient beings are
part of that oneness they all have their value through it, even if they deny and fight it.
The upper right hand carries a little drum, shaped like an hour class, for the beating of the
rhythm. Sound was the first of the five elements (ether, air, fire, water, earth) to develop from the
nothingness of the universe as the most subtle form of cosmic matter. In the beginning was the word,
or sound, OM. Ether is the primary and most subtle pervasive manifestation of the divine substance.
Out of it unfold in the evolution of the universe, all the other elements. Together, therefore, Sound
and Ether, allegorically, signify the first moment of creation, the productive energy of the Absolute,
which again is indicated by the crescent moon in Shiva's hair. This small symbol can here be
interpreted as the rising of the first sound, the first manifestation of space in the old Indian
mythological understanding. It represents the state of power, the heartbeat of the Absolute.
The upper left hand, with a half-moon posture of the thumb and forefinger bears on its palm
a tongue of flame. The cobra dances in the same plane, thus we have the three elements: ether, fire,
water. Ether as the primal driving creating force of the absolute oneness-nothingness. Water
associated with Shakti-yoni as the female creating power and fire as the male creating power are
the driving forces underlying all reality of sentient beings.
An outer ring of flames and an inner ring of light surround the dancing Shiva. This is said
to signify the vital processes of the universe and its creatures, nature's dance as moved by the

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dancing god within. Simultaneously it is said to signify the energy of Wisdom, the transcendental
light of truth, dancing forth from the personification of the All.397
This reminds again of Shiva who in the story of Shiva In The Forest Of Divine Trees
appeared in a flaming ring of fire radiating like a thousand suns. This story itself introduces the pre-
Aryan idea of the omnipotence of Shiva and Shakti, the linga and the yoni, and establishes their
power above that of the newer Aryan gods.
In this story Shiva is challenged by the lot of fake forest dwelling
ascetics, who are jealous that their wives and daughters could be
seduced by this beautiful stranger. They have taken vows of celibacy
and think that they have removed themselves successfully from the
low pleasures of reality. This unknown stranger shows them that their
determination and discipline is not all that hot after all, and they hate
him for it. They want his head, or at least his penis. Outraged by this
cheap asceticism the master yogi himself rips off his penis and throws
it to the ground. The penis grows and in a fiery ring penetrates into
the earth and grows beyond all imagination.
Vishnu and Brahma, meanwhile are excitedly occupied disputing
among themselves who is the greatest god. They are caught in the
web of Maya and don't know it, otherwise they would not entertain
such silly quarrels. Thus, Maya has them easily in her power.
Suddenly this gigantic flaming thing appeared in front of them and
kept growing and growing. Neither Vishnu nor Brahma had any idea
what was going on. Stupefied they change into the forms of their
animal personae and chase after the appearance into opposite
directions, but they cannot find the beginning or the end of this thing.
They become afraid and start to utter the sacred syllable OM, and
implore Shiva to help them in their dread, induced by the powers of
Maya. It is then that Shiva appears to them in this huge thing which
is the linga, which is only containable by Maya, the yoni of the
universe. Thus, Vishnu and Brahma recognize that the creative and
destructive ultimate power of What Is, is the One Shiva-Maya, linga-
yoni. Om Mani Padme Hum.
The jealous yogis in the woods recognize also their terrible mistake
and try to make amends with Shiva. Thus, Shiva shows that neither
the rejection of the world through asceticism, nor the divine wisdom
of the high gods Vishnu and Brahma, can save a being from the web
of Maya, who is Shakti, who is Shiva.

Maya is the yoni of the world. Her essence is the essence of all, she is the mistress of all:
the power of the Great God, accomplished without beginning. She is All-Space and All-Time,
radiating she fills All. In her is the Great One, who beyond the world resides in highest place:
Shiva, the One, but also the God who is half woman. He created the universe, which has its

397
) From Heinrich Zimmer, ZMS, pages 151-157; and ZAIA, page 122.

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origin in Him, obeying His Maya. The Maya God or Goddess, concealed in all things, without
separation: He is the Goddess, and nothing is separate from Him or Her. He who sees this, is
immortal. The ring of fire is the yoni enfolding and unfolding the whole space, within which
Maya-Shakti rules, it is reality, actuality, and truth.
In some bronze figures the shape of the fiery ring is more like that of an almond, rather than
round, revealing even more the
intentional connotation with the
Figure 80 opened yoni of the eternal Shakti.
Chintamani Avalokiteshvara, Thangka The heat and moisture of Shakti
envelopes the ecstatically dancing
Shiva. It also represents the
mystic syllable OM, or A-U-M,
the letter A standing for waking
consciousness or mechanical
thinking-sensing-acting, the letter
U sta nding f or ge ne r a tive
consciousness or dreaming state,
the letter M standing for creative
consciousness, the non-conscious
activities of the Mind, which is
one with the universal mind. The
silence that follows the sound is
the Nothingness aspect of the
s o u n d O M . T o g e t h e r , t he
Nothingness of the silence and the
Oneness of OM are All.

The f a m o u s Ti be t an
mantra:
OM MANI PADME HUM
spells out and affirms the oneness
of Shiva-linga (Mani) with his
Shakti-yoni (Padme) in the same
erotic cosmic dance represented
here. The ring of fire is Shakti,
the cosmic yoni, embracing Shiva
in passionate love. In this
oneness, the illusory duality is
t r a n s c e n d e d, w i s d o m a nd
compassion are one. This same
idea is present in the single figure
of Avalokiteshvara, in any of the innumerable representations. His is the mantra OM MANI

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PADME HUM, and he/she appears as the enchanting dancer encountered earlier398, or as the
beautiful transcending figure shown here.
Let us return to the image of the dancing Shiva: The symbol for the primordial ether in one
hand and the flame in the other represent the dialectic harmony between the creation and
destruction aspects of the universe. At the close of the current age, the Kali Yuga, according to
Hindu belief, fire will annihilate the body of creation, to be itself then quenched by the ocean of the
void, represented by the serpent.
The "fear-not" gesture
( abhay a mudra), bestowing
Figure 81 protection and peace, is displayed
Shiva-Shakti in Yab-Yum as Vajrasattva and Consort by the second right hand. The
(1996) remaining left arm and hand is
lifted across the chest, pointing
downward to the uplifted left foot.
The left leg is lifted high in a
playful elegant dancing position,
the foot hanging in a relaxed yet
c o n t r o l l e d downward b e n t,
crossing over the slightly bent
right leg which stomps on the
demon, representing Man in his
pitiful ignorance. The left hand is
thus pointing to Shiva's foot
inviting worship of the God for the
attainment of the higher
consciousness of the Shiva-Shakti
oneness. The posture of this left
downward pointing hand imitates
the outstretched trunk or hand of
the elephant, reminding us of
Shiva's son with Parvati (Shakti).
This son Ganesha is the God of
Wisdom and Remover of Obstacles,
who grants success on the secular
as well as the spiritual plane.
Shiva as the cosmic dancer
is the embodiment and
manifestation of eternal energy in
its five activities: Creation,
M a i n t e n a nc e , De s t r u c tio n ,
Concealment (Maya), and Favor
(bestowal of peace through a

398
) See also figures on page s xxii, 2, 157, an d frontispiece.

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revelatory manifestation). The first three and the last two are in groups of dialectic opposites; the
God displays them all. And he displays them not only simultaneously, but also in sequence. They are
symbolized in the positions of his hands and his feet - the upper three hands being respectively,
"creation," "maintenance" and "destruction"; the foot planted on the demon, Man in his ignorance
and hope, is "concealment," and the uplifted foot, "favor"; the "elephant hand" pointing to the
uplifted foot indicates the linkage of the three to the two, and promises peace to the soul that
experiences the relationship. The two arms representing the dance of creation and destruction, ether
and fire, together with the dancing cobra, are in the plane of the fire circle, the opening of the
cosmic yoni.
The hand turned upward and asking not to fear, as well as the hand pointing to the foot
which has been lifted from the poor ignorant person, ourselves, allude to the hope of liberation from
ignorance. "Step out of the ring of knowledge-ignorance into the ring of dance."
The two protruding hands and foot are distinctly relaxed, untouched by the fire but reaching
outward into the world of human beings, inviting us to dance into the gateway to freedom. Shiva-
Shakti sings and drums and dances the dance of life:

"Join the dance, fear not, see the oneness of creation and destruction,
and the burden of ignorance is lifted from your back. See that this
horrific, ecstatic, erotic, lascivious, and sacrilegious dance is in
actuality one with the divine. See your ignorance, the web of Maya,
and be free."
The foot, stomping on the near corpse of ignorance, will be lifted if homage and attention
is paid to the dynamic truth of the universe in its play of Maya. This same image of the Buddha
stomping on a prostrate man and woman can be found in the wrathful Yab-Yum figures as well. It
is not the God's foot that keeps us in prostrate ignorance and immobility, fighting the wrong fight
against Maya. It is our own action of fighting that fight, which maintains Maya as illusion rather
than Shiva-Shakti as liberating dance. The sublime wisdom of the transcendent Shiva and the
exuberant terrible and pleasurable play of the Shakti are the same. The whole represents Shiva in
his embrace with Shakti, more, Shiva, identical with Shiva-linga is in the ring of fire, the yoni, which
is Shakti. And Shiva is Shakti. We are one with Shiva-Shakti but we don't know it, we don't even
generally sense it. But the goal of human life is to be this. It is our own dance to which we are
invited.
The indestructible Self and the mortal being, both metaphors and ciphers of who we are -
which we don't know - are in essence the same. The incessant, triumphant motion of the swaying
limbs of Shiva induced by the rhythm of the drum and the dance of the Naga-Shakti is in significant
contrast to the balance of the head and the immobility of the serene face.
Shiva is Kala, "The Black One," "Time"; but he is also Maha
Kala (Great Time) and eternity, Yamantaka (killer of death),
active transcender of Time. Time, eternity, and the realm in
between, of which we as human beings can partake in silence.
This is he Shiva, she Shakti, the male and female Buddha in
Tibetan representations.

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Shiva, as Nataraja, king of dancers, his gestures, wild and full of grace, suggest the cosmic
drama; his flying arms and the swaying of his torso together with the swaying of his female
companion represented by the cobra, represent the continuous creation and destruction of the
universe. Death and birth, annihilation and revolution. The initial explosion of Nothingness as the
future universe, the creation of suns and nebulae, and their implosion into nothingness, history and
its ruins, the genius and evilness of the human mind, are all contained in this dance of Shiva, the
dance of Maya.
In the medieval bronze figurines of Southern India this cosmic dance is miraculously
rendered. The cyclic rhythm, flowing on and on in the unstayable, irreversible round of the Maha-
yugas, or Great Eons, is marked by the beating and stamping of the Great God's heels on the
ignorance and stupidity of illusory thought, the illusion of Maya. But the face remains, meanwhile,
in sovereign calm.
In this bronze figure of Shiva-Nataraja the peaceful and the wrathful yab-yum figures of
Tibet are condensed into one dancing ecstasy.
Shiva's fiery hair, blazing from his head to the surrounding ring of Shakti-yoni, like hissing
cobras, hot and cold simultaneously, defies the ascetic attitudes of yogic denial, and celebrates the
female fire and sensuous beauty. Uncut, flowing in long manes, it is the secret of male and female
power, which Shiva-Shakti displays and relishes with unapologizing abandon. The hair guards the
entrance to the bliss of Shakti and invites to it with its flowing beauty and fragrance. This is in total
defiance of the customs of the priests and the denyers of life, sex, earth, water, and nature with their
"dirty and messy" habits of creating and destroying.
The world renouncers everywhere cut their hair and shave their heads defying the generative
impulses of the beautiful and seductive Maya-Shakti. They don't dare to look at the naked beauty
of a woman or a man, not to mention the ecstatic union of the two, they don't dare to enter this Yoni
ring of water and fire, which has been denigrated to pornography and deadly sin, particularly in
Christian and Islamic religion. How refreshing to see this fear of the flesh transcended in the erotic-
spiritual bronzes and sculptures of India and Tibet. Shiva, just like the Buddhas in the yab-yum
embrace, shows an introverted calm. He understands Maya, all this pain and suffering and
struggling. He uses all his magic, from dance to sex and threats of death, to break the panic and
stupor of the ignorant gods and humans.
Whatever Shiva does is teaching: the passionate lover of his Shakti and Parvati, the erotic
and ecstatic dancer, the destroyer, the master of illusion. It must be remembered that Shiva is not
only the ascetic yogi, the ecstatic dancer, but also the austere deity of learning, the very embodiment
of knowledge.
This head, this face, this mask, abide in transcending all-oneness, as a spectator
unconcerned, seeing the whole together with the duality. Its smile, bent inward with a pair of eyes
and the third eye open towards the inside and towards the outside, filled with the bliss of all-
oneness, enhances and suspends, with a scarcely hidden irony, the meaningful gestures of the feet
and hands. A tension exists between the marvel of the dance and the serene tranquility of this all
transcending facial expression. The tension is not resolved but revealed, the tension of Eternity and
Time, the paradox - the silent Oneness-Nothingness - of the Absolute and its Reality. The immortal
self and the perishable psyche, Brahman-Atman and Maya; virtue and the illusion of virtue, sin and
the illusion of sin, are transcended in dance and meditation. For neither one is the entirety; the two,
invisible and visible, are the Betweenness. Man, on whose back Shiva performs his dance, with all

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FRITZ WILHELM: DANCING WITH MAYA PAGE -503-

the fibers of his native personality clings to the duality, in anxiety and delight; this is his religion,
hope and forgetfulness, his ignorance, and arrogance. Nevertheless, actually and finally, there is
no duality; but thinking cannot penetrate through the silky garments of the beautiful Maya.
Thinking can at best acknowledge her dance and participate in it. Ignorance, passion,
egotism, the active play of Maya disintegrate in this dance which is the experience of the highest
essence, crystal clear, transparent and illusive to thought or deed. What emerges is the
comprehension of the universal illusion-actuality of a world of individual existences. This "What
Is" for all its fluidity and incomprehensibility to conscious thought is eternal or eternity. This dance
is

"The Unfolding of the Playful Illusory


Manifestation of the Buddha on the Earthly
Plane."

7.2.4.1 SHRI-YANTRA AND YAB-YUM


The Shri-Yantra399 is the completely abstract representation of the basically identical
fundamental ideas of Tibetan Buddhism and Tantra philosophy, which we just described. The Shri-
Yantra corresponds to the Yab-Yum figures of Tibet and also to the symbolism of Shiva-Nataraja
(in the interpretation given here). It consists essentially of nine superimposed triangles converging
on a central point (bindu). The five triangles whose apex points down represent Shakti, while the
four with their apexes pointing up represent Shiva. The central point is bindu, the absolute,
nothingness-oneness, which may or may not be shown. Out of this unknowable Ground, Shiva-
Shakti, grows the first power of the universe and the universe itself.
It is the downward pointing triangle, the yoni, Maya-Shakti, the Mother Goddess, who finds
her parallels in all cultures of the world as Isis, Aphrodite, Parvati, and so on. With this downward
pointing Shakti triangle comes into existence immediately the upward pointing triangle, representing
Shiva. This upward pointing triangle is the male, the linga, and400 is called the fire "vahni." Thus,
the vahni triangles denote the male essence of the god, and the shakti triangles the female essence
of the consort. Together they form the two primordial dialectic and dynamic opposites, which from
here on should never be separated. Consciousness emerges from the unio mystica of the two forces
which are one. Consciousness becomes I and not-I, I and the other, I and the rest of the universe,
yoni and linga, which create the next levels of triangles and so forth, in an ever expanding and
contracting form of forms, always dialectic and dynamic, always unfolding and enfolding.401 The
Yantra of figure 82, nava-yoni, represents the creation of the universe through the union of the male

399
) See the earlier section 7.2.4.1 on pag e 503 ff.
400
) Heinrich Z immer, ZMS, page 140 ff.
401
) For a m ore de tailed ex plana tion see Sir John W oodroffe, A valon : Shakti and Shakta, SS, page 274.

Ch. 7 Pg. 503


FRITZ WILHELM: DANCING WITH MAYA PAGE -504-

and female principles. Each of the nine (nava) triangles is the yoni of the universe.402 This Nava-
Yoni Chakra floats on the cosmic waters, which I would liken to the unobservable quantum-field
ether, enfolding and unfolding all universes and all forms with their potential actualities and
realities.
From some point of view the Yantra images serve in the yoga of Buddhism and Hinduism
a strangely similar purpose to the advanced mathematical formulas of theoretical physics. The
yantras are symbols representing the interaction of the human mind, psyche, and soul with itself and
the world; the formulas of physics describe the world in its interaction with objective thought. Both
representations are completely empty and meaningless to the untrained mind. But in the case of the
yantras one should only
consider to associate the three
Figure 82 b a s i c mode s of t h i n k i ng
Shakti-Shiva Triangle. Nava-Yoni mentioned earlier with the
corner points of the Shakti
triangle, for example, and one
has a powerful non-linear model
of thinking at hand. If one
furthermore associates the three
basic human activities with the
corner points of the Vahni
triangle, namely thinking,
sensing, and acting, one has
created a structure of the human
mind-body tota lity. Such
structures are non-linear; they
can account for mechanical,
g e n e r a t i ve , a n d c r e a t i ve
activities, any mixtures thereof,
and possibilities for infinite
variations - with the infinite Shri-Yantra - of differentiated oneness. An interesting aspect of this
representation is that we have a fundamental structure which may be repeated to infinity, not unlike
the structure of the material universe with its fundamental pattern of quarks as described in physics,
energies of un-certain structures, sunyata (nothingness) and sunya-sunya, a no-thingness which is
not nothingness. The holomorphic structure of human consciousness finds its adequate
representation here. Human consciousness expresses divine consciousness in a fundamental
oneness, which dissolves into unknowable nothingness, like the triangles of the Shri-Yantra
dissolve in and emerge from an unknowable point before consciousness, before anything was
or is.
An infinitely expanded Shri-Yantra could encompass the whole universe of mind and matter,
in a symbolism which avoids the pitfalls of dualistic and hierarchical models. The interpretation of
the Shakti-Triangle as Nothingness and of the Vahni triangle as Oneness allows us to even meditate
on the mystical aspects of What Is.

402
) See K hanna, M adhu, Yantra, YAN page 28.

Ch. 7 Pg. 504


FRITZ WILHELM: DANCING WITH MAYA PAGE -505-

Figure 83 Shri-Yantra
The loving embrace of Shiva
with his Shakti is the Nothingness which
is not Nothingness (Sunya-sunya) and
the Oneness which is two in one, and
thus a betweenness, which is the self-
suspending path of the Buddha.
The physicist who meditates on
the complex equations of quantum field
theory and on the algebras which for
him generate the universe, enters into
the same realm of the Tibetan adept who
meditates on creation through the Shri-
Yantra. Their minds become
unobservably one with the abstract
Nothingness-Oneness of What Is. From
that creative space, Shambala in
Buddhist terms, which is nowhere, and
not in any time, new ideas emerge.
7.2.5 ENERGY AND
MATTE R, SHIVA AND
PARVATI
In the orthodox system of Indian philosophy, called Sankhya, What Is was thought of as
made up of two constituents, Purusha and Prakriti.403 This pre-Aryan dualistic realistic system of
thought was ultimately incorporated into Brahmanism together with Yoga. Prakriti corresponds
somewhat to the Western idea of matter whereas purusha corresponds to the internal life-energy and
spiritual intelligence. It was this dualism which was, as was the scholarly custom of the time, pushed
to extreme classifications and categorizations. It was and still is in conflict with the non-dualistic
Vedanta philosophy, as expressed also in the Upanishads. The relationship and ultimate oneness of
Brahman and Atman permeates all of modern Hinduism, and as I have tried to show, also Mahayana
Buddhism. Eastern and Western thinkers and religious people commit most often the same mistake:
They forget that about the ultimate ideas one should only think in terms of ciphers. This insight is
present, in my view, in the visual expressions of Indian and Buddhist art. The very fact that these
ideas are being expressed for the senses excludes more easily their incorporation into a certain body
of knowable concepts. The meaning of art is a non-certain intuition, it is appealing to the senses and
full of meaning, i.e. it contains uncertain appeal to uncertain thinking and sensing.
Science can also lend us a hand in trying to find this meaning for us. Everyone knows (or
should know) the famous Einstein formula:

E = M@c2

403
) See H einrich Zimm er; ZP, page 325 ff.

Ch. 7 Pg. 505


FRITZ WILHELM: DANCING WITH MAYA PAGE -506-

This equation says to a physicist that any matter contains a certain amount of energy, which
can be calculated according to this formula. It also says that anything which we consider matter can
in one way or another be turned into energy and vice versa. If our psychological hangups are real,
they must have a material representation in our bodies in terms of molecules or their arrangements.
This is the gross matter which Shiva tried to burn into energy, much like any human yogi would do.
However, at the level of Shiva's 'existence' he is essence, not part of reality. He, like Parvati, is all
aspects of that essence. His form is pure illusion, and therefore, his gross matter is pure illusion also.
It is only Shiva's illusion, that keeps him trying to burn up what is not even there. Now, Parvati, as
Maya is not only the essence of all form, actuality, and reality. She is also the essence of illusion.
Thus, one can read the equation also for one's spiritual benefit as:

NOTHINGNESS
IS
ONENESS
IS
ENERGY IS MATTER
or
MAYA (KAMA) IS SHIVA
or
THE INTELLIGENT POTENTIAL POWER TO BECOME
IS
THE MOTHER, THE CREATRIX OF ALL
THAT CAN BE
MANIFEST IN TIME, SPACE, MATTER, AND THOUGHT.
As I showed in the previous chapter Nothingness itself can be looked at as the infinite
energy contained in every cubic inch of so-called empty space. Space is not empty; space-time-
matter-thought are unfolding movements of the underlying eternal Nothingness. Nothingness, matter
and energy, defy ultimate definition and explanation. The ideas of prakriti and purusha may be
likened to them. I intentionally use the more abstract ideas Nothingness for purusha and Oneness
for prakriti. Both are ciphers and not knowable concepts of measurable certainty. The Betweenness
of the ciphers is their Oneness and Nothingness. This is what all the bronze statues of Yab-Yum and
Shiva-Shakti or the symbolism of Shri-Yantra and Yin-Yang lastly express. The wisdom of the
West is hidden in its scientific achievement which is not well comprehended; the beautiful
nothingness of the equations of quantum field theory which unfolds models of the universe has not
yet been properly explored. The same holds for the particle wave duality, and the creation of the
universe out of an eternal infinite energy of an intelligent Nothingness-Oneness.
Hegel's statement that intelligence is mysticism for the intellect still holds. The majority
of scientists scoff at philosophers, who by and large lost themselves in negative philosophy, trying
to emulate the successes of science.

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FRITZ WILHELM: DANCING WITH MAYA PAGE -507-

The wisdom of India is hidden in the beauty of its sculptures and mythologies, and buried
in the immensity of its often inconsistent and contradictory (at least for most Western observers)
philosophical literature. But greatest treasures of the human mind are there.
The dialectic tension between ideality and reality, spirit and matter, intelligence and
mechanicalness is contained in yet another report about the stormy relationship between Shiva and
his Shakti:
When all the Gods were once again close to be defeated by the demons, they needed the help
of the great Shiva, who of course, as usual, did not take it lightly that someone tried to disturb him
in his meditations. In addition, having just lost his beloved wife Sati, he was absolutely in no mood
to look at a woman again. Only Shakti, the creative energy of the universe might have any hope to
approach him successfully. So she appears before him under her persona of Parvati.
The king of the Himalayas, Parvata, finally brings his daughter, the beautiful dark skinned
Parvati, with the pet name Kali, to Shiva to stir him up out of his yogic austerities. Shiva is quite
annoyed about this disturbance; after all, what has he, the master yogi immersed in meditation to do
with a sexy woman like Parvati?
It is not only her beauty that ultimately convinces him, but her intelligence and irreverent
speech. She challenges him by ridiculing his austerities.
"What do you think you are doing with your yoga practices, anyhow;
gaining energy by burning up matter?" she asks.
"If you are the highest form of matter, the created God himself, for
what purpose are you practicing yoga? To get rid of any blemishes?
This does not make sense."
Well, he claims that he is indeed this pure matter or prakriti, which
he burns up to gain more energy.
"No," she says, challenging him now as the Goddess herself, "This is
silly; I am matter (prakriti) and you are energy (purusha), I am what
becomes real and what drives reality, whereas you are spirit and
energy, the absolute. You are already what you want to gain through
these austerities. You are the absolute. Therefore, practices and
austerities don't make any sense. You might as well stop and come
along with me and marry me."404

So, in a sense, Parvati expressed the insight on the spiritual plane that matter is energy, and
that no practice, no method can lead the absolute spirit to some no-thing which it already is. This
is the insight into Maya. Duality is the fundamental illusion. What Is, is Oneness-Nothingness-
Betweenness. I read this account as the metaphorical rejection of division between reality and
ideality, between nirvana and samsara. It is also a criticism of all the methods and practices, which
supposedly lead to nirvana. It is the same criticism of all the religious organizations with their
lucrative superstitious ceremonies and practices, which is contained in the philosophy of Nagarjuna:

There is no path from samsara to nirvana, because both are


nothing and both are one.
404
) More on the love affair between Shiva and Parvati on pages 371 and 398.

Ch. 7 Pg. 507


FRITZ WILHELM: DANCING WITH MAYA PAGE -508-

Albert Einstein proved the realizable aspect of that insight at the beginning of the twentieth
century. Just as there is ultimately no separation between (measurable) energy and matter,
energy and substance, so is there ultimately no separation between existence and
transcendence.
One has to go even further: The apparent difference between No-thingness and Thingness
arises through the intelligent unfolding movement of Nothingness. Thus, Thingness is part of No-
thingness unfolded, or Nothingness has Thingness enfolded in itself, and vice versa. All things are
correlated with the underlying Nothingness.

The possibilities of differences are thus enfolded in Nothingness as well and are important
for the discerning processes of sensing, acting, and thinking. Nothingness, oneness, differences as
and through the movements of SAT, are enfolded in What Is and are unfolded to a thing-like reality
for consciousness. Neither separation nor 'mechanical oneness' are ultimately part of reality, but are
approximations or metaphors. The joining 'point' between an electron emitting a photon, does not
exist in reality, nor does the connecting signal in the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen-Bohm-Aharonov
experiment. We are in both cases entering the domain of non-certainty, non-locality, creative
space, Nothingness.

During the encounter between Shiva and Parvati, the mountain daughter could have added
that her worship was older (because she is of course Maya-Shakti herself) and truly timeless, and
that the two are one anyhow.

She is Shiva, and he is Shakti.

Both are oneness and nothingness, linga and yoni. He, transcendence, in her, immanence,
create and are actuality and reality. It is merely their appearance, as and in time and space, which
creates the confusion. But then, she didn't and doesnt have to reveal all of her maya, and she has
a sense of humor.
Anyhow, the story ends well, and in typical fashion the two become the greatest lovers in
the universe. Their loving and laughing, pleasure and fun, was witnessed by the faithful Bull Nandi,
who eventually told the stories of what he saw and heard during the night, in which the sweat drops
of the two lovers jumped into the skies to form the innumerable stars above. The story of their love
making became the Kamasutra, the teaching of sexual pleasures.

7.2.5.1 MAYA AND SHAKTI: THE TANTRIC VIEW


The last paragraph should be reserved to quote the great English researcher Avalon (Sir John
Woodroffe), who has done the ground breaking work on the philosophy of Tantra. He has inspired
among others the great Indologist Heinrich Zimmer, who was able to unlock some of the secrets in
Indian mythology for me. The following excerpts are from the book by Avalon: Shakti and
Shakta. To simplify reading I have included some explanations in parentheses and boldface,
referring to notions which I have used in this book; words in italics are explanations of Sanskrit
words added by the current author. I want to remind the reader again that this text represents a
model, and is metaphor and cipher:

Ch. 7 Pg. 508


FRITZ WILHELM: DANCING WITH MAYA PAGE -509-

"Religion405, therefore, which etymologically means that which


obliges or binds together, is in its most fundamental sense the
recognition that the world is an Order, of which each man, being, and
thing, is a part and to which each man stands in a definite, established
relation; together with action based on, and consistent with, such
recognition, and in harmony with the whole cosmic activity.
406
The Shakta is so called because he is a worshiper (he embraces the
power of uncertainty) of Shakti (power), that is God in Mother-form
as the Supreme Power which creates, sustains, and withdraws the
universe...
God is worshiped as the Great Mother because, in this aspect, God is
active, and produces, nourishes and maintains all.
Shiva is the God. Shiva is the unchanging Consciousness, and Shakti
is its changing power appearing as mind and matter. Shiva-Shakti is
therefore Consciousness and Its Power.
In creation an effect is produced without effect in the Producer. In
creation the power (Shakti) "goes forth" in a series of emanations or
transformations, which are called the 36 Tattvas (fundamental
principles). These mark the various stages through which Shiva, the
Supreme Consciousness, as Shakti, presents Itself as object to itself
as subject, the latter at first experiencing the former as part of the
Self, and then through the operations of Maya Shakti as different
from the Self. This is the final stage in which every Self (Purusha)
is mutually exclusive of every other. Maya, which achieves this, is
one of the Powers of the Mother or Devi. The Will-to-become-many
is the creative impulse which not only creates but reproduces an
eternal order. The Lord remembers the diversities latent in His own
Maya Shakti due to the previous Karmas of Jivas (conscious
manifestations, incarnations) and allows them to unfold themselves
by His volition. It is that Power by which infinite formless
Consciousness veils Itself to Itself and negates and limits Itself in
order that it may experience Itself as Form.
This Maya Shakti assumes the form of Prakriti (matter) Tattva,
which is composed of three Gunas (fundamental qualities) or
factors, called Sattva Rajas, Tamas (creative, generative, and
mechanical SAT). The function of Prakriti is to veil, limit, or finitize
formless Consciousness, so as to produce form, for without such
limitation there cannot be the appearance of form. These Gunas work
by mutual suppression. The function of Tamas (mechanical SAT,
maya) is to veil Consciousness (intelligent thinking), of Sattva
(creative SAT) to reveal it, and of Rajas (generative SAT) the active

405
) Sir John W oodroffe, A valon , Shiva And Shakti; SS, page 2.
406
) Sir John W oodroffe, A valon , Shiva And Shakti; SS, page 6.

Ch. 7 Pg. 509


FRITZ WILHELM: DANCING WITH MAYA PAGE -510-

principle to make either Tamas suppress Sattva or Sattva suppress


Tamas. These Gunas are present in all particular existence, as in the
general cause or Prakriti Shakti. Evolution means the increased
operation of Sattva Guna (unfolding of intelligence). The aim of
Sadhana (Shakti worship) is therefore the cultivation of the Sattva
Guna."
In Tantra Buddhism, What Is is the Buddha-mind. It is holy, creative, intelligent, No-
thingness, boundless energy and wisdom. The human mind is an intelligent representation and a
holomorphism of the movements of this spirit, Brahman and Atman, or energy (purusha). The
human brain is merely a temporary representation of this energy, with the potential to be receptive
to intelligence.
In this representation the live human brain is a holomorphism of matter and can create human
consciousness, but the manifestations and notions of this living brain and consciousness are bound
by the dimensions available to its understanding. Here, the narrow notions of mechanical thinking
with its possibility for relative certainty have their place, notions of morality, tradition, life, death
and so on. This is the reality of Maya.
But the mind as spirit (Geist) can go deeper than this because it is one with the Nothingness-
Oneness of What Is. Prakriti and purusha, matter and energy, Atman and Brahman, are one. To see
this is the ending of the limiting notions of life and death and human suffering. It is the ending of
conventional reality and the transformation of mechanical thinking, the beginning of intelligence,
freedom, and compassion. Maya is one with Buddha and Shiva-Shakti, Nothingness and Oneness
are One and Nothing. No matter how much mechanical thinking tries to get from here to there, it
cannot do it, because it itself is the obstacle and the illusory path. The path is as un-knowable as the
unknowable God.

IT IS THE MYSTERY
OF MAYA,
WHO INVITES TO HER
DANCE.

Ch. 7 Pg. 510


FRITZ WILHELM: DANCING WITH MAYA PAGE -511-

Figure 84
Shri-Yantra, the Unfolding and Enfolding of W hat Is

Ch. 7 Pg. 511


FRITZ WILHELM: DANCING WITH MAYA PAGE -512-

TO DANCE WITH MAYA


IS OUR FREEDOM
OF HER
AND OUR ONENESS
WITH HER.

Figure 85
Tara, Wisdom of the Buddhas, Action of Reality.

Ch. 7 Pg. 512

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