Frances Vaughan
"To meditate is to transcend time. Time is the distance that
thought travels in its achievements. The traveling is always along the
old path covered over with a new coating, new sights, but always the
same road, leading nowhere—except to pain and sorrow. It is only when
the mind transcends time that truth ceases to be an abstraction."
J. Krishnamurti, The Only Revolution
"I'm interested in [a] humbler approach, one that is
more accepting of human foibles, and indeed sees dignity and peace
emerging more from acceptance than from any method of transcending the
human condition."
Thomas Moore, Care of the Soul
In our exploration of the question, "What
is enlightenment?" for this issue of
WIE,
we sought out the insights of two of the most prominent enlightenment
traditions thriving in the West today: Buddhism and Advaita Vedanta. Yet
there is a new spiritual philosophy emerging in the West that has begun
to compete with these age-old teachings in both influence and
appeal—the modern psychology of spirituality known as
transpersonal psychology.
While traditionally the goals of goals of enlightenment spirituality
and psychotherapy have been at odds (enlightenment teachings aim at
subverting or transcending the ego, while psychotherapy aims at
supporting or healing the ego), transpersonal psychology is now
attempting to reconcile these differences and to offer new answers to
perennial spiritual questions. Curious to see if this school of thought
could shed new light on our inquiry, we began a brief but fascinating
foray into the world of transpersonal psychology.
Transpersonal psychology, which began as part and parcel of the human
potential movement in the 1960s, has advanced groundbreaking research in
its attempt to open doors of perception hitherto unknown in the West
and to chart the furthest reaches of human consciousness. Once a radical
current in the spiritual subculture, transpersonal psychology has
become widely recognized as a legitimate branch of psychology and is now
included in mainstream college curricula. At the same time, it has also
become increasingly associated with popular Eastern spiritual paths and
practices as they have taken root in Western soil. Ram Dass, originally
trained as a psychologist, became a spiritual teacher after traveling
to India and meeting his Hindu guru; and Jack Kornfield, now one of
America's most popular meditation teachers, decided, after several years
as a Buddhist monk, to pursue a graduate degree in psychology. The
Naropa Institute, founded as a Buddhist college by the late Chögyam
Trungpa Rinpoche, now boasts one of the most acclaimed programs for
"transpersonal studies." And the ideas and language of therapeutic
psychology have become intermingled with those of Eastern spiritual
teachings to the point that the two are often
indistinguishable—meditators speak about "working through psychological
blocks" as much as therapists speak about "going beyond ego."
Thirty years ago, transpersonal psychology was lauded for its
innovations in the scientific "mapping" of human consciousness and
development, but it was not yet viewed as an authoritative source of
spiritual guidance. Disciplined spiritual practice under the direction
of a spiritual teacher, if one was serious about enlightenment, was
still understood to be the most credible approach to the spiritual path.
In the interim, views have
changed.
Participants at the first national conference of American Buddhist
teachers in 1993, facilitated by a panel of psychotherapists and
attended by 115 Western teachers in the Zen, Tibetan and Vipassana
traditions, noted that the therapeutic perspective dominated the
conference, and that many meditation teachers no longer make any
distinction between psychotherapy and Buddhist practice. Judith
Simmer-Brown, chair of The Naropa Institute's religious studies
department, commented in a firsthand account of the conference published
in
Shambhala Sun magazine: "Those present had completely bought
the psychotherapeutic model of liberation, casting aside the tools they
had developed through their
dharma practice. . . . We even threw out our
dharma vocabulary, our discussions of practice, even our practice of meditation."
Transpersonal psychology has not only established itself as a distinct
voice in contemporary spirituality, it has also gradually become the
most resounding. Complicating matters even further is the fact that, one
after another over the past twenty years, renowned spiritual teachers
have fallen prey to the temptations of greed and power. Many of those we
have looked to as the highest examples of spiritual attainment have
left a trail of corruption and abuses of trust, disillusioning disciples
and onlookers alike about the reliability of spiritual authority as
well as the ultimate meaning of enlightenment. In the wake of this
confusion, leading proponents of transpersonal psychology have offered
potent criticisms of Eastern spiritual approaches that emphasize
spiritual experience and transcendence to the exclusion of a mature
development of other areas of the personality. Noted transpersonal
psychologist, meditation teacher and author John Engler, in an essay,
"Becoming Somebody and Nobody: Psychoanalysis and Buddhism," writes:
One has to be somebody before one can be nobody. . . .The
attempt to bypass the developmental tasks of identity formation and
object constancy through a misguided spiritual attempt to "annihilate
the ego" has fateful and pathological consequences. This is what many
students who are drawn to meditation practice and even some teachers
seem to be attempting to do. What is needed, and what has been missing
from both clinical and meditative perspectives, is a developmental psychology that includes the full developmental spectrum.
. . . Both a sense of self and a sense of no-self—in that order—seem to
be necessary to realize that state of optimal psychological well-being
that Freud once described as an "ideal fiction" and the Buddha long
before described as "the end of suffering" and the one thing he taught.
Transpersonal psychology has, over the past two decades, popularized the
very full-spectrum, stage-specific, developmental approach that Engler
proposes, with a sophisticated analysis of the evolution of
consciousness and therapeutic techniques that address every aspect of
human experience. Transpersonal psychology, with its model of continuous
growth rather than one of absolute attainment, and transpersonal
therapists, who derive their authority not from claims of enlightenment
but from knowledge of developmental processes, now hold forth the
prevailing paradigm. Jack Kornfield, in an article entitled "Even the
Best Meditators Have Old Wounds to Heal," writes: "For most people,
meditation practice doesn't 'do it all.' At best, it's one important
piece of a complex path of opening and awakening. . . . There are many
areas of growth where good Western therapy is on the whole much quicker
and more successful than meditation." As we approach the millennium,
transpersonal therapists rather than spiritual teachers have, to all
appearances, become the most authoritative and trusted commentators on
the subject of spiritual paths and practices in the West.
Therefore, for this issue of
WIE, we were eager to speak with a
transpersonal psychologist who could illuminate how this new breed of
spiritual guides grapples with the big questions we'd set out to
investigate. We were delighted to have the opportunity to speak with Dr.
Frances Vaughan, a respected therapist who has been called a
"transpersonal pioneer," a "Wise Woman" and a "midwife of the soul."
Vaughan maintains a private practice in Mill Valley, California, and
teaches and lectures around the world. She is the author of two books
and coeditor of five, several of which are required reading in
transpersonal training curricula. Speaking with clarity and confidence
about spiritual paths and practices, her books elaborate a precise
methodology for guiding others to "healing and wholeness for the purpose
of enhancing well-being at any level on the spectrum of consciousness,
pointing the way to liberation." We hoped our discussion with Dr.
Vaughan could answer some of our questions, the most central being:
Could the goal of the Buddha's teaching, as a growing number of
transpersonal therapists would suggest, really be reduced to "optimal
psychological functioning"?
We approached Dr. Vaughan, after reading her books as well as a number
of the other central texts in her field, with a genuine respect for the
contributions transpersonal psychology has made to modern discussion of
spiritual questions. Leading transpersonal thinkers, Ken Wilber foremost
among them, have clarified many significant distinctions about
psychological development and spiritual attainment that have never
before been so clearly articulated. And transpersonal psychology's
emphasis on including moral, relational and other dimensions of human
experience in a complete understanding of spiritual attainment we had
long appreciated as crucially important. Yet the more we had inquired
into the transpersonal approach to the spiritual path, the more we had
been haunted by the fundamental paradox inherent in any therapeutic
approach to enlightenment: How can one
simultaneously pursue the healing
and
the dismantling of the personal self? Or, if one is committed to
pursuing healing first, can that still be properly called a spiritual
path? We had also had lingering questions about whether the pursuit of
enlightenment is a developmental process that can be mapped in the same
way that other developmental processes can. Ken Wilber suggests in his
book
The Atman Project that it is: "The same process of
growth and emergence runs through the whole sequence—the way we got
from
the [bodyself] to the ego is the same way we go from the ego to God."
Yet the great enlightenment traditions have always claimed that the
spiritual quest is no ordinary journey—that enlightenment is a leap
beyond the known, beyond any conceptual framework, and
off
the map of relative progress altogether, no matter how comprehensive
that map may be. While it is traditionally understood that the spiritual
quest requires every faculty we can bring to it, in the end,
enlightenment has always demanded that we leave all our tools, maps and
concepts behind, and step into the unknown, blind and empty-handed. "You
people still conceive of [the One] Mind . . . as something to be
studied in the way that one studies a piece of categorical knowledge, or
as a concept," wrote Zen master Huang Po as long ago as the ninth
century B.C. "Those who use their minds like eyes in this way are sure
to suppose that progress is a matter of stages. If you are that kind of
person, you are as far from the truth as earth is far from heaven."
In the following dialogue, which took place in her counseling room in
May 1998, Dr. Vaughan articulates her holistic vision of transpersonal
psychology as a bridge between the dimensions of psychology and
spirituality. Describing herself and transpersonal therapists more as
"companions along the way" than as spiritual guides, and transpersonal
spirituality more as a personal healing journey than as an ultimate
reckoning of the individual with that which is Absolute, Vaughan gives
voice to some of the most popular themes in contemporary spirituality
today—and reveals another fascinating perspective on the question: What
is enlightenment? Does anybody know what they're talking about?