Is Enlightenment real? (Part 1)
Added 2022-10-03 02:41:52 +0000 UTCHave you heard about those guys actually trying to get enlightened?
Over a year ago I was talking with a friend of mine about learning and improving Japanese. Just as we were wrapping up, he asked me âhave you heard about the subreddit /r/streamentry?â I said No.
He followed up with âEssentially thereâs these non-monk guys who think the Buddhist concept of enlightenment is in fact real⊠and theyâre dead set on achieving it.â This really piqued my interest because as a kid who was exposed to a reasonable amount of Zen Buddhism, I always thought enlightenment and âthe end of sufferingâ sounded like a pretty sweet deal. (I also thought it meant youâd get some magic superpowers.) However, as far as I remember, Zen was not very helpful in understanding exactly what it was or how to do it. The stories of people becoming enlightened werenât very helpful either - so and so gets enlightened while sweeping the steps of the temple, so and so child gets enlightened after the master cuts his finger offâŠ
I asked my friend to elaborate and he said something along the lines of âIt sounds like what happens is that through meditation, you become so keenly aware of exactly how each conscious piece of mental activity comes to be, that you realize that the concept of a âselfâ is just a superfluous piece of mental activity - like, the brain looks everywhere for a self, canât find one, and then⊠implodes. This drastically changes how you perceive the world.â
Something about this caught my interest as a couple years prior I was interested in the topic of (the lack of) free-will and made a video on it. (https://youtu.be/o0GN4urbA_c) That and, the idea of a somewhat concrete definition of enlightenment made it more interesting to investigate. What would happen thanks to learning from direct experience that there is no self I couldnât quite imagine, but at least there was a starting point. (As opposed to the Zenâs âenlightenment is totally sweet but donât worry too much about it.â)
My friend recommended the book Mastering the Core Teachings of the Buddha by Daniel Ingram so I picked it up and got going trying to decipher all kinds of terms and concepts from various denominations of Buddhism I had never heard of. The first thing that stood out to me was that there was a relatively clear roadmap to âawakening.â Daniel lists 15 stages you have to progress through to experience awakening. Actually, you have to go through these 15 stages 4 times because there are 4 levels of awakening. So, you can have a âpartially awakenedâ person or a âfully awakenedâ person. (By the way these stages are from Theravadan Buddhism, not something that Daniel made up.)
In fact, Daniel Ingram himself was claiming to be a fully awakened person. His book says right on the cover: âThe Arahant, Daniel Ingramâ (Arahant is a Pali term referring to a fully awakened person.) I dug around on youtube and watched a couple interviews with Daniel and it sounded to me that one of the main permanent shifts in his perception was that he was experiencing the world without a central observer. So, rather than feeling like âyouâ are sitting in the cockpit that is your head, thereâs no cockpit in your head and your head isnât the center point of experience. Daniel said something like âThings just arise and pass away where they are.â
I donât think many people could imagine what thatâs like unless theyâre advanced meditators or have experience with psychedelics. On the other hand, there may be some concrete changes in Danielâs brain. Neuroscientist Judd Brewer and his team did some tests on Ingram and found that his default mode network was more or less⊠âoffâ by default. While not all bad, the default mode network is generally associated with ruminating, mind wandering - not being immersed in the present moment. A 2010 paper by Matt Killingsworth ( https://youtu.be/aAVPDYhW_nw?t=311 ) and Daniel Gilbert found that âA wandering mind is an unhappy mind.â Other papers ( https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4769634/ ) have found this default mode network rumination to be associated with perceived unhappiness.
So it sounds pretty sweet to have your default mode network switched off. Apparently the researchers needed Daniel to activate his default mode network to establish a baseline for their tests. They asked him to think some really neurotic thoughts about some terrible things that might happen in the future ⊠but that didnât do anything. Then he realized that he needed to switch off his default inclination of being aware of everything at once. The hum of the air conditioner, the whirs and beeps of the machines in the room, the rustle of his clothes, his breath and heartbeat - all these things that we would normally filter out as irrelevant, apparently itâs Danielâs default to be aware of all things all at once. Once he finally shut out the stimulation from the room and restricted his awareness to only the neurotic thoughts in his head, he was able to get the machine to pick up some activity in his default mode network.
The other thing odd about Daniel was it seemed like he had a hyper fast perception of reality. Think about the refresh rate of a computer screen. Most movies are 24 frames a second and video games especially fighting games are usually 60 frames per second. If you could clearly discern the frames of a video game more clearly, that would surely make you much better at. So if the average player needs 20 frames to be able to react to an attack, then the types of attacks they can properly react to is quite limited. However if you speed up your frame rate perception and youâre down to 12 frames, youâre going to be able to have a far better defense than the average player. (Many players can guess what their opponent will do, but they canât simply react)
Apparently Judd Brewer and his team were running this test on Daniel to see if there were any changes in his emotional reaction to things. IIRC, Daniel would be shown something in an incorrect orientation (say a house on its side) and he would hit one of the arrow keys on a keyboard to indicate the orientation it is in. So if a house was on its side with the roof pointing to the right, he would hit the right arrow key. An object would pop up, heâd hit the arrow key that corresponds to the objectâs orientation and then the next object would pop up and this would repeat faster and faster. Somewhere else on the screen would appear some sort of gruesome image to see if him having an emotional reaction (disgust, surprise etc.) would affect his performance on the orienting task. What was interesting about this test was they set up their program to just keep getting progressively faster and faster to a point where itâs more or less humanly impossible to keep up with the speed at which the objects were appearing. So at that point they would just say the test was over when the computer started spraying out images at an imperceptible rate. Apparently with Daniel, to the bafflement of the researchers, things never got too fast. He just sort of âŠkept going. I actually heard about this from Daniel when I interviewed him (still not released) and he said something like âYea I just synchronized the refresh rate of my consciousness with the refresh rate of the monitor.â (Seems like a pretty simple strategy, I think Iâll use it to get better at Tekken)
So is that enlightenment/awakening? I donât know, but it sure got me interested in this idea that you can get permanent upgrades to your brain through meditation. This led to me doing a solo meditation retreat where I meditated for 10 hours a day for 10 days. Though, I chose not to do the same meditation technique as Daniel. Iâll tell you why in another post.
P.S. I asked Daniel if the âobserverlessnessâ he was talking about was similar to psychedelic ego death, but he said that his only experience of ego death was so bizarre that he couldnât make a comparison.