My Work Is My Play - The Journey From Survival to Creativity
By Talia Shafir

“For
the love a’ creation!”, my father was fond of expounding, when “Pete”
and “God” had run their course. It was years later until I realized
that sentence actually held meaning for me – other than an expression
of exasperation. It is, most literally, the love of my life.
For a remote viewer, creation is both the destination
and the journey. It has a very real context, namely, the matrix. It
is the void, the confluence of all things singularly rolled into one
while simultaneously separated into individual parts made unique by
a nuance of frequency. It is that vast and limitless outer expanse
only reached by turning inward.
In my years of remote viewing, I’ve been on many journeys.
The real goal of this process is to engage the consciousness of the
matrix. In the advanced stages, the targets reflect this whether they
be of a terrestrial or off-planet nature.
There is no other way for me to describe my experience
except to say that it is a direct interaction with the creative source
and a distinct confirmation that we are part and parcel of this force.
As an embodied soul, I am both the creation, bound
to a contract of safety and survival, and the creator, inextricably
dedicated to risk and innovation.
One way of describing survival is to say that it
is the eternal quest for the mediator, the recognized other, regulator
of our early bio-neurological processes.
It is the search for the “savior”, the one who can
assure us that no harm will ever befall us as long as we remain faithful
to the other’s perceptions of the world.
Creation, on the other hand, is the direct experience
beyond time and space. Creation is the personal responsibility of
the individual to the collective and has no intermediary. Creation
assumes survival.
A Biological Imperative
Survival is our biological imperative. No argument
there. However, how we define survival for ourselves and others around
us is a component of health and well-being of global proportions.
We can, for example, be persuaded to go to war when
we’re convinced that our survival is threatened. However, resistance
not only arises from an immediate life and death scenario but also
out of a question of quality of life.
Enter creativity. In the final analysis, we are not
content to simply “survive”. Creativity then becomes the resourced
state that sustains life. It is, in fact, an inseparable part of survival.
The optimal word here is “resourced”. Our greatest
resource is our consciousness. Obviously, the more parts (i.e. pieces
of consciousness) of ourselves we can convince to stay present in
the moment, the more resourced we are and the more creative we can
be.
So what tethers us to the path of expectation? How
do we mistake opportunities for opportunists, gifts for burdens, or
vice versa? This is our survival mechanism in action; this is also
our survival mechanism run amuck.
Past Tense or Present and Tense?
Does the past exist? My answer would be yes, it exists
in the present. I have frequently had the experience of remote viewing
events, places and life forms in the past.
I absolutely know beyond a shadow of a doubt that
it is possible to focus on the signal line of such a target and experience
that “past moment” in its sensory entirety. As a remote viewer, I
am also trained not to take the experience back “home” with me. Consciousness
helps me do that.
However, when an unconscious part of me is connected
to the signal line of a past event, I don’t have the benefit of that
conscious resource. It’s as if that particular part has no idea that
a trained remote viewer also shares the same physical container.
In that case, whenever some present sensory input
amplifies the signal line (to which I’m already unconsciously attached),
I experience that event all over again.
And the experience registers in my body through the
nervous system while my brain draws the same fearful, hopeless or
delusional conclusion it’s always drawn, based on the limited resources
available to that unconscious part of me.
Of course, I’m just using my remote viewer part to
make the point. The same thing happens when consciousness is brought
to that current event by any other method of integrated awareness,
as long as it includes the body.
The body really needs to know it survived. Otherwise,
it becomes impossible to return to calm and safety, the portal to
creativity.
Survival In the Workplace
One place to easily view this in action is in the
workplace. When we’re growing up, choosing a career sounds like an
exciting premise. We don’t take into consideration that the unspoken
part of our job description will be to fulfill someone else’s expectations.
The workplace, by its very nature, is an arena of
external focus. That makes it a fertile field for the triggering of
unconscious past wounds. We can use the experience to heal and grow
(creativity) or we can use it to reaffirm our attachment to a certain
level of survival.
What often occurs is that we measure success or failure
by the amount of money earned, possessions garnered, and lifestyle
achieved. When we speak of someone as “successful”, we usually mean
“wealthy. Somehow, this has come to mean that only the “successful”,
the “creative”, have earned the right to play.
In this pass/fail world, survival can become a hook
synonymous with drudgery, boredom and bitterness. Notice how “successful”
people are often touted for their creativity. Ironically, you have
to be really creative to survive. It's just that when the majority
of your focus/energy is on a picture of survival alone, you don’t
always acknowledge the creative part of the endeavor.
Unfortunately, that brand of creativity rarely gets
translated into the quantum-leap realm of “success”. We tend to stop
at survival instead of peeking around the corner or taking those few
extra steps toward a new picture.
I must say that one of the major things remote viewing
teaches you to do is not to stop at the first picture you think you
see. Once again, it’s integrated, perceptual training that makes the
difference.
Work and Play Go Hand in Hand
When exactly did ‘work’ and ‘play’ become the Cain
and Abel of sound economic theory? In many cultures they used to go
together. In some, they still do.
How ironic is it that the biggest innovation in the
world of corporate training today involves improv theater techniques
and game design technology? No doubt about it…play is a primal imperative.
Look around in nature. Play sets the stage for life.
Stress management in the workplace is really about
people learning to work and play together for the creative good. Team
building skills are all about that very concept. When the company
prospers, then everyone benefits.
All work and no play makes Jack… a survivor in my
book and that’s really only half the story. Life needs creativity
to thrive and the creative process needs acknowledged space to happen.
I once attended a week-long meeting of advanced remote
viewers from all over the world. Approximately twenty-two nations
were represented in a group of about 75 people.
We came from all walks of life from teachers and ministers
to doctors and lawyers. For three days we struggled to agree upon
a list of prime imperatives for human survival. The question was “What
drives the human race?”
Some were easy, like ‘love’ and ‘fear’. Others did
not flow so glibly off the tongue, like ‘greed’ and ‘competition’.
I was a member of a contingent who tried in vain to introduce the
word ‘play’ into the mix. In the end, ‘play’ was nixed from the top
ten because it was not deemed a powerful enough imperative.
What amused me the most was that the group could not
sit there for a whole day deliberating on this list without someone
starting to play. People either began to joke about other people’s
words or just act out and laugh. Some of the group began to devise
their own game for picking words. But ‘play’, as visible a driving
force as it was, never made the cut.
How does our quest for survival sometimes end up being
the death of us? It’s when our biological history keeps insisting
that we’re fighting for our life when, in reality, the actual threat
in linear time has passed.
Our brains have a habit of holding onto strategies
that have proved themselves stalwart weapons in the moment only to
turn into shackles impeding the march of progress the next day. Humans
do it; corporations do it; nations do it.
Taking the Leap
How do we make the move from survival to creativity?
Well, first we have to recognize that we’re stuck on survival level.
That’s usually the hardest. That’s when we want to look around for
someone or something to blame – past or present
Many of us are reluctant to move off the “…but you
were supposed to take care of me” piece of the healing process. Becoming
aware of the fact that “where you are” is more likely “where you’ve
been” is an essential first step to witnessing objective truth in
the moment.
Remote Viewing calls these scenarios analytical overlays
or AOL’s. It’s easier to understand the concept of what needs to be
done than it is to actually train your brain not to close off the
creative process of inquiry. That’s what we do when we insist on naming
or labeling something or someone too quickly.
I’ve found that Remote Viewing actually trains your
informational processing system to behave differently. We really don’t
realize how quickly that conscious part of us wants to draw conclusions.
Not every embedded strategy is bad, of course. It’s
the ones that don’t work any more but keep on going like the Energizer
Bunny of survival mechanisms that we want to address and resource.
On a recent remote viewing journey, I was taken into
a part of the matrix that is an energy stream. I saw myself lying
there on the mat. The object was to surrender to the energy and have
the experience. I suddenly realized that the creative force wanted
to “play”. I “returned” with a feeling that creation demands a rebate.
The message seemed painfully obvious and terribly
simple but it was the experience of it, the embodiment of it that
drove the point home: It’s not enough to be someone’s creation. At
some point, you have to realize that you’re alive – you’ve made it
– and you must give back in order for that creative source to survive.
Making a conscious decision to move your perspective
from survival to creativity is a spiritual experience that grounds
your creative power in the three dimensional world.
Talia Shafir, MA, C.C. Ht. is a regression therapist
and co-founder of the Center for Integrated Therapy in Sebastopol.
She divides her time among a practice on both coasts which specializes
in trauma and long term PTSD, teaching Remote Viewing throughout the
country and running a corporate training consultancy using Improv
and a variety of experiential techniques called Bizprov International.
For information about Remote Viewing lectures and
trainings or therapy inquiries, call 707 829-7904 or visit the web
at http://www.soulview.com
For Bizprov International inquiries: 707 829-3757
or Gobizprov@aol.com.

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