A Course of Meditation

by
Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan
Inspired by the vision of
Hazrat Inayat Khan
 
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Welcome
Jewish Wailing Women
Rudra Vina
Rudra Vina 2
Turkish Call to Prayer

Allegri
Miserere

Abed Azrie
Murmur of the Breeze

Johann Sebastian Bach
Fugue in F major
Magnificat
Partita No. 1 in B
  minor

Prelude in F major
Prelude to St. John's
  Passion

Sonalast Partitas
St. John's Passion,
  Lamentation


Ludwig von Beethoven
4th Piano Concerto

Pandit Kashinath Bodas
Raga Komal Rishabh
  Asavari


Johannes Brahms
4th Symphony

Max Bruch
Kol Nidre

Deuter
Nada Himalaya

Choying Drolma
Tibetan Chant

Ghazal
Traces of the Beloved

Lama Gyurmé
Lama's Chant
The Tsok Offering

Sha heedi
Sâghee
  Nâme (Sufi
  Nâme)


Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan
1st Jhana
2nd Jhana: The
  Thinking Behind the
  Universe

3rd Jhana: The Emotion
  Behind the Universe

4th Jhana: The
  Consciousness
  Behind the Universe

A Transfigured World:
  the View from Within

A View of the World;
  Satipathana and
  Jhanas Stage1

Absorbing Light,
  Radiating Light

All Pervading Light
As a Promise of
  Resurrection

Attachment and Pain
Attuning to
  Glorification

Awakening the Glance
  of the Dervish

Being a Being of Light
Beyond Consciousness
Breathing from Within
Buddhism and Sufism
Cleansing the Emotions
  with Light

Clues in Our Psyche
Consciousness Becomes
  Infinite

Converging the Light
  of the Stars

Dervish Heart
  Meditation

Developing Light in
  the Eyes

Espy the Thinking of
  the Universe

Everlastingness and
  Eternity

Filtering Impressions
  (2 Immune Systems)

Finding Freedom from
  the Constraint of
  Impressions

God-consciousness
Image of the Pendulum
Image of the Vortex
  Energy Practice

Imagining an Archangel
  of Light

Impact of Situations
  on the Self

Impact of the Self on
  Situations

Keys to Meditation
Light in a Secondary
  Chakra: Eyes

Light in the 1st Chakra
Light in the 2nd Chakra
Light in the 3rd Chakra
Light in the 4th
  Chakra: Heart Center

Light in the 5th
  Chakra: Throat
  Center

Light in the 6th
  Chakra: Third Eye

Light in the 7th
  Chakra: Crown Center

Light in the Chakras:
  Introduction

Matching Latencies
Muhasibi: What Do I
  Value in Life?

Observing Yourself
  (Muhasibi / Jhanana
  Darshana)

Our Purpose is
  Awakening

Palace of Mirrors
Perception and Desire
Reflections
Seeing Beauty
Shifting Perspectives
Starry Sky Meditation
Steps to
  Transcendence:
  Seeking Nirvana

Steps to Turning Within
The Bounty of Life
The Glance, 1 & 2
The Glance, 3: That
  Which Transpires

The Glance, 4:
  Purifying the Glance

The Glance, 5: The
  Eyes Through Which
  God Sees

The Glance, 6: The
  Divine Glance

The Glance, 7: Shahid
The Process of Ta'wil
The Vortex
This Become Does Not
  Lead to the
  Non-Become

Thrust into Existence
Universe as Beings of
  Light

Visualizing the Body
  as a Crystal

Watch Your Body
Watch Your
  Consciousness


Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan
Watch Your Personality

Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan
Watch Your Thoughts
We are a Condition of
  God


Light Shows
Kirlian Photography
Fractal Journey
Impressions of the
  Cosmos

Sun Rises

Nathan and Joseph
We Shall Be Healed

Rustavi Choir
Gregorian Chant

Saki Lee and Shams Kairys
Thy Light is in All
  Forms


Sirin Choir
Russian Chants

Tallis Scholars
Victoria Tenebrae
  Responsories


Tibetan Buddhist Nuns of the Kopan Monastery
Track 13

Andrew Lloyd Webber
Pie Jesu
Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan: A Transfigured World: the View from Within            Go back

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© Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan, February 27th, 1999, Washington, D.C.

In Sufism, we discover the ability to shift our consciousness and our identity in the antipodal pole of our being. The antipodal pole of our being.

That is, what would it be like to think that you are thought of instead of that you are thinking. That you are known instead of knowing. And so on. This is typified by a word of St. Francis of Assisi who said, "I thought I was looking at the world, but the world is looking at me."

See? It's the opposite. So the second step* would be, once more getting into the consciousness of that person and trying to sense the kind of impression that that person has of you. The kind of picture that that person makes of you. And, if you could realize that the picture—their representation—they make of you is totally different from the one that you make of yourself. And you could even, now, gather from that that their action was based upon a false assessment that they made of you.

But your assessment of yourself is faulty also. But at least two assessments are better than one. But now we can increase our purview. So now think of a third person involved in your problem. Get into their consciousness and see how they look at the same problem, differently from that other person, differently to yourself. And you see the picture they make of you. Which is different from the picture that other person makes of you, or the picture that you make of yourself.

So if you were to increase the amount of people involved—because, in fact, we think that we have problems, that they are our problems, but, in fact, there is no boundary to these problems. They are really the problems of the whole cosmos. They're not just our problems.

So this would lead to exactly to what St. Francis is saying. If you try to get in—to look—to consider that "the world is looking at you" instead of "you are looking at the world." It's a whole other perspective.

Now St. Francis was walking in the forest at night time in a state of contemplation and he was getting into the consciousness of the trees. That is, what would it be like to be a tree. And we have that ability. And he could see that the trees are looking at him.

Now if you do that, and you could try to do that, you get into a transfigured world. You discover—you switch your consciousness from the ordinary commonplace kind of perception of the physical world into a transfigured world. You find yourself in a transfigured world. And that is the way to be high, is to get yourself in a transfigured world.

Now I understand that some women get into that state just shortly prior to giving birth—and, perhaps, even after the birth—because, somehow, the woman is connected with the thinking of the child, and the child is still in a transfigured world. And so the door is open between different worlds.

Can you imagine what that's like? To be like in a state in which you grasp the reality behind what appears at the surface as the physical world. And, of course, you grasp the meaningfulness behind what doesn't make sense to your efforts into figuring it out with your mind.

Now that's a great art, of being able to—it's just like switching. A switch. All of a sudden, for example, you're talking to a person and, right, you're saying the done things to say and what you are supposed to say and that person is saying things that they're supposed to say. And so on. At the same time, you're communicating with them at the depth, somehow, beyond the words. And it doesn't matter what you're saying, even if it's nonsensical. It doesn't matter. You're communicating in the depth. That's what I mean.

_________

*[First think of a problem you are having. Then attempt to see the problem from the point of view of the other person involved in it. - Editor]

© 2002 Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan