THE TRANSPERSONAL PERSPECTIVE: A PERSONAL OVERVIEW*

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THE TRANSPERSONAL PERSPECTIVE: A PERSONAL OVERVIEW* Frances E. Vaughan Mill Valley, California I have come to understand the transpersonal perspective as a metaperspective that attempts to acknowledge and learn from all points view. It is a perspective that does not seek to impose a new belief system or a new metaphysics, but rather to see the relationships between existing world views in order to envision transformational possibilities. Since 1969 the transpersonal perspective has emerged from an integration ancient wisdom and modern science. Clearly science and mysticism need each other. Science needs the wisdom mysticism and mysticism needs the power science. In this sense the transpersonal perspective sees the Eastern spiritual disciplines and Western scientific approaches to psychology as complementary. It recognizes the transcendental unity all religions and sees the unity in the mystical core every spiritual tradition. The mystical teachings agree that the source wisdom is within us. Each spiritual tradition has a different way saying it. For example, in Christianity we are told that "the kingdom God is within." In Buddhism, wisdom is in the discovery "our own true nature"; in Hinduism, it is in "Atrnan" realization; in transpersonal psychology, we speak "the Self." Yet the source is always the same and we need access to this source inner wisdom if we are to use science for the benefit humanity, rather than for selfdestruction. Furthermore, there comes a time when we can integration ancient wisdom and modern science the source wisdom *Adapted from a keynote presentation at the 7th Annual Conference. International Trunspersonal Association, Bombay, India. The Conference was held February 14-20, 1982 under the auspices the I.T.A. and eight cooperating organizations including the Association for Transpersonal Psychology. The Journal Transpersonal Psychology, 1982, Vol. 14, No.1 37

no longer rely on external teachings and teachers to teu us what to do. The transpersonal movement is unique in that there is no charismatic leader. It is an organic movement that has grown by networking. It is a movement that has drawn people to it who share a common concern and a purpose-and who share a vision what is possible for human beings as equal participants and co-creators our reality. an orientation service a crosscultural and interdisciplinary orientation the highest potential in human beings This is a new form working together in which we do not depend on anyone person to direct our lives. This requires awareness our capacity for self-determination, selfactualization, self-realization, and finally self-transcendence. It assumes that healthy personal growth evolves into selfless service. Thus a transpersonal orientation is basically an orientation service in the world. The transpersonal orientation is cross-cultural and interdisciplinary. It has its roots in the ancient perennial philosophy and it makes use modem science because science, like mysticism, is also a search for truth-albeit a different way looking for it. The search also requires wisdom, which I like to think as a blending consciousness and love. The Dalai Lama has ten spoken the need for compassion in the world. Mother Theresa Calcutta also talks about our need for love. Yet it is not from an outside teacher that we know the truth their words. Only when we are willing to remove the obstacles to the awareness love's presence in our lives, can we become active participants in our own transformation and conscious evolution. It is finding this awareness in our own experience that makes it possible to share it with others. In this way we support and empower each other to continue the process. My own experience being involved in the transpersonal movement is that it has been empowering in many ways. The opportunity to speak to you at this conference is an example that empowerment. Part the transpersonal purpose is to evoke the highest potential in human beings. By implication this includes the wise use technology and resources,but more directly it recognizes the human mind as one our greatest inexhaustible resources. A transpersonal orientation looks at the transformational process and attempts to understand it, so that it can be facilitated and encouraged. It sees the possibility our growth towards wholeness, which means growing beyond the ego (Walsh & Vaughan, 1980).This does not mean moving into transcendence instead ego. Ego development is viewed as a stage along the way. We can use the ego strengths that we develop in normal, healthy, adult 38 The Journal Transpersonal Psychology, 1982. Vol. 14. No.1

development and go beyond them. In this view, ego development is regarded as a mid-point on the great chain being. We emerge as self-conscious beings, out a pre-personal un-consciousness aware ego development and the concomitant alienation being identified with ego. But in transpersonal development that extends beyond the personal goals ego development, we recognize that we all exist in a web mutually conditioned relationships. Thus, the transpersonal orientation is based on an awareness our interdependence, not only in relationship to each other-but to the environment as well. We should remember that while we are shaped by our environment, we are also the shapers that environment. an awareness interdependence I want to emphasize the difference between pre-personal (pre-egoic) and transpersonal (trans-egoic) states, because it seems important to recognize that not all "non-ego" states consciousness are necessarily transpersonai. Wilber has discussed this at length in "The Pre-Trans Fallacy" (1982). Another relevant reference is Charles Tart's (1975) definition higher states consciousness as those states in which all the attributes and functions the normal waking state are available, plus some additional ones. Thus transpersonal experiences or higher states consciousness should not be confused with other altered states or suboptimal states. Hence, transpersonal development refers to development beyond the ego-not to substitutes for it. Transpersonal psychology has attempted to expand the field psychological inquiry to include transpersonal experiences and their relationship to the spiritual dimension our lives. The term "transpersonal" means, literally, beyond the personal or beyond the personality. It recognizes that who and what we are is not Iimited to personality and that, if we are identified exclusively with the body, the ego or the personality, we have a very limiting and restricting view ourselves. Transpersonal psychology also acknowledges the importance bringing about a balance inner and outer experience and awareness, recognizing that these are two sides a mutually interdependent reality. Before transpersonal psychology became an identifiable orientation in psychology, the term trans personal had been used by Jungians to describe the underlying ground ego-psychology. It had also been used by Stanislav Grto describe experiences he had observed in his work with psychedelic psychotherapy. In his book The Realms the Human Unconscious (Or, 1976), he describes trans personal experiences as those in which ego boundaries dissolve and awareness is extended beyond the ordinary confines time and space. pre-personal and transpersonal development the term,'transpersonal" The Transpersonal Perspective: A Personal Overview 39

Anthony Journal founders Sutich Journal editorial fou nda tions In the late 1960's, Abraham Maslow, Stanislav Gr, Anthony Sutich, and a few others felt the need to begin to integrate some their understanding the Eastern and mystical traditions with the humanistic psychology in which they had all been involved. It was Abraham Maslow and Anthony Sutich who felt that the term trans personal would be appropriate to this new branch psychology and in 1969 The Journal Transpersonal Psychology was launched. Anthony Sutich, who had also been the founding editor The Journal Humanistic Psychology. founded the new journal. He was a remarkable man and he lived an amazingly active life given the fact that he had been injured in a baseball accident as a youth and was totally paralyzed for the rest his life. He spent his entire adult life immobilized on a gurney, but he could read and he could talk. Indeed, he eventually talked with people all over the world by telephone. At one time he was very active in civil rights. Later he became a psychotherapist. Although he was actively involved in starting both the humanistic psychology movement and the trans personal psychology movement, he was not a charismatic leader. He served more as a facilitator-as somebody who knew how to empower others to do their best, to help them actualize their potential I first met "Tony" in 1965 at a seminar on humanistic psychology at Esalen Institute, and I was very impressed with him. I did not know that the leader the workshop I was attending was going to be someone who was physically disabled. I was both surprised and inspired by him at that time. It was that meeting that made me decide to go back to graduate school and become a psychologist. There is much that I learned from Anthony Sutich and from working with the Journal in the early years. One the things that most impressed me was that the Journal had a policy publishing original work that was generally excluded from most psychological mainstream journals. It began by publishing a wide range empirical research, theory, and applied articles, and still does, but it has avoided hostile or debunking attacks on other people's work. It sought to build on what had been done before by drawing on both Western psychology and Eastern mysticism. I was also struck by the fact that the editors the Journal would engage in lively discussions about the papers that were submitted and sometimes they would have totally opposing viewpoints. In fact, diversity opinion was encouraged. Everyone had their say and everyone felt heard, yet nobody seemed attached to their opinion. They were all great friends even if they had totally opposing opinions on particular papers. This was my first experiential contact with the idea not being attached to an opinion or point view. I saw how 40 The Journal Transpersonal Psychology, 1982. Vol. 14, No. 1

powerful that kind diversity could be, how an organization could work in that way, and how much love and cooperation and caring came out it. Before he died in 1976, Anthony Sutich transferred the editorship the Journal to a colleague, Miles Vich, who worked with him from the beginning, both in humanistic psychology and transpersonal psychology. Since then the Journal has continued to expand and now reaches readers in 35 countries. This growth also reflects the fact that there is now an expanding body literature in transpersonal psychology, including a number significant books. The Association for Transpersonal Psychology, the national association in the United States, was formed in 1971and the first president was Alyce Green the Menninger Foundation. It was determined at that time that the Association should grow organically-that those attracted to it should become members. It was not advertised, and there was no proselytization. The members were simply people who were interested in it, who shared values and a similar perspective on psychology. The Association was established to support the Journal so that those people who were interested in learning more about the trans personal orientation could have regularly published material available. In 1973when James Fadiman was president the Association, we had our first national conference. Since then, we have had an annual conference, in California, which has grown in size and explores different themes each year. Our first overseas conference was the First International Transpersonal Conference, held in Iceland in 1973. A second International Conference followed in Iceland in 1975. Since then, there have been international conferences in Finland; Brazil; Boston, Massachusetts; Melbourne, Australia; and in Bombay, India. In regard to the different areas investigation in transpersonal psychology, I think it's useful to make some distinctions made by Ken Wilber, a leading theoretician in this field. In Eye to Eye, he makes a distinction between the different realms knowledge (see Walsh & Vaughan, 1980). He argues that there are three kinds knowledge: the empirical realm concerned with sense data; the mental realm concerned with logic and reason; and the spiritual or transcendent realm concerned with insight and truth. Each realm knowledge has its own way acquiring information and each has its own rules for validation. A "category error" occurs if we attempt to reduce one realm to another or attempt to interpret the findings one kind knowledge in terms another. Pursuing an interest in any them The Association for Transpersonal Psychology annual conferences areas investigation The Transpersonal Perspective: A Personal Overview 41

importance spiritual training empirical research contemporary theorists requires undertaking the training required to attain understanding in that realm. While those us who are not trained as physicists would not attempt to evaluate research being conducted in a physics laboratory, almost anyone is willing to evaluate spiritual teachings without having undertaken appropriate training. I think one needs to acknowledge that each realm learning requires specific training in order to appreciate what it has to fer. In the realm empirical research in transpersonal psychology there is a growing body research on the physiological and psychological correlates altered states consciousness.and meditation. There is also a considerable amount data from bieedback research that is relevant, such as the work the Greenes at the Menninger Foundation and Dr. Fehmi at Princeton. In Bangalore, India at the Institute Mental Health the physiological correlates Yoga are being investigated. At Harvard, Dr. Daniel Brown is studying the effects meditation on perceptual sensitivity. Projects funded by the Institute Noetic Sciences San Francisco are investigating exceptional human abilities and optimum health and well-being. Also, there is research on the effects what we have come to call the "consciousness disciplines," derived from the Eastern meditative disciplines (Shapiro & Walsh, 1982). Recent findings indicate that people who undertake some these consciousness disciplines experience changes in lifestyle and values. A social scientist, Duane Elgin (1981), reports that there is now a large number people in the United States whose lifestyles are changing in the direction voluntary simplicity, largely as a result their having incorporated some type meditative practice into their lives. In the mental realm, Ken Wilber is making a major contribution to trans personal theory (1979, 1980, 1981). Other wellknown contemporary theorists include Stanislav Gr, Roger Walsh, and Charles Tart. In the spiritual realm, transpersonal psychology becomes the psychology spiritual development. Here we find both individual and group explorations, and much eclectic as well as traditional practice Western and Eastern origins. applications in psychotherapy and education Applications transpersonal psychology are evident in a number developments in education and in psychotherapy. In education, it represents an expanded view human capacities and emphasizes the integration physical, emotional, mental and spiritual aspects well-being. There is also an emphasis on service, or the application learning in 42 The Journal Transpersonal Psychology, 1982, Vol. /4, No.1 'II

the world. For example, at the California Institute Transpersonal Psychology in Menlo Park, California; where I teach, the curriculum represents a balance these five areas. Each student practices a physical discipline such as Aikido or Tai Chi; each does "emotional work" either in clinical training, and/or participating in group process. These students also study the theory transpersonal psychology, do their intellectual homework, and strengthen their background in general psychology. In addition, they are all expected to have a spiritual discipline- their own choosing. There is no one belief system that is exclusively supported. Rather, there is an emphasis on a willingness to question beliefs, to develop an intellectual understanding as well as having experiential knowledge a particular tradition. Transpersonal theory needs to be informed by transpersonal experience, so education is not limited to talking about spirituality. Experiential participation is essential. Enlightenment or illumination does not occur simply from learning the letter the wisdom teachings; it is attained only through direct experience. Genuine experiential activity is therefore encouraged in conjunction with theoretical learning. The fifth area emphasis, on community, translates the individual, personal transformational process into community service. In psychotherapy, many new developments in the transpersonal orientation come from the work psychotherapists who were traditionally trained and then became interested in Eastern disciplines. Those who undertook their own search and began to practice some the disciplines, found that this practice had significant effect on their pressional work. Many pressionals interested in healing found there was much to learn from the ancient traditions. Much transpersonal psychotherapy was born out the experience therapists who found that dee per exploration their own spiritual growth had a pround effect on their pressional work. It seems useful to make a distinction between the context therapy which is established by the beliefs, values, and attitudes the therapist, and the content the therapy which is established by the client. A trans personal therapist does not necessarily deal only with transpersonal content, but may simply be facilitating the growth the client, assisting in the process healing and integration at whatever level is appropriate. However, one would expect a transpersonal therapist to be qualified and capable working with people who are ready to grow beyond the stage ego integration. Clients who function well at an ego level a balanced curriculum psychotherapy and ancient traditions context and content therapy The Transpersonal Perspective: A Personal Overview 43

disappointment as a source transpersonal awakening the need for therapists familiar with the transpersonal domain an open-ended process may come to therapy because disillusionment or disappointment with the attainment ego goals. There seem to be two ways arriving at disappointment: One is by not getting what you want; the other way is by getting it. We know that success in terms ego goals and achievements in the world can leave one feeling empty and depressed. This is the existential crisis that can be precipitated by the experience success, as well as failure, by a brush with death or an experience loss. If, at this point, a person is willing to confront death and aloneness and the basic nature our existence, it may be the beginning a transpersonal awakening. It is, in fact, the transpersonal awakening that can lead one through the existential crisis despair. What is sometimes called "the dark night the soul" could be called the "dark night the ego." The transpersonal content in therapy, then, may be introduced by a client who is having transpersonal experiences or who is ready to move into transpersonal areas exploration. Sometimes a client may feel disturbed by trans personal experiences which have happened either spontaneously, as a result meditative practice, or as a result unsupervised use psychedelics. Whatever the cause, there now seems to be an increasing need for therapists who have some understanding and knowledge the transpersonal dimension, because clients who feel they are experiencing a kind spiritual emergency may not feel adequately cared for when they go to a therapist who is not familiar with the transpersonal domain. Finally I want to emphasize that the trans personal perspective is open-ended; it is always in process. It never seems to be fixed, finished, or completely defined. Each us is participating in the process that is unfolding because the evolution consciousness is happening in each us. The holonomic theory is a good metaphor because it illustrates that the whole exists in each us, and each us exists as part it. We may imagine that we are separate from all that is; this is the illusion. However, when we wake up to who and what we really are, we discover that we're all in it together, that each us has a part to play, that each us has simply to understand what our unique contribution can be. Sometimes this understanding develops under the guidance teachers, but it is my observation that good teachers lead us to find our way to our own inner guidance (Vaughan, 1979). Typically, our gurus remind us that it is the universal Self within our hearts that we need to contact in order to find the wisdom that will guide our personal growth as well as 44 The Journal Transpersonal Psychology, 1982, Vol. 14, No. I

our society's transformation. It seems to me that it doesn't matter whether it's Jnana Yoga, the path knowledge; Bhakti Yoga, the devotional path; Karma Yoga, the path works; or Hatha Yoga, the way the body. All have their value. One simply needs to find the way that is appropriate for oneself, and we are here to help each other do just that. finding an appropriate way Therapists are not supposed to give advice. Nevertheless, in this context I would like to recommend the advice (as quoted in Boorstein, 1980)that comes to us from the great teacher Gautama Buddha: "Do not believe in what you have heard. Do not believe in traditions because they have been handed down for many generations. Do not believe anything because it is rumored and spoken by many. Do not believe merely because the written statement some old sage is produced. Do not believe in conjectures. Do not believe merely in the authority your teachers and elders. After observation and analysis, when it agrees with reason and it is conducive to the good and benefit one and all, then accept it and live up to it. " advice a/a great teacher REFERENCES BOORSTEIN,S. (Ed.). Transpersonal psychotherapies. Palo Alto, CA: Science and Behavior Books, 1980. ELGIN, D. Voluntary simplicity. New York: William Morrow and ce., 1981. GROF, S. Realms the human unconscious. New York: E. P. Dutton and Co., 1976. SHAPIRO, D. H. & WALSH, R. N. (Eds.). The science meditation: Research, theory and experience. New York: Aldine, 1982 (In press). TART, C. States consciousness, New York: E.P. Dutton and Co" 1975. VAUGHAN, F. Awakening intuition. Garden City, N.Y.: Anchor Press, 1979. WALSH, R. N. & VAUGHAN, F. (Eds.). Beyond ego: Transpersonal dimensions in psychology. Los Angeles: J. P. Tarcher, 1980. WILBER, K. Spectrum consciousness. Wheaton, IL: Quest, 1977. WILBER,K. The Atman project. Wheaton, IL: Theosophical, 1980. WILBER, K. Up from Eden. Garden City, NY; Anchor Press/ Doubleday, 1981. WILBER,K. The Pre/Trans fallacy. J. Humanistic Psychol. 1982, 22, 57~90. Requests for reprints to Frances E. Vaughan, 10Millwood St., Mill Valley, CA 94941. The Transpersonal Perspective: A Personal Overview 45