SPECIAL EDITORIAL INTRODUCTION

DISCRIMINATIVE INTELLIGENCE AND THE SEVEN STAGES OF LIFE


This issue of The Laughing Man magazine has been in the test tube for over eight months. After the issue on Shamanism, it had become clear that this magazine was in need of an altogether new format to be of real service to our readers. What was not immediately obvious, however, was what this new editorial concept was supposed to be. It took many months of false starts, cul-de-sacs, solitary considerations, and marathon consultations before a picture began to emerge which looked sufficiently attractive to us to go into production again.

Meanwhile our office was increasingly inundated with phone calls and letters anxiously, or insistently, inquiring about The Laughing Man. It was good to see that most of those who contacted us in this way kept their humor relative to this matter. One or two inquiries even provided some temporary amusement for a troubled editorial team. One subscriber wittily remarked: "Please let me know if the last issue was late or early." Another, perhaps more ironical, reader congratulated The Laughing Man magazine on finally becoming an annual publication. And there was one ex-subscriber who wrote cheerfully: "I have the last laugh . . . I am cancelling." Fortunately, the majority of our readers proved more faithful than this-a fact which greatly encouraged The Laughing Man Institute to shoulder again the responsibility for publishing such a costly magazine.

We are naturally regretful that this process of clarification and redesign of the magazine should have taken so long, and all we can do at this point in time is to express our heartfelt gratitude to those many readers who have exercised great forbearance and goodwill throughout this prolonged period of gestation. We hope and trust that the new face of this publication will be found sufficient and appropriate recompense for the faith invested in us.

This issue was originally announced as a special feature on the holocaust theme which seems to loom large in all our minds nowadays. Indeed, that particular issue was about to go to the printer when a hold was called.

It was simply felt that it had become inappropriate to continue the magazine in the vein of previous issues, mainly because the many voices aired in them had no real common base, despite the unity of the subject-matter in each issue. What was felt lacking was a shared foundation which would enable the reader to come to a critical appreciation of the materials presented.

If you care to look at the table of contents or thumb through the pages of this issue, you will see an entirely different format or conception. This will be the basis for all future issues of The Laughing Man. First of all, we have discontinued the single-theme approach in favor of a wider spectrum of topics. However, as will be obvious, our selection of articles and other contributions and their overall arrangement are by no means arbitrary. All share the same underlying structure.

This structure is at once simple and profound. It can also legitimately claim to be quite unique. This sevenfold framework forms an integral part of the teaching of Master Da Free John, the spiritual inspiration behind this magazine.

Watching the editors' growing dilemma and agony over the magazine, Master Da at one point intervened and graciously suggested the seven stage structure as a possible orientation for future issues. In doing so, he resolved at one stroke-and in an elegant and masterly fashion-the impasse which was threatening to turn into a final checkmate.

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So, henceforth The Laughing Man materials will be organized into seven major sections, corresponding to the seven stages of life as described in the literature of Master Da Free John.

The following is Master Da Free John's summary of the seven stages.

In the literature of the Way of Radical Understanding, which is the Way that I Teach, I have described the seven stages of the development or spiritual evolution of human life. Briefly, the seven stages of human life may be summarized as follows:

In the first three stages of life, the gross body-mind complex is developed and coordinated. First the gross physical is developed, then the emotional-sexual functions are developed and coordinated with the gross physical, and, finally, the mental functions and the function of the will are developed and coordinated with the emotional-sexual and gross physical functions. All of this is optimally nurtured and done in a spirit of love, trust, and surrender in relation to the Living Divine or All Pervading and Transcendental Reality.

In the fourth stage of life, this now complex psycho-physical being is surrendered beyond itself, to and into the Living Current of Being that pervades it and the total world. This is done to the point of generally harmonizing the body-mind in that Life-Current and otherwise Realizing self-transcending devotional Union with that Living Reality in occasions of Love Bliss that involve and simultaneously transcend the body-mind.

In the fifth stage of life this harmonizing trend is continued, as well as the ecstatic gesture toward Union, but the plane of self-awareness ascends, to become dominantly subtle (or psychic) rather than gross (or merely physical), and the Realization of Union involves experiences of ascended attention that eventually go beyond physical references and, at last, even beyond mental references.

In the sixth stage of life, the body-mind is simply relaxed into the Life-Current, and attention (the root or base of the mind) is inverted, away from gross and subtle states and objects of the, body-mind, and toward its own Root, the ultimate Root of the egoself, which is the "Witness" Consciousness (when attention is active) and also simple Consciousness (prior to objects and self definition). The final result of this is conditional Self-Realization or the intuition of Radiant Transcendental Being via the exclusive self-essence (inverted away from all objects).

In the seventh stage of life there is native or radical intuitive identification with Radiant Transcendental Being, the Identity of all beings (or subjects) and the Condition of all conditions (or objects). This intuitive identification (or Radical Self Abiding) is directly Realized, entirely apart from any dissociative act of inversion. And, while so Abiding, if any conditions arise, or if any states of body-mind arise, they are simply recognized in the Radiant Transcendental Being (as transparent or non-binding modifications of Itself). Such is Sahaj Samadhi, and. it is inherently free of any apparent implications, limitations, or binding power of phenomenal conditions. If no conditions arise to the notice, there is simply Radiant Transcendental Being. Such is Bhava Samadhi, about Which nothing sufficient can be said, and there is not Anyone, Anything, or Anywhere beyond It to be Realized.1


1. Da Free John. The Bodily Location of Happiness (Clearlake, Calif: The Dawn Horse Press, 1981, pp. 25-6.


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"The public has invested the specialist with a charismatic power previously reserved for priests, men of God, alone."

 

 

For a greater elaboration of these stages, we refer you to chapters four and seven of The Enlightenment of the Whole Body, one of the principal source texts by Da Free John.

This description of the seven stages of individual growth and maturation, which is further elaborated at the end of this editorial and throughout this magazine, is meant to facilitate our understanding of the life-process in terms of its ultimate spiritual implications. This description of human development is notably different from the psychological and psychoanalytical models of human growth elaborated by scholars and clinicians. Even when the more adventurous psychologists or psychiatrists speak of "spiritual awakening" or "spiritual transmutation," their conceptual efforts seldom proceed beyond. the realm of self actualization or self-improvement of the third and fourth stages of life.

Most important of all, their models are not informed by the highest expression of human life, the seventh stage Realization of perfect ego-transcendence (not merely egolessness). Thus their efforts, worthy and helpful as these are in themselves, are incomplete and fall short of their intended goal of integration and wholeness. One must have scaled a mountain before one can know it, and before one can appreciate its particular setting from the vantage-point of its peak.

We hang on the lips of scientists to hear the latest truth about the universe; we listen intently to our psychiatrist as he dissects our psyche and tells us everything we want to know, or possibly even do not wish to know, about our neurotic microcosm; we are equally attentive to the expert analysts who serve us the most up-to-date gospel truths about the state of the world. The public has invested the specialist with a charismatic power previously reserved for priests, men of God, alone. Very few people seem to be unduly bothered by the fact that a specialist is "one who knows more and more about less and less." It is curious and tragic that in our expert-glorifying world, we turn to specialists whenever a problem needs to be solved, or whenever guidance is necessary. Yet, when it comes to spiritual matters, seemingly everybody feels competent to play the guru.

It is symptomatic of our secular age that we have lost sight of the living tradition of the spiritual heroes who, as Arnold Toynbee pointed out in his encyclopedic Study of History, have always been the prime source of inspiration in the evolution of human civilization. It is part of the mythology of modern mankind that such spiritual luminaries are an extinct race.

Certainly, such spiritual authorities, real transcenders or Adepts, have always been exceedingly few in number. Perhaps today they are a still rarer occurrence. But they do exist. And one of them lives and is active in this very society. Since his own dramatic awakening to the seventh stage Realization in 1970, Master Da Free John has been Teaching his Way of Radical Understanding to a slowly but steadily growing circle of practitioners, some of whom have moved into the higher stages of practice. His many books, consisting of talks and essays, have reached a still wider audience. An increasing number of people from all walks of life-from the housewife, laborer, or schoolteacher to university professor, writer, and even religious leader-are coming to appreciate, and directly benefit from, his spiritual presence and work.

Where the existence of such Adepts is not simply denied, there is the weird expectation, possibly springing from the fear of personal involvement and commitment, that these masters of life should perhaps be seen but definitely not heard. It is considered acceptable to enthuse about the existence of these great beings either in the remote past or in some secluded inaccessible spot, but the presence of even one of them here and now causes consternation. This is a case of misplaced romanticism, nostalgia, and wooliness.

"The Adepts are the Sources of spiritual life. Such individuals must therefore enter into the stream of society, to purify the culture and reestablish the process of God-Realization."

 

Master Da Free John is well aware of this widespread attitude. He observes:

There is a notion that Adepts should be hiding in caves in the wilderness. This is not true. If the Adepts do not speak, the only voice that will be heard is that of ordinary people who are not God-Realized. The Adepts are the Sources of spiritual life. Such individuals must therefore enter into the stream of society, to purify the culture and reestablish the process of God-Realization. If they do not speak and become influential, there is no hope at all for humanity.2


2. Da Free John, Scientific Proof of the Existence of God Will Soon Be Announced by the White House' (Middletown, Calif.: The Dawn Horse Press, 1980), p. 382.

Aside from being a convenient way of shelving any true response to the existence of these spiritual heroes, the popular stereotype of their purely passive life of contemplation, is, to be sure, at least partly rooted in historical precedents of quietism and asceticism. There have been Adepts who chose to be silent or inexpressive on the physical level, and who preferred to perform sacramental service in solitude for the sake of the world. But whenever the Adept breaks his silence, he is bound to make himself heard with a lion's roar. His teaching will be prophetic and profoundly critical of the ways of the age. He cannot help but sweep the money changers from the temple and rebuke the scribes and pharisees. He seeks to transform the world in which he lives. This is his essential function. He does not share the complacency of those around him, and in everything he does and says he affirms the primacy of the Ultimate Reality, the Divine, the Being-Consciousness-Bliss, the Whole in which every single being and thing inheres.

Master Da Free John is the first Adept to fulfill this function by drawing on the total world culture. This has not been possible in earlier periods, where humanity was self divided into small cultural enclaves. Today, the all-pervasiveness of the "Western culture," with its super-sophisticated communications technology, has created a global culture unparalleled in the history of mankind. But while our "Western culture" has extended itself over the entire surface of our blue planet, it has also spread its venom into the last strongholds of a more wholesome way of life. It has done this with such effectiveness that the apocalyptic mood, which has been with us ever since the two world wars and possibly earlier still, is rapidly turning into a self-fulfilling prophecy. In the words of Master Da Free John:

These are the worst of times. The Truth and its Way are inconceivable to the usual man, and all the media of daily life propagandize for a vulgar, subhuman world. Even the "peace" men seek is only a kind of uninspired political ordering of the lower man, and it is not founded on the spiritual transcendence of experience. It is not merely that the Truth has not been communicated. Even when it is communicated, it is not accepted. The Truth is unacceptable in this time and place.

These are the most sinister times. Every thing and every one is suspect. And what men suspect above all is God.3


3. Da Free John, The Enlightenment of the Whole Body (Middletown, Calif.: The Dawn Horse Press, 1978), p. 153.


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"Our intention has been to point directly and forcefully to the spiritual legacy of the past and to the teachings of illumined Adepts."

 

It is difficult for anyone to orient himself in the present-day whirligig of thoughts, opinions, preconceptions, prescriptions for a happy life, creeds, philosophies, and dogmas. The body-mind of humanity is aching. Who will still seriously contest that we are in the throes of a worldwide crisis? What more needs to be demonstrated before it is finally accepted that the root-cause of this crisis is our spiritual impoverishment, our century-long severance from the vivifying spiritual traditions of the world?

Now, The Laughing Man was originally created in response to the need for a clear voice in the midst of this cacophony. Our intention has from the start been to point directly and forcefully to the spiritual legacy of the past and, in particular, to the teachings of illumined Adepts. This objective remains unchanged. In point of fact, we expect that the new format of this magazine will make our communication more unequivocal and effective. To put it more strongly, we are committed to help end the prevalent confusion. Specifically, The Laughing Man has three primary purposes:

 

1. To present the clarifying teaching of Master Da Free John.

As a living Adept who abides from moment to moment in the disposition of God-Realization, Master Da is uniquely suited to appraise and place into proper perspective the many different, and often contradictory, expressions of life in the various stages of adaptation and growth. This should prove helpful to anyone seriously trying to make sense out of all the many contesting views and ways of life. We are convinced that even those who are committed to a spiritual path will find his insights into human nature, and all the numerous forms of subtle conditioning which make a person a person-whether saint or sinner-of immense usefulness. Because Master Da Free John has no axe to grind, no dogmatic viewpoint to defend, no system of philosophy to establish, no bank account to fill, and no personal interest in making converts or disciples, he can give his free attention to any aspect or problem of human culture. And he has done so ever since his teaching work commenced in 1972. The numerous books published by our Press reflect both the scope and the depth of his considerations. His subjects range from diet, sexuality, politics, and true community, to science, the great spiritual traditions of the East and West, yogic esotericism, the higher potentials of the body-mind, and, most importantly, his wisdom of radical transcendentalism that includes and transcends all of these, offering to mankind a direct means to the realization of Truth.

But despite the easefulness which Master Da brings to the analysis of traditionally difficult and complex themes, he is not-nor does he pretend to be-a man of science, a philosopher, or a psychologist. His "expertise" lies in his Realization of the Transcendental Condition of all there is, and it is from this Enlightened vantage-point that he can, with astounding facility, grasp and usher into light the essence of whatever is brought to his free attention. His wisdom is not book-knowledge but insight based on his Realized disposition. His intelligence is not acquired skill or learning but native, spontaneous understanding.

So, although we shall publish essays by his pen in this and forthcoming issues of The Laughing Man, we will also feel free to introduce the reader to Master Da Free John the "Siddha," the God-Realizer, the "Crazy Wisdom Adept," in whose company the question of spirituality is a very practical matter. Master Da does not, after all, theorize about spiritual life, but he lives it in its highest form and expects those around him to do the same.

In the past we have been more than diffident in presenting this aspect of Master Da Free John and his teaching work. Our reluctance has hitherto effectively prevented us from portraying this important spiritual personage and his message in an unambiguous light. In future issues, therefore, we will begin to document some of the eventful "sacred history" of our Communion.

We are fully aware that in adopting this more forthright approach we invite the criticisms of those who, oblivious to the psychophysical nature of the cosmos and of the unknown psycho-physical potential of a GodRealized Adept, feel safer in denying or denigrating anything that does not readily fit into their preconceived ideas of how the world is supposed to operate.

Short of spiritual Awakening there is no cure for chronic doubt. Strictly speaking, a skeptic is one who is eternally seeking because he assumes that perfect knowledge is unattainable. He chooses to live in a permanent state of uncertainty. Bertrand Russell opened his well known Skeptical Essays with a story about Pyrrho-the Greek arch-skeptic who entertained the view that we could never know enough to make a wise decision. One day, the story goes, young Pyrrho found his old philosophy teacher headlong in a ditch. He contemplated the situation for a while. Unable to decide on what would be the best course of action, he simply moved on. Later his teacher praised him for his consistency or, as Bertrand Russell would have it, his "heroic scepticism."4


4. Bertrand Russell, Skeptical Essays (London: George Allen and Unwin, 1935).


So, rather than try to dislodge inveterate skeptics from their self-inflicted position of distrust, we intend to address ourselves to open-minded readers who can appreciate and understand the fact that "there are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."

 

"The time has come for a new and worldwide reformation . . . It will include all of mankind and every aspect of human culture."

 

This brings us to the second objective of The Laughing Man.

2. To counter scientific materialism and religious provincialism.

Skepticism, the mood of doubt, is as old as rational thought. Closely associated with it is scientific materialism, the dogmatic system that reduces all phenomena to the material dimension. It is the viewpoint of the man who loathes unsolved riddles, loose ends, paradoxes, mysteries, and irrationality and who rationalizes his unconscious recoil from the world-which is never an orderly affair-into a full-fledged system of close-knit propositions.

Religious provincialism is the same deficient attitude transposed into the sphere of religion. It is the dogmatism of half-truths, sectarianism, cultism, and all the other "isms" which substitute a part for the Whole.

To champion the wisdom of the Adepts, the Transcenders who live in and as the Whole, inevitably means to actively oppose the Scylla and Charybdis of modernity-scientific materialism and religious provincialism. Both are expressions of a failure to live the Truth. Both are reductionistic interpretations of human nature. Both impose limitations on man's higher development and ultimate awakening, which has no ceiling other than the Divine Reality itself which is his source, mainstay, and ultimate destiny. Like the monster and the treacherous whirlpool of Greek mythology, both these neurotic strategies are a peril to humanity. They must be transcended if mankind is to have a future. Right at the outset of his work Scientific Proof of the Existence of God Will Soon Be Announced by the White House! Master Da Free John makes this programmatic statement:

The time has come for a new and world wide reformation of human culture. The impact of this cultural conversion of mankind will be comparable to that made by Copernicus in the natural sciences and Luther in the domain of religion. But this new reformation will be universal. It will include all of mankind and every aspect of human culture. It will include all aspects and all traditions of religion, all-the sciences, the communications media, economics, and politics. And it will transform the intimate and relational conditions of all people.

This new reformation will continue the cultural gesture begun in the time of Copernicus and Luther. That is, it will extend the cultural and scientific tendency of Man to acknowledge and also surrender to what is beyond and more primary than Man, and beyond and more primary than the earth. This new cultural gesture will base itself on full recognition of the more radical and modern discoveries in science and cosmology, such as those proposed by Einstein and his theories of "relativity." And it will also base itself on full recognition of the more radical and modern realizations in the area of human religion and spirituality.

Therefore, this new cultural reformation will step beyond the old and childish mentality, wherein Man is surrounded by the Parent Deity and the Parental Universe. And this reformation will also pass beyond the adolescent conceptual rigidity of scientific materialism, so that mankind may not only acknowledge the Paradoxical Condition of Nature, but also participate and surrender within that Paradox. Only in that case may we continue to grow and evolve as Man, and ultimately transcend Man and Earth.

There will be no conflict between religion and science in that new and future culture of Man. Religion will not be irredeemably distorted by the illusions of "subjectivity," and science will not be irredeemably distorted by the illusions of "objectivity." Rather, all human beings will engage in common disciplines of knowledge and of self-transcendence (or Ecstasy). (pp. 13-14, 16)

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"We have been liberated from the shackles of traditionalism-but we are as yet undecided about how best to use our newfound freedom."

 

Our criticism of the dogmas of science and religion is linked up with the third objective of this magazine:

3. To present and put into critical perspective the great spiritual traditions of the world.

As we constantly orient ourselves in the world, we are naturally inclined to simplify the complex relations and structures that we observe. In simplifying, we also select. The next step in this process is that we elevate what we have thus chosen from the welter of impressions into a personal dogma. We idolize it and turn it into a mini-god. Behind this tendency is our need to distill from our experience guidelines for action.

An the past, this has been a comparatively simple affair. The socio-cultural environment of earlier periods was such that the mechanisms of selection, the filters which we apply when we experience the world, were fairly uniform and strongly reinforced (through social convention and pressure) within a given society. Today, however, we live in a so-called pluralistic society in which countless cultural options are open to anyone who cares to experiment. The result is that we have become disoriented. We have had to forego the security of a traditional environment, with its clear behavioral expectations and an unchallenged (and generally unchallengeable) world view. We have been liberated from the shackles of traditionalism-but we are as yet undecided about how best to use our newfound freedom.

There is much in the great spiritual traditions of mankind, both known and relatively unknown, which is immensely useful, much that is of lasting truth and value. Yet, whenever we assume a fixed position in relation to these traditions-indeed, in relation to any form of conventional knowledge or even extraordinary experience-we immediately undermine their capacity to transform us spiritually. We are prone to practice what is agreeable to us but resist and ignore whatever requires us to change. It will be one of the functions of The Laughing Man to present great traditional teachers and teachings faithfully and appropriately. At the same time, however, we will not shirk the responsibility of placing traditional-and also modern-knowledge into a more critical context, which is supplied by the higher point of view of the great Realizers, who have worked both within and outside of the traditional framework of their times.

The seven stage model, which is seen from the Adept's and not merely from the theoretician's point of view, will provide you with a key to understanding the essential spiritual significance of any piece of literature, any tradition, system, or practice. But this must not be turned into a cheap gimmick or a tacky game. Fundamentally, it should serve as a radar beam for guiding you in your critical spiritual appreciation and consideration of any experience or standpoint. And in this sense we intend to make use of it in this and future issues of The Laughing Man. Thus the thrust of The Laughing Man is not merely to present information, but to instruct, thereby helping to serve the spiritual consciousness of our readers.


THE SEVEN STAGES OF LIFE

 

"The seven stage model will provide you with a key to understanding the essential spiritual significance of any piece of literature, any tradition, system, or practice."

 

Although the precise nature of the seven stages of life will become obvious from the articles and comments in this issue, it seems appropriate to outline this important schema at this point. The seven stages of life range from the somatic level to the highest spiritual Realization. This model depicts a process of potential Awakening in man. The emphasis is on the word "potential" because most of us live well below our capabilities, and it is very rare indeed for an individual to awaken beyond even the higher evolutionary potential (the first six stages of life) into the self- and world transcending Realization of the seventh stage of life.

Our human body springs from a single cell. Researchers on human development conceptualize this original cell as being "totipotent," that is, as possessing the capacity to become the fundamental structures which make up the fully developed body. This primary cell carries a kind of blueprint of the mature organism into which it can develop. However, in order to manifest these differentiated structures, the cell must forego its "totipotency" in favor of specialization and individuality.

We can usefully apply this biological insight to the sphere of man's overall psycho-spiritual evolution. As newborn babies, we have only a dim awareness which allows us to relate to our environment just sufficiently for our survival within a protective, caring human society. World and ego are as yet a sort of primordial soup. Most of our neonatal behavior is purely reflexive or instinctive. Our "life-style" is one of complete dependence. We barely succeed in finding our mother's nipples, or in signaling to her our discomfort and distress.

This rudimentary awareness contains all of the necessary structures for future conscious and even supraconscious activity. Yet, because we lack a spiritual culture, few people actualize their consciousness potential in full. To realize the seven stages of life beyond the purely mechanical level of development requires spiritual practice and individual responsibility for growth, from adaptation to the functions of the body-mind to the ultimate transcendence of the body-mind.

The seven stages of life as described by Master Da Free John serve as a total, holistic program of psycho-spiritual transformation. Furthermore, it is possible to regard the different spheres of human activity, particularly all organized knowledge, as expressions of the focal concerns of each stage. For example, in this issue we consider in stage one (vital-physical readaptation) the "spermatic being" or the mysterious process of human incarnation. In stage two (emotional-sexual readaptation) we examine the cultural suppression of the flowering of the emotional-sexual being. In stage three (the development of the will and lower mental or thinking mind) we consider the technique of science, its values and limitations, and the need for science to found itself in its own ultimate discoveries. Stage four (higher mental and lower psychic development) leads us into the culture of devotion which provides the foundation for true religious and spiritual practice. Stage five (cosmic gnosis and higher psychic development) offers an unusual account of mystical experience and its limitations by a remarkable saint who had achieved the fifth stage of life. The sixth stage (realization of Consciousness prior to the subjective ego) section recounts the life and teaching of an Awakened female renunciate whose life and teaching epitomize the one-pointed dedication necessary to spiritual growth and Enlightenment. And in stage seven (whole-bodily Enlightenment) we confront the liberating message of self-transcendence as it has been given from ancient times to the present by inspired Adepts who have Realized the Truth of all the stages of life.

We intend to present a wide spectrum of materials in future issues of The Laughing Man, making full use of their correlation's to the seven stages of life. In placing our articles into the seven categories, we do not thereby mean to pigeonhole the author of a given piece. An individual's level of realization may well be different from his teaching and recommended practice. Papa Ramdas, for example, whose communications at times reflect the seventh stage point of view, taught the fourth stage practice of devotional surrender to the Divine by means of the repetition of the name "Ram," as this was the practice whereby he had attained ultimate realization. Also, throughout these seven categories you will read the teaching of Adepts such as Master Da Free John, whose teaching as well as his Realization are clearly of the seventh stage but who has commented on all the stages, from the practice of diet, for instance, to perfect God-Realization, in order to serve the practice of his students. Realized Adepts appear with the intention of awakening others-whatever this awakening may require, at every level or stage of manifestation.

Therefore, with this issue The Laughing Man presents a uniquely comprehensive view of all of human life informed and enlivened by the highest Wisdom of Man. We hope that this and future issues serve your understanding and appreciation of such Wisdom. And, as always, we invite your comments and participation.

The Laughing Man - editorial


The Seven Stages of Eternal Life - Laughing Man Magazine
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Adi Da, Ramana Maharshi, Nityananda, Shridi Sai Baba, Upasani Baba,  Seshadri Swamigal , Meher Baba, Sivananda, Ramsuratkumar
"The perfect among the sages is identical with Me. There is absolutely no difference between us"
Tripura Rahasya, Chap XX, 128-133


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