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Buddha at the Gas Pump

027. David Spero

Buddha at the Gas Pump

Rick Archer

Religion & Spirituality, Philosophy, Spirituality, Society & Culture

4.7 • 695 Ratings

🗓️ 29 June 2010

⏱️ 78 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In my youth, I was not prone to easy laughter or the common jokes that circulated among human beings. I lived in a world all by myself, thinking, feeling and being led innocently toward a life of relentless spiritual evolution. It would be many years before my spiritual sadhana, or spiritual practices, would reveal the memory of my inherent oneness with the Divine. My parents did not hesitate to inform me that my destiny was to attend “college,” a word they spoke with joy and enthusiasm, emotions that stood out starkly in my young attention, since those emotions were so deeply absent in almost every other part of my childhood. My early religious background was coincidental and predetermined by my parents’ educational choices. I attended Roman Catholic schools from kindergarten through high school, schools selected for their reputation for academic excellence. My fate unfolded several months before my graduation when I was given an early graduation present, instruction in an East Indian form of meditation. In the meditation center, I looked past the sundry forms of decor and what to me were superficial, distracting (and even disturbing) proclamations of the “benefits” of meditation. Nevertheless, I went forward to receive initiation into a unique form of Indian meditation. On April 26, 1975, I learned to meditate with a quiet and eager anticipation for “enlightenment.” It was a day of joy I will never forget. I practiced meditation for over twenty years, adding various asanas (yoga postures) and pranayama (yogic breathing exercises), reading every form of non-dualistic mysticism and scripture I could acquire from Europe, India, Tibet, China and Japan. I also read poetry avidly. Again, and again, I surrendered into psychological/emotional/spiritual dissolution, dying into Consciousness. I was madly in love with oblivion, ecstasy and self-transcendence. While others were busily preparing for a conditioned life in the world, I was ceaselessly going beyond the conditioned mind and its world of disappointments and illusions. I still recall the various forms and flavors of intense spiritual raptures and samadhi (transcendental awakenings) that I experienced in my third year of undergraduate study. The pinnacle of these raptures culminated in the state of nirvikalpa samadhi in March or April of 1980. During this time, I also experienced other forms of exquisite and exalted Transcendental Realizations in my active and meditative life, as well as during sleep. In sleep I tasted intoxicating, ambrosial nectars flowing from my heart to my brain in a cosmic circle. I’d wake up each morning feeling as though I had ascended into the worlds of Gods and Goddesses. It was a time of unspeakable ecstasy in the subtle regions beyond the body-mind. Simultaneously, I began to feel the palpable manifestation of the Primordial Energy of the universe, the Shakti. It was brilliant, active, and sparking. Shakti had simultaneously been born in that Being of Pure Light. Sharing this Radiant Energy and Divine Light became a natural capability: a radiation without circumference, effort or knowledge. A spiritual magnificence, a superabundance of Being, a Transmission of Radiant Awakening–that which has been written about in every religious scripture–was born within that Ultimate Meditation. Primordial Bliss was now free to enjoy Its own spontaneous play in the world. Yet, the Bliss of Perfect Unity in the Self and its ever-present Shakti still needed to migrate more deeply throughout the physical body, toward the outskirts of the flesh, right to the surface of the skin; divinizing and transforming it further. Amrita sahaja samadhi (the nectarous, ambrosial, natural state) dawned, displaying itself as this further evolution: a God-Intoxicated Condition wherein the body became a living host for Devotional Rapture, Kundalini-Shakti, and Divine Light. These qualities revealed a Dynamically-Interactive,

Transcript

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0:00.0

The

0:07.0

The Welcome to Buddha at the gas pump.

0:28.6

My name is Rick Archer and my guest this week is David Spiro.

0:32.6

David is an independent spiritual teacher living in the Bay Area.

0:36.6

He and I somehow connected with each other several

0:39.7

years ago. I think I might have come across his website and read some things and sent

0:43.5

him an email and we ended up on each other's email lists and sending things back and forth,

0:49.5

chatting about sometimes spiritual things, sometimes political things, and so on.

0:54.4

But we've sort of become virtual spiritual friends through this process.

1:00.5

And so it's a great pleasure for me to have David as our guest this week.

1:06.1

And as we have been doing with previous interviews,

1:08.9

we're going to make this somewhat autobiographical.

1:12.9

On David's website, David Spiro.org, he has a whole autobiography page, which you could read,

1:17.7

but I think this discussion will go into greater detail than that.

1:21.8

And I think you'll find it interesting.

1:24.4

So David, welcome and thank you for coming on the show.

1:28.3

Thank you very much, sir.

1:30.3

Yeah. So I think, unless you have a better idea, I think a good place to start might be just, you know,

1:38.3

when as a young man or whatever did you get bit by the spiritual bug and, you know, how did that feel at the time?

1:47.9

It goes right back to the very beginning of my life

1:53.6

when I noticed that my awareness had a kind of innate radiance or knowledge embedded within it.

2:08.6

I don't really talk about my very early years often, but since you're asking me, this seems to be coming up. I was vividly aware of

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