Toward Awakening Jean Vaysse
Toward Awakening Jean Vaysse
Toward Awakening Jean Vaysse
Theoretically, dreams can be divided into three principal categories: associative (or reactive) dreams,
compensatory dreams and symbolic (or archetypal) dreams. But there are many other kinds, such
as premonitory dreams, or telepathic dreams,: associative dreams correspond to mechanical life,
compensatory dreams correspond to a personal aspect colored by emotion, while symbolic dreams
may offer obscure glimpses into the life of the real self, when the higher emotional center (working on
another level) is able to make itself felt
The normal evolution is possible only by passing through the state of self-consciousness.
These are the three levels of life given to us naturally-sleep, the waking state, and flashes of self-
consciousness (which actually cannot yet be rightly spoken of as a state).
Constantly forgetting ourselves, we also lose at the same time the sensation of ourselves.
Reconstituting this sensing has to be part of any endeavor to awake to oneself.
different and depending on what is expedient at the moment. They may serve to express buffers,
but then have no deep roots themselves other than the urgent need of each personage, when
faced with his inadequacies and his contradictions, nevertheless always to be right; at the same
time a certain intelligence is called for in order to always find good excuses. Buffers, on the
contrary, are deeply imbedded inner devices, conditionings that are securely set in the structure of
the personality and have grown along with it in order to damp down or camouflage or avoid the
contradictions that make up the usual life of man-not only the contradictions between his different
personages, but above all the contradictions between them and essence, arising from the abnormal
predominance they have assumed. Buffers are permanent automatic mechanisms within the
structure of personality, with whose development they have been built up. They have made its
development possible and thus it is they who maintain its predominance.
This mechanism, however, is accidentally sometimes held in check by life-at times of violent shock
(such as an accident or the death of a loved one) or at a moment of great disillusionment or of a
new and unforeseen situation. If he is still able to have a certain sincerity, a man is then led to put
in question again his usual way of living, and for a moment he feels a need to understand. A
special interest awakes in him to understand the causes of his situation, and for an instant he finds
again in himself the wish to understand his being and to understand his life.
As a matter of fact, there is, in every man, a more or less buried side of him, asleep to a greater
or lesser degree, that
takes an interest in understanding himself and his life and, broadly speaking, life in general. Because
of this special orientation toward a pole of fundamental interest, namely, the understanding
of life, it may be called magnetic center. It is not a center in the strict sense of the word, but only
a center of interest, and, with the magnetic apparatus which corresponds to it, it belongs to
personality, not to being. It is an interest for oneself, turned toward the understanding of oneself,
whereas ordinarily all the interests of man are turned toward the externals. It is personalitys
interest in this latent demand for being that gets covered over-an interest turned toward himself,
but nevertheless an interest like others; and a man generally has many interests of this sort in his
personality. Such an interest for self, belonging to the person, is entirely different from
self-consciousness, which develops in an awakened man and belongs to his being. However,
interest in oneself, properly guided, may lead to self-consciousness.