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Mysticism isn't just for medieval monks; it lives on in everyday aesthetic experiences. When we listen to music we love, we engage in a form of 'sensate ecstasy' that allows us to access something larger than ourselves, pushing the ego aside in a way that is functionally mystical.
People who live in their minds, applying logic to everything, often struggle with emotional and spiritual problems that logic can't solve. Creative pursuits like painting or music are not about rational thought; they are a direct path to accessing emotion and bridging the gap between the analytical mind and the feeling heart.
The ability to experience awe—the feeling of being in the presence of something vast, like a waterfall or starry sky—builds resilience against heartbreak. It provides perspective by making your personal problems feel smaller, temporarily quieting the ego, and fostering a connection to the wider world.
A psychologist combated his own severe anxiety by engaging in activities like team basketball and loud rock concerts. These experiences allowed him to "get outside of himself" and lose his narrow preoccupations, demonstrating that awe-inducing activities can be a powerful therapeutic escape from anxiety's self-focus.
Modern life, with its focus on work and technology, overstimulates the analytical left hemisphere ('how' and 'what'). This neglects the right hemisphere, which processes the 'why' questions of love, mystery, and meaning. Finding purpose requires intentionally engaging in right-brain activities.
The common pursuit of 'freedom of the will' can lead to a tyrannical ego and constant striving. Mysticism proposes an alternative: 'freedom from the will.' This involves practices that quiet the ego, leading to a 'released existence' of detached, flowing openness with the world.
Awe is not just appreciating beauty; it's a cognitive process defined by encountering vast mysteries that require a "need for accommodation." This means you must rearrange your existing knowledge structures and mental models to make sense of the new, incomprehensible experience.
The right hemisphere of the brain doesn't define a separate "you." It experiences the world as a unified whole, integrating all sensory input into one big picture. This is the neurological basis for "flow states" or feelings of transcendence, where the boundary between self and the world dissolves.
Paradoxically, achieving a deep sense of personal significance requires experiences of awe that make you feel small, like studying astronomy or being in nature. This shifts your perspective from the self-obsessed 'me-self' to the transcendent 'I-self,' which is the source of true meaning and peace.
The 'Wiggle Theory' suggests we are born with a natural, playful 'wiggle' that gets suppressed by the rigid structures of adulthood. Music and other creative acts give people permission to rediscover this innate, non-linear state, unlocking essential emotional channels.
Experiencing awe quiets our ego-focused identity. In experiments, people standing near a T-Rex skeleton later defined themselves with broad, collective terms like "a human" or "a mammal," rather than individualistic traits like "ambitious," demonstrating a shift away from the self.