Catherine Shainberg: Kabbalah of Light

Catherine Shainberg: Kabbalah of Light

Kabbalah of Light: Ecosystem for the Soul

by Debra Sofia with Catherine Shainberg | March 9, 2021

We Are Made of Images

CATHERINE SHAINBERG is a transpersonal psychologist, healer, visionary and teacher with a private practice in New York City. In her 40 years’ experience, she has taught thousands of students around the world to discover their Soul Pattern, rebalance their Internal Ecosystem, and build a Palace of Light for physical and emotional wellbeing.

After training as an art historian at the Sorbonne and the Louvre, Catherine became a consultant for UNESCO. And then in 1972 she moved to Israel, where she converted to Judaism. There she spent ten years studying the Kabbalah of Light in Jerusalem with Madame Colette Aboulker-Muscat, a renowned kabbalist, mystic and teacher. She also studied with the Rav Zerbiv and the Rav Kook, son of the first Great Rabbi of Israel, the most revered kabbalist of the 20th century.

The Door to Rapid Transformation

Catherine’s words of encouragement: You are not victims. There is the language inside to transform and become the best of yourself. It’s fun, not exhausting. And doesn’t require a lot of reading — it’s enlivening, exciting!

By seeing within, you can change the world by how you look at it. Dreaming is a global language that everybody has. Dreams of the day and night provide a way forward.

Soul to Soul: And the Conversation Continues

by Debra Sofia with Catherine Shainberg | 33 min

Bonus Audio: Excepts from an earlier conversation with Catherine. When you listen, please be patient with a wobbly web connection. Notwithstanding, our conversation is full of insights. And she will take you through a practice to ask a question of your Soul.

Learn More:

Website, Courses and Books

Kabbalah and the Power of Dreaming

Dream Birth

Catherine Shainberg Kabbalah School of Images
Toward Freedom: Dreaming Our Lives into Being

Toward Freedom: Dreaming Our Lives into Being

Vayakhel-Pekudei – Exodus 35:1 – 40:38

Mar 7 – 13, 2021 | 29 Adar 5781

Watercolor by Nurullah

Dreaming Our Lives into Being

For the cloud of YHWH was over the Dwelling by day,

and fire would be by night in it,

before the eye of all the House of Israel

upon all their marches.

– Exodus 40:38

In this week’s double-parsha Vayakhel-Pekudei, the House of Israel donates so heavily to the construction of the Mishkan – the Dwelling – that Moshe says, Enough! The importance of keeping Shabbat is reiterated. And the construction begins. 

Have you listened to Kabbalah 99’s latest podcast with Catherine Shainberg, founder of The School of Images? When you do, you will hear how the line between sleep-dreaming and awake-dreaming blurs. What if someday we wake up and find it was all a dream?

Looking at the Book of Exodus in this manner — as a dream of awakening — reveals much about our human journey. Everyone and everything is you — all different aspects of you. Following Catherine’s method, we can look at what happens from four vantage points:

1) The story

2) Patterns and relationships

3) What it means, from your own experience in combination with the interpretations of others

4) What you take away from this exploration — your own, enhanced experience of the dream and its impact on your perceptions, choices and self-understanding.

So let’s give Catherine’s method a try. Let’s apply this approach to the Book of Exodus.

Exodus as Story

Speaking from my experience as the dreamer, my story goes about like this: I am a slave in Egypt. With difficulty, the leader in me rises up to take me and my people out of bondage. This is in unison with the will of G’d, YHWH — my Truth that cannot be Named. In order to reveal many signs, YHWH unleashes nine plagues on the hardened places in me that can’t let go.

With the last decree, the slaying of my egoic self, I must actively protect my family and my animals by performing rituals — including marking my doorpost with the blood of the sacrificial lamb. Finally, all of the parts of me that yearn for freedom get to escape in the dark of night.

And yet, near the Sea of Reeds, my grasping, fearful self who won’t let go catches up to the me who longs for freedom. YHWH divides the waters so that only the desire for freedom and communion can pass through. With a round-about route, the Unnameable brings me and my kind to the Sinai Wilderness. I feel something magnificent is about to happen. 

There I am instructed how to build the dwelling place for YHWH — that part of me that is Beyond Name. I learn the importance of keeping the day of rest, Shabbat. I am shown 10 Words by which I can live peacefully with all of my selves.

However, doubt resurfaces. Willingly, I give my golden earrings to be melted into an idol I can tangibly see and touch. When I become lucid to what I’ve done, I get angry with myself. Feeling betrayed, I break the Tablets on which G’d has written guidance for life.

And yet, death will not be my consequence. Like a parachute that opens at the last minute, G’d forgives me, and instructs the leader in me to climb the mountain again. This time, I write the Tablets with my own hand. 

I rejoice in this Reunion. I give freely of all that is mine to create a dwelling place for G’d. The wise and skilled builder in me, Betzalel, says to my illuminated self, Moshe:

The people are bringing much more

than enough for the service of the work

that YHWH has commanded, to make it!

― Exodus 36:5

Patterns and Relationships

Really, it would take at least a full chapter in a lengthy book to identify the major patterns in this dream of Exodus. As my own dream, what strike me the most is the relationship between myself and YHWH, the me that can’t be Named. How many times did I doubt? How many times did I pledge my love and allegiance, only to forget again?

A related pattern is Zakar — to remember. In parsha Beshalakh (When Pharaoh Let Go) I defeat doubt with remembrance. To the question, “Is G’d with us or not?” — the answer is to remember. To discover a knowing faith within myself.

Another pattern is the need to participate in my own unfoldment. For instance, in Beshalakh I have to protect myself, my family and my livestock from the 10th Plague. In parsha Va’era (And I appeared) G’d makes three promises to me and to my community: I will bring you out, I will rescue you, I will redeem you from the dry, tastelessness matzah of servitude.

And then in pasha Bo (Come) the fourth promise is offered: I will take you for me as a people. This promise requires reciprocity – I cannot passively receive this communion. I must actively participate in Union. In parsha Mishpatim (Laws, Family) I recall the words naaseh v’nishma, “We will do.”  This is all about action, behavior, deed. Along with my family of selves at the foot of Mount Sinai, I pledge to follow G-d’s words.

Extracting the Meaning

If this were my dream, I would interpret it to mean that my many sides tend to be in conflict with each other, and yet sometimes do unite in glorious harmony. That it can be hard to speak up and be authentic. That purpose is the fabric of human life. And yet, my senses and intellect can get in the way of understanding and acting on my purpose.

And that I must balance my passion to self-actualize with the humility to transcend my limited self and know that All is G’d. That G’d is the bestower, and I am the receiver… which awakens me to the capacity and the calling to serve humanity.

What do others have to say about the meaning of the dream of Exodus? Recently, Kabbalah 99 interviewed Rabbi Mendel Brackman. You can hear more wisdom in his podcast interview: A Taste of Kabbalah: Receiving Wisdom of Torah for Personal and Global Transformation.

To answer my question, what insights do you glean from Exodus as a dream? Here’s how Rabbi Mendel responded:

The Book of Exodus is the journey of the love Hashem has for us, and how we impart that love into the world around us.

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The tabernacle shows us the immense love Hashem has for each of us. The travelings of the Mishkan impart that love into the whole world: how being brought out of Egypt and being given the Torah was for us to share Hashem’s love with the rest of the world.

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When we become a mini-Mishkan, we carry that love wherever we go, showing the journey though our own lives and the world around us is a place that doesn’t reject the divine, but rather welcomes it with open arms.

Rabbi Mendel Brackman, Chabad of North Metro Denver

 

From a completely different perspective, we have the words of the chaplain and nature photographer Glenn Sackett. For his full podcast interview, click on: Exploring Beauty and Resilience in Nature and in All Our Relations.

We are not alone. Something happens and we complain. Then G’d intervenes and we remember G’d. Then we forget and kvetch again. Then we find out — we are not really alone. Someone we can’t see knows what we need and provides in ways we don’t expect.

Ellen White, a Founder of 7th Day Adventist Church, puts it this way: “We need not fear the future unless we forget how G’d has lead us in the past”.

Glenn Sackett, Explorer of Inner and Outer Worlds

What Is Your Awakening?

In my mind and heart, this dream of Exodus teaches me that the purpose of my life is to contribute to an ethical society — to love G’d and to love each person, all that is, as myself. For truly, we are One Being. This we invoke whenever we say these words of the Sufi mystic, Hazrat Inayat Khan:

Toward the One.

The perfection of Love, Harmony and Beauty,

The Only Being.

United with all the Illuminated Souls

who form the embodiment of the Master, the Messenger, the Message,

The Spirit of Guidance.

After all this exploration, what does the dream… the experience… of Exodus mean to you? How are you Moshe? How are you Pharaoh? In what ways do you serve because of your love of your neighbor? In what fullness of capacity is your love of G’d?

These are big questions to explore today. As big as your LIFE.

This week we will choose practices that bring us into Zakar – Remembrance. For this is our door to Oneness. Through breath, light and sound we create the conditions to tune ourselves with the Infinite and harmonize with the rhythms of this life. This beautiful, chaotic, ever changing, all-pervading Life.

 

Yitro Kabbalah Sufism crescent moon

Photography by Glenn Sackett

WEEKLY PRACTICES: Remember to Remember

The Soul Manifestation Process awakens us to the present in the fullness of our being. This gentle, embodied awareness allows the heart to begin to heal its wounds and unify the broken shards of separation. This week, we will work with breath infused with light and sound to allow us to return to the home of our soul.

We will continue with the purification practices as they are foundational to clearing away that which no longer serves us. Return, return. Ours is not a caravan of despair.

Suggestion: Do one practice a day, or do all 6 consecutively. Remember… have your Journal nearby to jot down any insights that may arise.

Audio Recording – Coming Soon

 

BREATH

To remember our true Self, first we must remove the accumulations and stories of our heart, mind and body. By so doing we purify ourselves before entering into prayer. We will use the energetic states of Earth, Water, Fire and Air to remove all obscurations. Begin with a complete exhalation. Throughout the practice, breathe deeply and rhythmically, with an even exhalation and inhalation.

Earth: Inhale and exhale through the nose 5 times. Feel the capacity for solidity. Release to the earth all that belongs to earth.

WaterInhale through the nose and exhale through the mouth 5 times. Feel the capacity for liquidity. Set adrift in  water all that belongs to water.

Fire: Inhale, sipping through the mouth, and exhale through the nose 5 times. Feel the capacity for heat and transformation. Give to fire all that desires to be released in flame.

Air: Open your mouth and inhale and exhale through the mouth 5 times. Feel the capacity for expansiveness in the gaseous state. Let the wind carry away all that belongs to air.

Now sit quietly, breathing gently in and out through the nose. Feel the capacity for stillness. This is Ether from which the four elements arise. Do you feel the stillness? A lightness of being? When you are ready, return to your normal breath and open your eyes.

CONTEMPLATION

In this purified atmosphere, we turn to prayer. Contemplate the lines below from the week’s parshot, Vayakhel-Pekudei. And drawing from the words of the Sufi master Hazrat Inayat Khan, consider this quote from the Githas on Meditation and Zikr — a word which means Remembrance. 

 

Contemplate these lines about observing Shabbat from the parsha Vayakhel (And He Assembled):

For six days is work to be made,

but on the seventh day,

there is to be holiness for you,

Sabbath, Sabbath-Ceasing for YHWH

– Exodus 35:2

Reflection: In what ways do you observe a day of rest? In what ways does it enrich your life? If you were to deepen your observance, what might you do differently?

Contemplate these lines from the Githas of Hazrat Inayat Khan:

The moral of Zikr is humility, and in its performance the Nafs is absorbed like the shadow when light is turned on it. 

Nafs can be translated as “ego” – that sense of self as separate from Oneness. What happens to the shadow of your personality when light shines upon it?

LIGHT

Now that we have emptied ourselves with the Purification Breaths and readied ourselves with prayer, now we can rejoice in awakening, and commit to our essential nature.

With eyes closed, breathe in and out gently through the nose. Balance your inhale with your exhale. Keep your body still. Focus on your crown, at the top of your head. On the inhale, visualize the color yellow above your crown. On the exhale, breath out yellow light through your third eye, between your eyebrows. Now imagine the morning light. All is bathed in yellow. Breathe in the deep yellows of earth, exhale pure yellow light. Let it permeate your entire body. Breathe in the sparkling light that dances on water. Stay with this image as long as you feel engaged.

When you are ready, open your eyes and breathe naturally. Witness your experience of this practice. How do you experience the energy of yellow? What qualities arise?

 

SOUND

We relax ever more deeply, naturally into the home of our soul with sound. The 99 Beautiful Names of Allah carry a sound code with the capacity to quiet our minds and open our hearts to Truth beyond concept. Through repetition, focus and intent, layers of meaning of the Name will be revealed to you.

Ya Hadi (yaa haa-DEE) is an invitation to remember God (zikr) and to remove the coverings over our heart that cause forgetfulness. It offers the light of guidance that illuminates the way for us to overcome self-delusion and find the broad and balanced road, the straight way that offers patience and hope: a life-giving water. (Source: Physicians of the Heart by Pir Shabda Khan).

We recite Ya Hadi 33 times.

  • Inhale: (listen for guidance in silence)
  • Exhale: Ya Hadi

Afterwards, let the sound of this practice reverberate in your being. Note how you feel. What guidance arises?

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ZIKR

Meaning “remembrance”, Zikr is the repetition of a sacred phrase with the intention of returning to the essence of Unity. Similarly, in Hebrew Zakar means to remember, recall, or call to mind. Today we will offer Zakar in Hebrew and Zikr in Arabic. Simply click on the tab labeled “Zakar” or “Zikr”.

 

Continuing from last week, we will repeat the central Jewish prayer known as the Sh’ma.

In Hebrew:

שְׁמַע יִשְׂרָאֵל יְהוָה אֱלֹהֵינוּ יְהוָה אֶחָֽד

Shema Yisrael YHWH Eloheinu YHWH Echad

The Sh’ma can be translated as: “Hear, O Israel: the LORD our God, the LORD is one”. LORD is the unpronounceable four letter word יְהוָה – YHWH, the Name of G’d that can’t be named. Instead, we’ll use the word “Adonai“, meaning Lord, or “HaShem“, meaning The Name.

When practicing Zakar, remembrance, it’s best to use the original language in which the prayer was revealed. As you inhale and exhale, softly repeat out loud, 33 times. Afterward, feel the effects of the vibration on your being.

The phrase lā ilāha illā allāh can be translated as “nothing exists except G’d.” To practice this as gift of remembrance, listen to this recording of the Zikr of Hazrat Inayat Khan:

Inhale: Shema Yisrael Adonai Eloheinu
Exhale: Adonai Echad

Inhale: Shema Yisrael HaShem Eloheinu
Exhale: HaShem Echad

NATURE

This week as you take time to walk in nature, pay attention to the play of light. What conditions give rise to yellow in nature? If you can, walk in the yellow light of dawn. What is dawning in you today?

To be guided in two more nature practices – the Medicine Walk and the 360 Listening Practice – please enjoy the podcast with Maria Rosa Galter: Answering Our Soul’s Longing to Connect in All Dimensions.

Shabbat Shalom!

After 6 days of practice, when Shabbat arrives, observe how this week’s practices shape your Shabbat experience. Be sure to check in Sunday morning for next week’s parsha.

You are invited to comment on how the contemplations and practices for this week have shaped your experience of daily life… any big Ah-ha’s? Please share your thoughts and feelings below.

 

חַיִּים
L’Hayyim…. To Life!

Beyond Words and Intellect: Realization via the Language of Music

Beyond Words and Intellect: Realization via the Language of Music

Beyond Words and Intellect: Realization via the Language of Music

by Debra Sofia with Michael Harrison | March 2, 2021

Music and the Physics of Sound

The American maverick, composer and pianist Michael Harrison is a rarity among musicians. With equal training and rapture in Western classical and Indian classical music, his compositions pioneer a new approach to music. He seeks expressions of universality via the physics of sound – music that brings one into a state of concentrated listening as a meditative and mind-altering experience.

Extending the ancient concept of just intonation, Michael creates structures of pure tuning that derive from musical intervals of perfect mathematical proportions. These harmonic relationships organically determine other musical elements of his music, such as pitch, duration, and dynamics.

Winner of the once-in-a-lifetime Guggenheim Fellowship in 2018, renowned performers such as the Grammy-winning vocal group Roomful of Teeth, Alarm Will Sound, Cello Octet Amsterdam, Cellist Maya Beiser, and many more have commissioned Michael to compose works that give voice to their unusual talents.

One favorite is the highly praised album Revelation, named one of the Best Classical Recordings of 2007 by The New York Times. Listeners often find themselves journeying in unseen realms. Composed for piano in his own tuning system, listen to this podcast to hear Michael explain the WHY and HOW of just intonation. 

Immersion in Pure Sound

What inspires Michael to dedicate his life to this pursuit of excellence and innovation in music? As a young undergraduate student, he met composer La Monte Young. Soon Young brought him to New York as his protégé to study composition, performance, and Indian classical music. In that environment, Michael immersed himself in the world of minimal music and art.

In a matter of timing, La Monte Young and Terry Riley introduced Michael to their music guru Fakhir Pran Nath. Soon Michael became a disciple of Pran Nath, traveling to India with his guru for periods of extensive study and practice.

This early relationship remains foundational to Michael’s spiritual and musical development.

Seven Leading Names of Creation

In Season One, Kabbalah 99 interviewed Suhrawardi William Gebel — astrophysicist, mystic and author of the book — Nature’s Hidden Dimension: Envisioning the Inner Life of the Universe. Seeking to express the vibrational essence of these Names of Awakening, Suhrawardi commissioned Michael to be the composer.

This podcast interview plays the composition expressing the Seventh Leading Name Al-Kalimthe culminating capacity to fulfill the desire for self-knowledge. Beginning and ending this podcast with a few phrases of this piece, we also play it in its entirety as a sublime example of just intonation.

Polyphonic Raga

After more than 40 years of training and practice in both Western and Indian classical music systems, Michael is formally exploring melding the two worlds of Western classical and Indian classical music.

The universal foundation for music, which is vibration, is the software for the universe.

His latest project is a multidimensional art installation in collaboration with the visual and media artist Nina Elder, the astrophysicist and roboticist Suhrawardi Gebel, and other contributors as well.

This interdisciplinary installation will show the relationships between human time, planetary time, and cosmic time — within a 24-hour music cycle. In gradual evolution with the cosmic cycle, a natural connection with Indian raga will become apparent as the installation is unveiled.

Press play now to get an early preview of the forefront of innovation in the world of avant-garde classical music interfused with classical Indian raga.

Learn More:

Website, Video and Recordings

Complete Album

Live in Rome

Michael Harrison Alarm Will Sound

Photo Credit: Alarm Will Sound and Four/Ten Media