It all began with the crash of a car against a brick wall and the small knee of an eleven-year-old boy caught in between.
I had been visiting my father, and I was enjoying the late summer afternoon as I made my way home on roller skates. My parents lived three miles apart in Portland, Oregon. I was midway between these poles of my life, almost exactly between my father’s house and my mother’s house. Certainly the split between my two parents was a place of danger. I decided to buy a Coca-Cola at the local drugstore and was just going in the door with five pennies clenched in my hand when two cars collided in the street before me. My left leg was through the door, but the right one was still touching the sidewalk when there was a crunch of steel and brick, a rush of adrenaline, and the sickening realization that it was too late, my leg was pinned between brick and chrome, the knee crushed. In that instant everything seemed to move in slow motion. A second earlier would have caught both of my legs as I entered the drugstore, while a second later would have had me safely inside the building. But it was that second, just that second, that everything was aligned to give me a devastating blow but leave me just short of death.
I awoke on the pavement, dazed, feeling no pain but bleeding profusely since the main artery of my leg had been severed. The five pennies that I intended to spend on a soft drink were still clenched tightly in my hand. A circle of people looked down at me. Someone asked where I lived, and I managed to whisper my home telephone number. I was weak and nauseated when an alert nurse who lived nearby came running to provide first aid. She improvised a tourniquet, an ambulance rushed me to the nearby Immanuel Hospital, and a bone specialist was summoned to surgery. When they wheeled me into the emergency room, the hospital gurney bumped the doorjamb, a bump that felt like sheer agony. Then came the oblivion of anesthesia.
I knew nothing more until the middle of the night, when I awoke sweaty and shivering in a metal bed, my leg held down by a heavy cast that ran from my neck to my toes. I felt nauseous and horribly weak. No one knew that the sutured artery in my leg had broken loose and was hemorrhaging again inside the cast. I was slowly bleeding to death, and I began drifting away to another world. I knew precisely what was happening, at least in its psychic dimensions. I set my feet against the downward spiral and determined not to die, resisting it with all my willpower. But at a specific moment I crossed a divide—it felt like that bump against the doorjamb—and suddenly I was in a glorious world.
It was pure light, gold, radiant, luminous, ecstatically happy, perfectly beautiful, purely tranquil, joy beyond bound. I wasn’t the least bit interested in anything on the earthly side of the divide; I could only revel, at what was before me. We have words for this side of reality but none to describe the other side. It was all that any mystic ever promised of heaven, and I knew then that I was in possession of the greatest treasure known to humankind. Later in life I heard the religious scholar Mircea Eliade refer to this magnificent realm as the Golden World, which is exactly right, and I have called it that ever since.
But I was not to leave this earthly world on that August day in 1932; instead I was only to be teased with a brief preview of the Golden World that would figure so profoundly throughout the rest of my life. An alert night nurse came by and noticed blood leaking through the underside of my cast. She set off an alarm and had me whisked off to surgery, where they quickly tried to transfuse blood. My veins were so badly collapsed that I still have ribbons of white scars down my arms where they made incisions, searching desperately to find a vein.
Inwardly, I was harshly interrupted in my timeless ecstasy of paradise by a summons to go back to the earthly realm. I resisted this as strenuously as I had fought the crossing from earth to heaven, but to no avail. I awoke on the surgery table convulsed with pain, hearing the busy sounds of an emergency room, and looking up into a nightmare of tubes and a circle of masked faces peering down at me. One of these, the surgeon, said, “So, you are alive!”
Yes, I was alive but reluctantly so. No one can look upon even the antechamber of heaven without a lifetime of regret at what has been lost. Seeing through this mundane world to the golden, archetypal world was marvelous beyond description, but at the tender age of eleven it was almost too much. I was so blinded by the golden light of the divine world that I was spoiled for regular life. A curtain separating the two realms was for me forever parted. In the morning of that fateful day I was a giddy kid; by midnight I was a very old man in a boy’s body.
The physician initially told my mother it was doubtful I would survive, as this was the age before antibiotics. My mother later said that after being brought back from the lifesaving surgery I emerged out of the stupor of the ether and sat upright in bed, and my first words were that I wanted to be buried in the Lincoln Memorial Cemetery in Portland, bringing terror to her already worried face. Apparently I said very little about my Golden World experience.
My leg began to heal in the next few weeks. The blood system, however, never attained proper function. Gangrene set in, and first one, and then a second, amputation was required. Fortunately, both were below the knee, a lesser degree of handicap than it might have been. I spent two months recovering in the hospital before they sent me home. I philosophize now that I was wounded just enough to set off a deep experience of the inner world but not enough to end my life. Just enough!
I LIVED WITH DESPAIR for some time following the auto crash. Managing crutches, getting used to an artificial leg, adapting to the world as a handicapped person—all these were difficult enough, but it was the loss of the Golden World after having seen the pure source of beauty that was the most difficult. It’s better to live in oblivion of that world than to be teased by it.
I had no context within which to understand what had taken place. I might have believed that my Golden World experience was just a hallucination brought on by anesthesia or physical shock. But at the age of sixteen I saw the glory of paradise again, and this time it was even more glorious because I was fully conscious. Once again I would experience what a biblical passage describes as the morning stars singing together. William Blake knew that world well and captured it for us as only an inspired poet can do:
To see the World in a Grain of Sand
And a heaven in a Wild Flower,
Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand
And Eternity in an hour.
This passage is from Blake’s “Auguries of Innocence.” From his writings I know that this poet had a direct experience of the Golden World, which he called Imaginative Vision. In his preface to “The Jerusalem,” Blake speaks of that composition as having been dictated to him, as though it came as a revelation. I know now that many others have shared my experience of heaven and have returned to tell of it, but only the seers, poets, and artists come close to conveying its glory.
At the age of sixteen I was visited with a clumsy urge for independence, to go out and conquer the material world and make my place in it. I was very much like Parsifal, the legendary youth in the medieval story who longed to become a knight. Parsifal set off in search of adventure, hoping to prove his manhood, and instead stumbled into a profoundly religious experience in the Grail Castle. Like Parsifal, I stumbled into the Grail Castle as a youth and could comprehend it no better at sixteen than I had at the age of eleven. Here is how it happened.
I had never worked as a young man, not even on a paper route or any other odd job. It was 1937, and the economy was barely nudging itself out of the Depression. I looked around Portland for something to do, but no one would hire me. An artificial leg was a real limitation for the kinds of menial labor that a sixteen-year-old could do.
After observing several of my false starts, my stepfather decided to intervene. He pulled some strings and arranged to get me a night job at the Del Monte canning factory in Vancouver, Washington, where he worked as a manager. The factory was twenty miles from Portland across the Columbia River. I was to work seven days a week, twelve-hour shifts, on night duty. The pay was fifty cents an hour. I saw this as the perfect opportunity to exercise my independence and demonstrate my manhood.
I arrived a half hour early for my first shift and was swallowed up by a great mechanical beast, the Depression-era factory. Of course I wasn’t used to sleeping during the day and arrived primed with excitement at 6 P.M. I was pumped full of adrenaline and ready to take on the world.
It was hot and noisy in the factory, a dark and ugly building that stretched on for more than a block. The tin-roofed cannery employed more than a thousand workers. Rows and rows of women were peeling pears by hand with curved knives; farm boys twice my size were scurrying about loading and unloading carts of fruit. People were shouting and cursing over the din of machinery. It was a chaos of activity, noise, and sheer ugliness, an angry existence, with people snarling at one another and swearing at the tops of their lungs. It had been a warm summer, and tons of pears and peaches had ripened early. The cannery was running twenty-four hours a day to get the ripe fruit canned. My shoes stuck to the floor and made a sucking noise with every step across the concrete. My job was to check the cans of fruit as they came spitting out of the cooker in an unending stream.
I was just getting the hang of my new job when the night foreman decided to pirate labor to help with a bottleneck farther down the production line. My job of inspecting cans was expendable. I knew nothing of fending for myself in the work world, and I soon found myself on one of the most grueling jobs in the factory, hand-trucking four-hundred-pound loads of hot cans from cooker to warehouse. I had never been near a two-wheeled hand truck before, let alone one with cans stacked high above my head that had to be carefully balanced. With my first venture I spilled the entire stack of cans across the floor and was roundly chewed out by the foreman. I wasn’t very strong, and the job was far beyond my ability, but I was too determined to admit defeat. I clung to the task at hand and decided that this was a true test of my manhood: either I was going to prove myself or die in the attempt. As the night wore, on it was nearly the latter.
I spent the next six hours pushing that hand truck from one end of the building to the other. Sometime after midnight I was given a short break, and I was relieved when the foreman assigned the job to someone else. But after my break he sent me back to the same exhausting task, and again I went to it without saying a word. By this time the junction of my leg and the artificial leg was soaked with blood. The blood had run down into my shoe, and my wool sock was so wet that you could have wrung it out, but I prided myself on not complaining to anyone. This was my test, and I was going to do it or die. I don’t know what was worse—the pain from my leg or my first untempered look at the harshness and ugliness of the world. They merged together in my mind into pure misery.
At 4:30 A.M. I punched my time card and walked out into the damp night air. As I started my borrowed car I suddenly realized that if I didn’t see something beautiful I would not survive. I needed to get home, soak in a bathtub, and collapse into bed, but another need was even more powerful. I had to have the beauty of life confirmed again, or I felt that I could not continue to live. I drove up into the hills west of Portland, where I knew I would find a view overlooking the valley, reaching to the four snowcapped mountains that surround the city. This was my answer to the compelling need for something to counterbalance the horror of the preceding hours.
I parked the car and hobbled out onto a promontory just in time for the sunrise. The sun began to inch its way over the horizon, and—unbelievably—the Golden World shone forth again with all its glory. The same world I had known at age eleven, the same golden light, the same condensation of pure beauty—it was all there. It was the same world that I had lost and mourned several years before, and I knew it with an intimacy and delight past any other value in human life. At eleven, I had been forced onto the edge of the next world, but by some quirk of fate I had recovered and reentered human existence. This time, at the age of sixteen, it was the same Golden World, but my reception of it was different. There was more consciousness in me. Before, I was a child blundering across a corner of heaven by accident, but I now had the consciousness of a young adult, and my birthright had been restored to me.
I can’t really say whether I heard, saw, smelled, tasted, or touched that sunrise. No matter. It was an antechamber of heaven, and it was my native land. It lasted for about thirty minutes of clock time, but it was eternity in the heavenly realm. Language fails me when I try to describe what I experienced, so I must again turn to the words of others.
Even Dante, one of the world’s greatest poets, finds it nearly impossible to describe his vision of Paradise: “In the heaven that receives most of its light I have been, and have seen things which he who descends from the above neither knows how nor is able to recount.” The great American poet Walt Whitman comes closer in his lines referring to the same or a similar Golden World experience. Whitman writes in Leaves of Grass:
As in a swoon, one instant,
Another sun, ineffable, full-dazzles me,
And all the orbs I knew, and brighter, unknown orbs;
One instant of the future land, Heaven’s land.
Henry David Thoreau, that lover of solitude and mystical communion with nature, also surely tasted the Golden World, as indicated by these lines from Walden:
I hearing get who had but ears,
And sight who had but eyes before,
I moments live who lived but years,
And truth discern who knew but learning’s lore.
I hear beyond the range of sound,
I see beyond the range of sight,
New earths, and skies and seas around,
And in my day the sun doth pale his light.
When the sun was up, I returned to ordinary consciousness. My physical exhaustion came pouring back in, and my leg began to hurt again. I limped back to my car and was quickly pulled back to mundane realities by a flat tire. The Golden World was entirely gone by the time I changed the flat. I was back in a gray existence, desperately tired and disillusioned, my leg hurting; but at least I had the comfort of knowing that the Golden World was not just a once-in-a-lifetime experience. I had been to that sublime realm a second time, it was real, and this time I would never doubt it again. My life would never, could never, be the same.
I don’t believe in chance. India has more insight into these things than we do in the West. We don’t have a language for comprehending such irrational experiences. In India they talk about an old soul. This term is used to describe someone who is ripe enough to experience the deepest mysteries. If there is such a condition, then perhaps my soul was ripe—ready to be plucked from this life and introduced to another one. The problem was that those hardworking physicians had brought me back to the old realm. I would have to learn to live on earth with an indelible memory of heaven. Much of the rest of my life would be spent seeking a balance between these two realms.
I FERVENTLY BELIEVE that my “accident” in front of that Portland drugstore was no accident. Later in life one of my spiritual teachers told me, “If you had not been injured in an accident at eleven, you would have experienced this contact with the unconscious as a psychosis.” I must admit that I tremble at such a statement. If it is true, it reveals to what extent our lives are controlled by those slender threads of an intelligence far superior to our own.
These openings into another realm can be terribly dangerous; indeed, visions of heaven break some people by interrupting their sense of identity and continuity. For years my life seemed upended by this glimpse of the divine. Nothing on this earth could fill my hunger for more of the ecstatic experience. None of the aspirations or goals that seemed to drive other people could hold my interest for long. History is filled with examples of mad ones, monks, sages, and seers who have undergone numinous encounters, and for such souls it becomes nearly impossible to lead an ordinary human life.
Perhaps if one can absorb some of the experience through the physical body, it helps to reduce the overwhelming impact on one’s psyche. That seems to have been the case with me. The timing of that auto accident and the result that I would lose one leg and not two has always been fascinating to me in this respect: It wounded me enough to ground me, but not so much as to knock all the life out of me. The wounding was sufficient to claim me for an interior life and loyalty to the Golden World, but it was not so severe that I was removed from the necessity of simultaneously building a life on earth.
It is particularly dangerous to experience a divine vision at such a young age. It is much more tolerable for a mature personality. After thirty minutes of ecstasy on the mountainside that morning, I spent the next ten years in terrible suffering—not physical suffering, but the subtle hell of loneliness and isolation. I was doing all the standard things in life, but they meant very little to me. My visions came close to destroying the practicality in me, the usual human dimensions of existence. I went into solitude and found what solace I could in music and by surrounding myself with animals: homing pigeons, an aquarium of tropical fish. I spent hour after hour in my own world, an inner realm. All this time I was getting top grades in school, but my heart was never really in such achievements. My allegiance was elsewhere.
I now believe that many young people experience the Golden World to some degree. The poet Wordsworth aptly wrote that we come into this world trailing clouds of glory. We are born whole, and, God willing, we die whole.
Children come into the world with that sense of celebration and delight in the awesomeness of life. Then we eat of that wonderful, terrible fruit depicted in the story of the Garden of Eden, and our lives become divided. In childhood we have innocent wholeness, which then is transformed into informed separateness. If one is lucky, a second transformation occurs later in life, a transformation into informed wholeness. A proverb puts it this way: in life our task is to go from unconscious perfection to conscious imperfection and then to conscious perfection.
As we grow up, most of us retain an intuition that heavenly wholeness exists somewhere, however harsh our lives may be. The boundary between the two worlds seems to be particularly thin during adolescence, a condition that does not occur again until we reach the age of forty-five or fifty. Then there is a chance to experience the Golden World again. Unfortunately, adults often dismiss such experiences as “only a dream” or “childish talk.” We tell our children to grow up and face the realities of life. As a result, many people give up on ever finding wholeness.
For me, the essence of life comes from these experiences of the Golden World. Such encounters with the divine have been called visionary, mystical, manifestations of cosmic consciousness, or, in secular language, peak experiences. Such experiences were the goal of life in the Middle Ages, when they were referred to as the Unitive Vision.
I am fascinated by the word ecstatic, which in its original sense means to stand outside oneself. We work so hard to make a personal self, an “I” or ego, with clarity and continuity. This is extremely valuable, but one pays a price for this “I”—we become small, personal, and limited; we are a highly circumscribed entity in our “I-ness.”
The ecstatic experience involves escaping from the “I-ness.” This requires that we break the boundaries of our separateness to experience a greater realm, a realm that taxes our finest poets and artists to convey. It is the most valuable experience any person can ever have. The beauty of the Golden World is that one sees a vastness, something so much greater than oneself that one is left speechless with awe, admiration, delight, and rapture.
After childhood, in our twenties and thirties, we are called upon to fulfill the cultural tasks of the society in which we live. In India this is called the householder stage, the time for building careers, raising families, paying bills, meeting all of our social obligations. But at midlife many people hunger again for some glimpse of the Golden World. By the time most of us become adults, we have lost all contact with this world. I only have to look carefully to see the spiritual hunger in the eyes of most Westerners. Rarely do you see radiance in the faces of middle-aged people. And so instead of reconnecting to the ecstatic realm as adults, we see the infamous midlife crisis in which one tries to fill the emptiness with all the extravagant things we have around us. This is the tragedy of many modern lives.
Most of our neuroses come from hunger for the divine, a hunger that too often we try to fill in the wrong way. We drink alcohol, take drugs, or seek momentary highs through the accumulation of material possessions. All the manipulations of the outer world carry with them an unconscious hope of redeeming our lonely, isolated existence.
The experience of paradise in the wholeness of youth is our birthright. It is a gift. However, seeing the Golden World again as an adult has to be earned. It requires inner work, a commitment not just to material success but to bringing some sense of meaning and purpose to one’s life. There is a paradox involved here. The Golden World cannot be acquired like a possession, and enlightenment cannot be turned into a project. We do not select an ecstatic experience; rather, it is delivered upon us as a state of grace. However, we can do the necessary inner work so that we are open to and prepared for such experiences when they arrive.
I can’t tell you how many times after that morning when I tasted heaven that I went to some high place to watch the sunrise again, hoping to hear the morning stars singing together as they had done at that glorious dawn. I yearned desperately to get a glimpse of that world. Everywhere I went I would find myself looking over the horizon or peering into someone’s eyes, hoping to find it. Sometimes I would see just enough of it to tease me and make me feel even worse.
It is ironic that often our breakthroughs into consciousness of the divine grow out of breakdowns in ordinary consciousness. Contacts with the divine may at the time feel like pure suffering, and I sometimes wonder if all suffering is a vision of God too great to bear. The Buddhist tradition informs us that enlightenment is often perceived as tragedy or total disaster from the ego’s perspective. Very few people have the intelligence to surrender with dignity to forces greater than themselves. Most of us have to be hit in the head, or in my case the leg, and thereby forced into a realization of the Golden World.
I hate it when people say after a tragedy, “Well, it’s all for the best” or “It’s all in God’s plan.” It also is said that “Man’s tragedy is God’s opportunity.” These sayings are true, but they are almost always said at the wrong time by the wrong people. Out of mouths that parrot them like verses in a greeting card, they are false.
I recall a Zen story in which a master is sitting in his hut when a student comes to him and asks, “What is Zen?” The master points to the moon. Time passes, and one day the master goes into town. While he is away, the student is charged with minding the monastery. A young stranger comes to visit and asks the student, “What is Zen?” Recalling the action of the master, the student points to the moon. Just at that moment, the master comes home, witnesses the conversation, and goes into a rage. He pulls out a knife and cuts off the student’s pointing finger.
This is a harsh lesson but one intended to demonstrate that consciousness that truly knows Zen is different from the consciousness of one who is just quoting, abstracting, or theorizing. Mundane comments about other people’s suffering deserve to be cut off. Even if you say the right thing, when it is said at the wrong time it is wrong. Or, worse yet, if a wrong person says the right thing, then it is most certainly wrong.
I also believe that the ache of loneliness relates to knowing there is something more than one can have. If you hadn’t known it at first, it would never bother you. I was hungry for the Golden World that I had tasted and then lost, but I could not articulate that hunger. I can tell the moment people walk into a room if they are searching like I was for a taste of heaven; their eyes scan the landscape as if they were hunting, but most probably if you asked what they are hunting for they could not tell you.
When people enter therapy today with such a hunger, many health care professionals try to talk them out of their experiences; too many mainstream therapists pathologize the client’s dreams and visions and make every attempt to get this neurotic individual back into the humdrum world of “normality.” Alternatively, individuals can be taken aside and given some tools to maintain this process, find their own balance, and live with a foot in both worlds. Of course, to help someone find this balance assumes that the helper knows how to do it.
Nowadays we often don’t recognize when someone has been shaken by a view of heaven. Yet, the meaninglessness of the modern world arises from having a taste of something so glorious that the beholder can neither find it again nor settle for anything less. There is an old Christian proverb that says, You would not search for Me if you had not first known Me. This applies to anyone who remembers glimpses of the Golden World. Each of us can become stuck in egotism, which is merely a half-consciousness, suspended between two worlds and continually yearning for something that is scarcely remembered. How does one continue to live on the face of the earth when he or she is half blinded and spoiled for anything less?
Dr. Carl Jung was one of the few voices in the modern world who even addressed such a thing. Freud said the human personality is nothing but the ego and that the unconscious is essentially a scrap heap of leftover conflicts with your parents and the society around you. Dr. Jung said something very different—that the earthly world and the Golden World are two faces of one reality. He believed that the ego is the master of its own little separate domain but that there is a larger, more encompassing Self. It is a lifetime’s work to reconcile the earthly world and the Golden World, the ego and the Self.
Strange. The automobile accident that morning in Portland nearly ended my life, but I have never regretted it or its outcome. Ironically, one way of constellating the Golden World may be to reach the most desperate situation tolerable, as both my experience in the hospital and again in the steam and din of the canning factory were ugly and terrifying.
When I visit Portland I often make a pilgrimage to the street where my leg was sacrificed. The building is still standing, and I can still see the damaged brick near the door. And although the canning factory has long since been torn down, I also drive into the hills outside Portland to watch the sun rise and remember that morning when the stars sang to me. If it were not for yet another visitation of the heavenly realm many years later, I would have to finish my story by recounting the perpetual loneliness of a fruitless search for the ever elusive Golden World. But it would come again.