Awakening Warrior: Introduction

Note: I wrote this introduction many years ago and although I’m publishing this version, it may change over time and be different in the final book.

I live an extraordinary life where miracles manifest around every corner. Although, it’s actually other people who use the term ‘miracle’ to describe the way my life unfolds. Calling something a ‘miracle’ implies it was an unlikely event. I don’t see it that way.

When I say my life is extraordinary, I don’t mean to imply I’ve become a millionaire or a successful entrepreneur. I was an entrepreneur once. It was awful. If I wrote a book about it, it would be titled I Threw My Laptop Lifestyle Out The Window.

Extraordinary, to me, means exactly that – extra ordinary. Ordinary with a side of ordinary; hold the pickles.

I’ve reached a place of ease, where the struggle to survive – physically and psychologically – has dissolved. I didn’t win the lottery and I don’t live in luxury. Life is easy because I’m no longer struggling to maintain an identity in the world. I have a deep connection with life, and an even deeper appreciation for simplicity.

My life wasn’t always like this. In my teens and through my 20’s, my life was chaos and destruction at every turn. I suffered from severe depression and saw no point to life. I was suicidal and burning with rage.

I dove head first into spirituality at the age of 11, immersing myself in Wicca, Druidry, and other ancient practices. At 16 I worked at a new age metaphysical bookstore and read every book I could. Based on what various authors proclaimed, I pictured Awakening as the end of suffering – the dawning of eternal bliss. After all, that’s what “enlightenment” is, right? Heh. Not exactly. Not even close.

When the Awakening process unfolded, the result was unexpectedly destructive… yet profound.

After Awakening, I gave my spiritual practices a swirly and flushed them all down the toilet. I realized the deceptive nature of abilities like telekinesis, seeing through closed eyes, and clairvoyance. I understood the deception of superconsciousness, reincarnation, oneness, and other “new age” spiritual concepts – no matter how real the experiences are, they are a distraction from the ‘meat and potatoes’ of Awakening. You can have both, but not at the same time. Awakening comes first – then these things fall into their rightful place.

Living chaos and destruction woke me up

Most people presume their path to Awakening will be positive, like lovers dancing in a field of flowers, blissed out, feeling “one” with the world. My path was being in perpetual conflict with everyone around me on a bloody battlefield that followed me everywhere I went.

While journeying through life tuned to the frequency of destruction, I came to understand aspects of humanity that most people can’t even fathom. Although it remains a mystery to most, one aspect of humanity I thoroughly understand is school violence. I understand it because I was one of the kids who decided to pack years of rage into the barrel of a gun and unleash that rage at school.

Although I had the desire to do it, it never went beyond an idea. I didn’t have access to a weapon. But that didn’t stop me from planning – and threatening – a suicide-murder mission at the age of 14.

When I was caught I didn’t deny my intentions. Still, the judge dropped my case without even meeting me – that decision would never happen today. It was 1995 – three years before Jonesboro, four years before Columbine, and twelve years before Virginia Tech.

I was charged with terrorist threats, narrowly escaping charges of vandalism and extortion. I got off easy. I was a gifted student so they didn’t believe I was a threat. I wouldn’t really hurt anyone, they said. I was just acting out over my parents’ divorce, they said. Therapy would help, they said.

Everything “they” said was wrong. I wanted revenge more than my own life. My rage had nothing to do with my parents’ divorce. Therapy made me angrier. The rage I was ready to unleash had accumulated from years of abuse in school that went ignored by everyone around me. But I didn’t write this book to describe those experiences to win your sympathy or support. And I’m not using this book as a platform to lament about schoolyard injustice.

Although many will sympathize with my experiences in school, I’m not trying to validate my past, nor am I looking to shame the school system or even condemn my bullies. In fact, some of the people I once considered bullies are now my friends.

I wrote this book to tell a different story. For many years I perceived the actions of others to be the cause of my rage. After Awakening I understand it differently. Despite my experiences, I don’t see myself as a victim, and by the end of this book, you’ll understand why.

There’s a fork in the road to healing, and most people go left or right. I didn’t take the easy road. I didn’t take the road less traveled. I continued straight ahead, forging a path through a dark and brambled forest, thorns piercing and slicing my body from every angle. I emerged exhausted and bloody, yet victorious. What I discovered destroyed my perception that abuse had caused my suffering. I learned the Truth. And that’s what this book is about.

Not another book about school violence

Awakening Warrior isn’t just another book about school violence. You won’t find kill counts, biographies, or a psychological analysis of school shooters in this book. Other authors have covered that information extensively.

This book shares what hasn’t been published: a raw and unfiltered perspective on school violence written by a former teenager arrested for planning a shooting, who transformed their life.

Not another book about bullying

Stories about bullied kids are a dime a dozen. I’m going to tell you a different story, one you likely haven’t heard.

I’m going to tell you how I obliterated severe depression, homicidal urges, suicidality, OCD, manic depression, rage, and severe PTSD without a drop of therapy or medication. I’m also going to tell you how I turned my bullies into friends.

I’m going to share the monumental ‘mistakes’ I’ve made that led me to uncover a deep wisdom about life. And I’m going to share the training that taught me how to step into my greatness and lead others to do the same – training that’s accessible to everyone around the world.

I’m going to share how attending a modern day Mystery School forced me to climb out of the morass of judgment, give up my emotional addiction to pain and suffering, and trained me to achieve higher states of consciousness that often result in mind-blowing mystical experiences. Like being able to manifest desires and see with my eyes closed.

Most importantly, I’m going to share the wisdom of a four-decades-long journey born from destruction that unfolded into a deep love for what many call “God” or “The Universe.”

This book is about transformation, not motivation

We already know why teenagers choose to kill their classmates and teachers: they’re burning hot with rage, generally the result of real and perceived injustices. There are individual circumstances that vary, but with each new incident, the narrative follows a familiar path. We have this narrative memorized, yet knowing a shooter’s motivation never helps to prevent the next incident.

If you want to learn how to transform a deeply rooted state of depression, rage, and suicidality into one of peace and contentment – in yourself or others – this book is for you.

My story will take you beyond motivation, into a space that provides answers from a new perspective. A perspective I didn’t have access to until I became committed to Truth. Once I tugged on the first thread, my life unraveled like a Weezer song.

Getting to this point wasn’t easy. I had to confront my worst fears and courageously walk through them all. I had to allow myself to bleed out, to be shredded and dismantled from top to bottom.

Most importantly, I had to let go of the one thing that provided me with comfort: my suffering. Not just suffering, but my suffering. I clung to it like a koala clings to a Eucalyptus tree. And when I realized nobody was going to pry it away, I had to do it myself.

Why I’m sharing my story

My story is a roadmap for preventing suicide and school violence and demonstrates how even the most destructive mindset can be healed.

I’m sharing my story because…

… right now, there are kids plotting murder right under their parents’ noses. Their friends know something’s wrong, but don’t know how to intervene.

… right now, there are teenagers and adults sinking deeper into suicidal depression who don’t know how to get out of their downward spiral.

… right now, there are thousands of people whose lives will one day be ripped to shreds by a school shooting. Like all who came before, they’ll say, “I never saw it coming. He was such a nice kid. I never thought it would happen here.”

I’m sharing my story because the world is divided on the cause and solution for school violence. And I’m committed to bridging this cavernous gap.

I’m sharing my story because right now, thousands of teenagers are suicidal because they feel irrelevant. And they need to know their life matters.

I’m sharing my story to encourage parents to develop authentic connections with their kids, and to give teens the courage to have ruthless compassion for friends who may be on the edge.

And if you’re on the edge, I wrote this book as an invitation to take a few steps back from that edge, just for now. No matter who you are, I’m committed that by the end of this book, you’ll see a bigger possibility for your life, and you’ll know that your life – and your voice – matter.

Be.

For a short time, I lost myself in a sea of quicksand, trying to defend myself against lies that only made me sink deeper. In the end, I came back to center. And here is my mantra:

“I am so in tune with who I am at the core of my being and with unconditional love that I allow others to Be even when they don’t allow me.”

Yes. This.

Powerless.

Eric wanted to be powerful. That’s a sign of powerlessness.

“The next reason is that Zeus and I both like to be powerful and have some control over what is happening.”
-Eric Harris (p.26770)

He felt powerless and out of control of his own life.

The irony is none of us have control, yet we spend countless hours desperately trying to control our lives… some of us recognize this and check out fast.

However, most of us just live with the resulting frustration and depression, many put whipped cream on the situation and “keep trying.” Some of us become life coaches to feel better about our powerlessness by encouraging others to achieve their dreams…

It’s all a distraction from the fact that we aren’t in control.

 

The rock and stream are not at war

I once read a quote attributed to H. Jackson Brown that says, “In the confrontation between the stream and the rock, the stream always wins… not through strength, but through persistence.”

This is a beautiful personification that exemplifies the importance of persistence. However, there is another perspective.

We like to personify nature akin to the way we live our own lives. If we live in confrontation in our own lives, naturally we’d see confrontation in everything, even something as simple as a stream flowing over some rocks. After all, you can’t have persistence without confrontation to endure in order to give rise to the virtue of persistence. But what if our perspective is skewed and there is no confrontation, and therefore no persistence?

When I look at a rock well worn from a flowing stream, I do not see a confrontation nor do I see persistence. I see a harmonious relationship between what we call the stream and the rock. The rock doesn’t object to the stream’s desire to flow over and through. It simply adapts by allowing itself to change and wear down to allow the stream’s flow. The rock does not resist what is. It allows what is. The rock allows the natural progression of life to unfold.

The rock is not in battle with the stream. The stream is not persistent. And the rock is not defeated. What is occurring is a beautiful dance with all parts played in harmony. Without this dance, there would be no waterfalls. Without the rocks, we would never see a stream flowing. The rock and stream are one grand display of life moving and dancing.

When we remove the story of confrontation, then the story of persistence also disappears. Can we be inspired by a flowing stream without inventing a story of persistence? Can we be inspired simply by noticing what is?

When we personify what we experience in nature, we do so based on the script of our life. And if the script of our life is a confrontation, then that is what we will see everywhere we look.

Only when we change the script of our life can we see things as they are.

Who creates your reality?

The idea that “you” create everything in your life isn’t the truth; it’s a powerful place to stand. If you take it literally, you’ll waste your life trying to figure out inexplicable suffering in your own life and the lives of others. You’ll blame yourself for your worst fears and biggest shortcomings. You’ll believe in the nebulous idea that you “vibrationally” created the murder of your own brother – even though you can’t figure out how… and you’ll drive yourself mad trying to figure out how “you” created such an experience.

You won’t stop to question, hey, wait a minute, what if I didn’t create the experience of my brother being murdered? What if… that is an assumption?

There is a fine line to walk when you believe yourself to be the creator of your entire reality. It’s easy to take credit for the wonderful things, but the suffering makes you pause. Perhaps that pause within suffering is there to open a tiny pinhole for you to peek through to see what is actually doing the creating…

Perhaps you aren’t the creator, and perhaps that’s actually where your power has been all along… perhaps the misattribution is so slight it’s difficult to see until you experience a major tragedy or serious illness… to see that even when you create intentionally, it’s still not your creation… you had nothing to do with it… to see the empowerment in that, the freedom…

“I create my reality” is a powerful place to stand and serves a purpose – to help you see something deeper and more profound than the mistaken belief that you, the personality, are creating.

If you can create something without conscious knowledge of it, that should be a clue to what is (or isn’t) doing the creating. You do create your reality, but the “you” that is doing the creating is not the “you” you think you are…

All beliefs are false

Imagine for a moment that “Awakening” is a process that begins by thrusting you deeply into illusion – illusion so good you don’t question it.

Imagine you invest yourself emotionally into all the illusions in your life. You call your emotional investment in these illusions “identity” and “being myself” and “my personality.”

Each time you go to a seminar to better your life, you up the ante. Everything you do that adds a layer to your identity or a dream to your list of goals ups the ante.

Each new attachment you acquire forces the Awakening process to require a heftier swing of the sword to chop through your Gordian Knot. You could have simply and gently untied it at the age of eleven, but puberty forced you to tie more knots.

Now imagine that in order to Awaken, you must sacrifice your entire life. Give it all up. It doesn’t matter to what or whom you give it, but you must place it all in the crucible to burn.

Imagine that once your life begins to burn, you’re going to experience the unraveling of illusion. It’s not going to be pretty and it’s going to hurt. And, inside of that experience, you’re going to become everyone and everything you opposed all of your life.

You’re going to see the sense of your worst enemies, the truth of their beliefs and perspectives. And you’re going to embrace it. Because it’s not about adopting new or better beliefs – it’s about letting go of your existing beliefs, and the best way to do that is to be shown the validity of what you’ve opposed your whole life.

Once you have a taste of how easy it is to “switch sides” of a belief, you have the opportunity to awaken right then and there, but few recognize what’s really going on.

Once you see that every belief has merit, you also must acknowledge that all beliefs are false. Nothing that can change is true. Truth is unchanging. All beliefs are false.

Once you acknowledge that all beliefs are false, then all sides of every argument drop away. All questions disappear. All problems disappear. You’re finally left with TRUTH. Undeniable, indisputable truth.

When the pendulum swings you to the other side of an issue, it isn’t about you finally “finding truth,” although that’s what most people believe has happened. No, if you’ve swung to the other side, you haven’t gone far enough yet. Truth isn’t found in any belief or idea. Truth is found just one step further…

Don’t be a ‘tire kicker’ – JUMP!

Often, I see that people live decades of a rich and colorful life and then report back about what they’ve discovered. They try to warn people starting on a similar journey, “caution! It’s not what you think!” but they’re met with skepticism… skepticism that the individual can’t be trusted because their experience led them to a conclusion they once opposed. Obviously if they oppose what they once supported, they clearly have an “agenda.”

Ah yes, we can’t trust people with an agenda. That’s what we’re taught, eh? Growing up… don’t trust adults with candy, don’t take rides from strangers, and… never, ever trust anyone with life experience. Experience=agenda.

We hear stories about this all the time. People who live a specific lifestyle, and then discover a higher wisdom.

The point is, most people won’t heed your advice to go back to safety. And maybe they shouldn’t. Maybe it’s their journey to fall off the same cliff you fell off of because falling off that cliff IS the journey that leads to wisdom. If they heed your advice and turn back, they’ll remain a fool.

If you want wisdom, you don’t want comfort or safety. The cliff is what you want. It’s not an accident to fall off that cliff. It’s meant for falling. Most people just sniff around it like a ‘tire kicker’ and procrastinate. If you’re lucky, you’ll get a little shove. But it’s more fun to hurl yourself off and see what happens…

Stop rearranging your life – it doesn’t work

You can only spend so much time rearranging your life, trying to make it fit your idea of “happy” or “ideal” – the moment you let go of the thread you’ve been weaving, life unravels everything, and if you want to wake up, you’d be a fool to stop the process.

That unraveling and destruction is life’s way of regaining control you only thought you had – life gives you some room to play with as long as you want to remain in the illusory world. The difficulty is that people stop the ride they’re on and get on another one, and think they’ve woken up.

All rides are just rides. They’re all illusory.

Once you decide to leave the amusement park, things change.

You can wake up within the dream state and think you’re “awake” but if you’re still focused on rearranging your life to match your personal desires/will, you’re just awake within the dream – not FROM the dream. You’re sleepwalking.

You’d be surprised what your body/vehicle will guide you to do when you let go of arranging your world artificially according to what you think you want or how life should be… your life might take a whole new and unexpected direction…

But letting go of trying to make life more pleasant, allowing destruction, pain, and discord, well, that’s the Universe’s best kept secret. You’d never know it from the outside.

From the outside it sounds like madness. It’s not even a matter of “what you resist persists” therefore you should allow painful experiences in order to get them to go away – nope… it’s more like… there’s a certain grace that comes from acknowledging What Is. And not trying to change it or resist it in any way. To just BE with it. Be with reality for once in your life rather than running away… it’s magical.

Life is only a mirror in the dreamstate

“Life is a mirror” is the most misunderstood statement with a forehead-slapping punchline that bursts wide open after Awakening.

In the dreamstate, you’ll look at someone and say, “he’s an asshole!” and your law-of-attraction buddies will remind you that you can only see in others what you, yourself are.

You must be an asshole, then. Somehow, somewhere. You’re sure of it. You simply cannot see something in someone else that you aren’t. So you’ll start the inner work necessary to stop being an asshole.

Fifteen, twenty, thirty years later you’ll realize that got you nowhere. Then, one day, you’ll realize what it really means to see in others only what you are. The realization only comes with a fundamental shift in perspective – not as an experience or piece of knowledge.

In the dreamstate, you define yourself by your voluntary, conscious behavior. Awake, who you are is unlimited, and there is no other. As a result, the reflection ceases to exist and truth emerges.

Reflections are dreamstate interpretations of a deeper truth that can’t be comprehended as anything else until that fundamental shift occurs.

There are no reflections outside of the dreamstate because there’s nothing that isn’t you.

A reflection requires self and other; something only possible in the dreamstate.

That the cucumbers in your garden are as much the sun as the sun itself becomes obvious.