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In reply to The Conversation Continues by Shantiram
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Ed: This is a reply by Open to Shantiram from private exchanges...
"Hi Shantiram
Thanks for getting back.
I put answers to your questions on the website because that’s where you posted them. And it did feel like they were coming from a curious place - challenging the point of remastering them, perhaps? Or at least that’s how it communicated. Hence it felt necessary to answer there, and in the fullness of what I felt.
You quote Karma as being an ‘Archon trick’ and yet quote Gautama too - who of course, attained enlightenment under the Bodhi tree, having passed through powerful karmic experiences. Indeed, the list of ancient texts from past masters and their experiences of karma is endless. They need no justification or validation here.
My experience is that people tend not to remember karma for one of three reasons: 1) They’ve undergone past life harvesting - whereby their karmic memory has been wiped; 2) They haven’t yet gone deep enough to trigger karma, or else don’t recognise it when its happening; 3) They’ve applied excessive yogi (or other) techniques (like mantras, for example too), that detaches the karmic imprint - the memory - but without working on the soul fragmentation that created it.
In the first case, karma will always reactivate in life, providing we aren’t still living a life of intentionality that blocks the natural flow of the soul out. In the second case, the natural flow of the soul can also be blocked by heftily disciplined yogic practice, which overwrites the energy of karma in the 4D body - or, as is often the case, dispels the karmic energy but without first dealing with the triggering that created it. I’ve expressed this in the book ABSOLUTION, which I understand you have.
Finally, there can be no true emptiness nor Nirvana without relativistic experience too - or how else can it be experienced at all? The absolute and the relative need to be integrated in dynamic equilibrium. In other words, we integrate the absolute through regular living.
Nirvana, as an experiential Universe, can only be attained by allowing full and complete expression of the soul - which, of course, is the great lesson of the Gautama. He allowed himself the fullness of the journey and the experience, no matter how challenging. This leads to the integration of soul, expressed without attachment in the relativity. Therein lies Nirvana.
Much love and respect
<<< Open 
