But in my view, these teachings are based on a misunderstanding. One metaphor sometimes used to describe spiritual awakening is that of the wave and the ocean. In our normal unawakened state, we perceive ourselves as individual waves, separate to the whole ocean. But when we wake up, we realize our oneness with the ocean, that we are the ocean, that we’ve emerged from it and are always part of it. However, this doesn’t necessarily mean that we lose our identity as a wave. We can have an identity as a wave at the same time as being part of the ocean—at the same time as being the ocean. We can still function as individuals, with some degree of autonomy and identity, at the same time as being one with the whole universe.
One way to look at this is to see
spiritual awakening not as a dissolution of self but as an expansion of
self. In our sleep state, our identity is constricted, more or less
confined to our own mind and body. But as we wake up, our identity opens
up, expands outward. It incorporates and encompasses wider realities.
It expands into other people, other living beings, the natural world,
the earth itself, until eventually it encompasses the whole cosmos. In
conceptual terms, this expresses itself as a movement beyond a narrow
egocentric outlook (with a strong sense of group identity) toward a
global, universal perspective, with a concern for overriding global
issues and a sense of oneness with all human beings, irrespective of
superficial differences of nationality or ethnicity....<<<Read More>>>...