Conquering Drama:
A Discussion on How to Attain Unwavering Happiness
Are you tired of suffering life drama? Are your life experiences working for you, or against you? We will show you how to free yourself of drama, so you can achieve unwavering happiness.
This book is the transcription and summary editing of various seminars given by Master MahaVajra. It is to be read like if you were present at a seminar. These were arranged in a way to coherently fit together. Our denials are truly what keeps us blocked in suffering and attached to the past. We are stuck because of our attachments in a fortress of emotions. When these emotions are freed, with the good tools, happiness comes all by itself because there’s nothing to attach us away from it and nothing blocking us from it anymore.
Maha Vajra teaches us how to free ourselves from past experiences, and achieve this high level of happiness we are all looking for.
Excerpt from the book, by Master Maha Vajra:
Truth is Not the Words We Use
For some people, conquering drama and attaining immovable happiness (often referred to as “englightement” by many) means paying a certain amount to a specific organisation, sect or guru. For some others, enlightenment is attained by consuming funny hallucinogenic products. For others, enlightenment is found by reading every book they can get their hands on, listening to every audio track they can find and attending as many seminars as humanly possible. Yet for others, enlightenment is cutting yourself away from the world so that you can live a hermit life. All that said, if enlightenment exists, there must be someone who is right. Someone somewhere must have experienced it. Someone must know the truth!
Some people will tell you that I am enlightened. Don’t trust them. They can’t know this for sure. Well, maybe some rare people can, but most can’t. What’s more, I can’t prove to you that I am either. However, whether I am enlightened or not is irrelevant anyway. Why? Because truth is not an information, it’s an experience. What matters is what you get out of the experiences that you have.
I’ll give you an example to illustrate my point. Let’s say you travel out in a desert in Africa and go to some village to explain to the locals what snow is. “Hey people, listen up: I’m going to teach you something you don’t know today. I’ll talk to you about SNOW! Snow is like white cotton falling from the sky. It’s cold and when it touches you it becomes water.”
After hearing you say all that, they’ll probably loot at each other with a puzzled look on their face and wonder if you’ve smoked those aforementionned funny things that make someone “enlightened”. They may laugh at you, ignore you, they may burn you on a pillar to “save your soul”, they may ask you for food or medicine, or they may listen to you with a genuine interest to discover more, but one thing is for sure: they most certainly will not have a true understanding of what snow is aside from the sterile words and examples you used in your best effort to make them experience it.
Even if the words you use make sense, even if the individual concepts you use are common knowledge for those people, they will never grasp the complete truth of what you are trying to convey, no matter how clever your examples and explanations may be.
Now, bring those villagers in a place where there is snow. Let them touch it, taste it, smell it. Let them play with it, let them have a snowball fight, build igloos, slide on it, etc. Only then will they truly grasp what snow is. “AH!! Snow! So this is what snow is! Hey, you’re right: snow is like white cotton falling from the sky, it’s cold and when it touches you it turns to water!” Now all the examples and words make total sense for them.
The same thing would apply if you had never tasted a chocolate cake. I could spend months telling you about flour, cocoa, eggs and milk. I could explain to you what the texture of the cake is like, how it melts in your mouth, how it smells. I could get you to speak with the baker who invented the recipie, with the guy who built the oven that cooked the cake… none of this will ever ever make you experience the truth of what a chocolate cake is. To find out, you must experience it yourself.
Since I have no other tools than words to convey the experience of a chocolate cake to you, all I can do is use those words and examples hoping that somehow I will pull enough strings in you to make you “get it”.
So we use words to refer to experiences, and “enlightenment” is such a word. But have you experienced it? If not, regardless of how much effort I would put into explaining it, at best you will have some vague concept of what enlightenment is but you’ll only really get it when you get there
Thus, nothing proves you that I am englightened, and most of you are not enlightened, so don’t trust me. Actually, don’t fear me either. The only thing you can do is to trust your own experience. Your experience IS the truth. Trust it. Trust yourself. Trust what you feel, trust what you experience. Upon reading this book, you’ll be triggered thru diferent states of being. This is where truth lies. The words and examples I’ll use in the coming pages are merely pointing to it.
If you feel that this book is not for you, you are blessed with something called free will. Nobody forces you to read it. No one has power over your mind, not even an enlightened person. So if you don’t like the experience you have while reading it, respect yourself and put it down. On the other hand, if you do like what you experience along the way, then respect yourself also and keep reading, experimenting and integrating. Don’t take my word for it. I can’t prove what enlightenment is to you. All we can do together is to experience stuff, so we’ll play along. In live seminars, and to a lesser degree in live online events, I have other tools to communicate like non-verbal cues, tone of voice, etc. I play mind tricks and word games with attendees, I laugh, act and talk stupid, it’s all ok. Here in writing, I don’t have the luxury of using non-verbal cues, so I’ll do my best to trigger experiences thru written words alone.
Ready? Let’s play






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