Anandam Sharanam Gacchami.Let us take refuge of Ananda. "Anandam Brahma ityahu" Ananda (divine Bliss )and Brahma(Cosmic entity) is same. "A'tmamoksárthaḿ Jagathitáya Ca" –
“Self-realisation and Service to Humanity.”
"I trust that it is possible to remain unconcerned when the time comes for my physical death. "This" is my Unborn Awake Mind, my true nature. Resting here makes it impossible to be concerned with birth and death; I can simply and gratefully let go."
It's been only a community of equals among us. That's where my trust really lies. I say goodbye to you all. You are in my heart.
It's pretty amazing. I am going, and I don't even know the way.
Recently, I have been seeing our engagement with Radiant Mind as a gem with three facets or three inseparable aspects: introduction, familiarization, and integration. These three aspects correspond with the traditional Dzogchen formulation of view, meditation, and conduct. In this contemplation, I would like to briefly touch on each of the three aspects and relate them to their Dzogchen counterparts, as the Dzogchen tradition is one of the primary sources that make up “contentless wisdom lineage”. Introduction. The first precept of Dzogchen is “direct introduction to the nature of mind”, or to our essential Buddha nature. Implicit in this precept is that for direct introduction to take place, there must be recognition of our true nature – a clear seeing of spacious Presence/Awareness. This clear seeing is the View, or the Base, upon which our Radiant Mind engagement is founded. Then, once we have been introduced to our own primordial nature, we return to conscious awareness of it repeatedly, starting at the end of the path over and over again, and finding ourselves resting in complete fulfillment each time we do. Familiarization. The essence of meditation is to be this aware Presence knowingly. We no longer think of meditation as striving to attain some desired end, such as enlightenment, but instead see it as simply resting in awareness of this, which is always already, timelessly, here. In fact, as Longchenpa says, it is "Not so much meditation but rather familiarization; If familiarization becomes the matrix, it is supreme meditation." (~Tulku Pema Rigtsal, The Great Secret of Mind, p. 168) Our ‘practice’ is one of becoming more and more familiar with this, with pure Presence-Awareness, and deepening our recognition of what we now know ourselves to be. Integration. The third aspect has to do with bringing our realization increasingly into our everyday lives. What we are doing here is closing the gap between meditative familiarization and the way we conduct our ordinary activities and relationships in the world. In Dzogchen this is considered the integration of life and spiritual practice, with the idea that your practice and your life are coextensive. Eventually your life becomes completely saturated with your realization and you are able to meet everyday difficulties and challenges with greater composure and equanimity. (Geraldine) --------------
Beginners - 5 Vajras of Tibet Yoga with Lama Norbu
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fz9FOw9nGPQ When we get the mind under control no taboos, extreme emotions or thoughts can bind us to react immaturely. We are free as we know to unconditionally accept ourselves and others and let things arise free, abide and vanish in their own right (within reason of course, the obvious: abuse... violence... needs to be dealt with by drawing boundaries, which ultimately do not exist).
The world created by thought, the world of words, language, and concepts, is the world of opposites. ‘Up
and down’, ‘this or that’, ‘inside and outside’, ‘right and wrong’,
‘black and white’, ‘true and false’, ‘positive and negative’, ‘me and
you’ and so on. The world of words, language, thoughts, concepts,
is a dualistic world of apparent opposites. But, in reality, do
opposites exist?
What we are really pointing to when we use the word ‘non-duality’ is something that goes beyond all of these mind-made opposites. But how can we talk about something that goes beyond opposites, when even our attempt to talk about non-duality is dualistic?
So, what the word non-duality actually means is really very difficult
to describe or put into words. In fact, you could say it’s impossible.
For we are not talking about non-duality as opposed to something called duality, we are not talking about pro-duality as opposed to anti-duality.In
fact the non-duality we speak of is not the opposite of anything. This
is impossible to understand logically or rationally. To see what is
being spoken of, we must go beyond our ordinary way of thinking and
seeing. ‘Non-duality’
is actually a translation of the Sanskrit word ‘Advaita’, which simply
means ‘not two’ and points to the essential oneness (wholeness,
completeness, unity) of life, a wholeness which exists here and
now,prior to any apparent separation. It’s a word that points to an
intimacy, a love beyond words, right at the heart of present moment
experience. It’s a word that points us back Home. And despite the
compelling appearance of separation and diversity there is only one
universal essence, one reality. Oneness is all there is – and we are
included.
What we are really trying to do when we say ‘non-duality’ is point to
life as it is right now, before the appearance of concepts and labels;
before thought creates a world of things: table, chair, hand, foot, fear, me, you, past, future. What is life before thought? Can we even talk about that? Is it possible to capture non-duality into words?
When we speak of non-duality it can sometimes seem like we mean ‘anti-duality’,
that we are against duality or that it’s wrong or false or even
dangerous. This can then lead to dogmatic thinking and religiosity and
to the proclamation of rightness: “You are dualistic and I am non-dualistic! I am more non-dual than you!” That is the religion of non-duality. We are more interested in the truth of non-duality.
Non-duality isn’t a new belief system, a religion or a ‘how to’ guide
to living. It makes no promises about the future. Of course, it canbecome a belief system or religion, however, like anything can. You could start to believe that there is “no self, no ‘me’, no time or space and that everything is an illusion” – and non-duality could become your new belief system.
That’s what happened years ago in my own experience; non-duality had
become my new belief system, although at the time I actually believed I
was free from all belief systems! When someone subscribes to non-duality
as a system of belief, there’s just someone there – a separate person –
believing that they’re no longer a separate person! And then perhaps
they go round telling everyone that they are not a separate person.
Secretly they experience themselves as a separate individual but they
have taken on a set of concepts, they are living with a new image of
themselves as beyond all images.
You can believe you are not separate, but you can still feel
separate, and experience yourself as separate. There’s a world of
difference between simply believing that you are not separate, in other words, intellectually taking non-duality concepts on as a new belief system, and really seeing what those words are pointing to in a very deep way. Here, we are interested in the seeing
of non-duality, not just talking and arguing about it. We can talk and
argue about non-duality concepts until we are blue in the face, we can
argue about who is right and who is wrong and who is more
‘nondualistic’, but we would really be missing the point of all this.
Isn’t
it fascinating how automatically thought (or ‘the mind’) tries to turn
what we are talking about into some kind of special state or experience.
Thought hears about ‘non-duality’ and wants it. And it asks, ‘How
do I get it? How do I reach it? How do I see it? Who can take me there?
Who can transmit it to me? Who can teach me it or give it to me? Where
will I find it?’ It starts looking for something called ‘non-duality’. It starts waiting for it. It lives in hope.
That will inevitably happen because the individual is always a
seeker. A separate person is always looking for something. We might seek
wealth, success, power, fame, or we might seek for ‘spiritual’ things
instead – but really it’s all the same seeking. The spiritual seeker
might seek awakening, enlightenment or a non-dual state instead of money
and power and success – but deep down, it’s the same movement.
Time is always involved in seeking. What we search for is always in the future. We say, ‘One
day I will find non-duality. I’ll get into the non-dual state or have
an awakening experience or my person will drop away magically.’ So, stop right there! You’ve already turned non-duality into a future goal. Stop and look and see where this seeking begins.
Yes. Ask anybody on the street what they are looking for, and they’ll
probably say they’re looking for peace, happiness, success, popularity,
power, love, acceptance, understanding, fame, glory. Someone who
identifies themselves as a ‘spiritual person’ might be looking for an
altered state of consciousness, or some kind of transformation, or an
enlightenment experience, or they may be seeking to no longer seek
anything anymore!
Everyone is looking for something. This seeking takes many forms but
really it’s all the same seeking. It seems as though everyone is looking
for different things, but actually what we are looking for, deep down, is the same.
Basically, everyone is in pursuit of the same wholeness (or oneness, or
completeness, or whatever you want to call it) – a wholeness that is
already here, but is ignored in our pursuit of a future completion.
That’s where it all begins: looking for something better in the future.
Looking for the next moment that will be a better moment, a more full
moment, a more complete moment. And of course, non-duality could just
become something else you are looking for. We could turn non-duality
into our new goal. But the word ‘Non-duality’ actually points to what is
already presenthere and now,within this present experience, as
this experience. We’re not talking about a new goal for the seeker.
We’re talking about life as it already is. non-duality is not in time.
The real question is ‘Who is seeking?’. What is this seeker?
Where is it? Can I find it now? And is this seeker who I really am? I
seem to be a separate individual who is looking for something to
complete myself, but is that really who I am? Does this seeking really
define me? Am I really something that is incomplete, something that
seeks completion in the future? You pass through all these different
layers of questions and ultimately you get to the fundamental question: ‘Who am I?‘ That’s where everything leads to in the end.
If you ask most people that question, they’d probably reply with a
story about who they think they are. They’d give you a description about
what they’ve done in the past and maybe what they dream of doing in the
future. They might tell you a story about their role in life – that
they are a father or mother, or a business person or baker -where they
work and live, and how many children they have. They’ll quite literally tell you a story
about the past and future. They’ll basically tell you a story about who
they were in the past and who they think they will be in the future –
not who theyare in this moment. But the question is, ‘Who are you now?’ Normally that question is answered by describing the past or an imagined future.
We are living with a thought-created story about ourselves. I am a shop keeper, a doctor, a lawyer, an artist, a spiritual person.
(Someone who calls themselves a ‘spiritual person’ might even tell a
story about how they are not a person, that they’ve transcended time and
space and that they have no relationships because they have no self and
there are no others. Despite the content of the ‘I am’ story, it’s
still a story! Maybe, if you see yourself as ‘enlightened’ you have
convinced yourself that you are not telling a story, that you’re beyond
stories. But isn’t that just another story? We all seem to live with an image of who we are.)
Exactly. Is the image of yourself who you really are? Does it define you?
And here’s the problem. When you live with an image of yourself, that
image can always be improved; you can always have a better story. If
you have the identity that you are successful business women and you’re
making a lot of money, maybe you hope that one day you’ll make a fortune
and be a famous millionaire. Or the story could be that you’re a
spiritual person and one day you’ll become enlightened.
Well, it’s always about ‘me’ completing myself in time, isn’t it. The
enlightenment story is equal to the ‘one day I’m going to win the
lottery’ story.Within the story you are always incomplete and always moving towards a future completion.
On some level we feel incomplete now – there’s a sense of lack, or of
not being whole. Everyone lives with that, although not everyone admits
it or realises it. This is how the search begins: the sense of being
incomplete now, that something is missing now. Then
there’s the urge for a future fullness, a future completion. Something
wants to complete itself in the future, but it begins with a present
sense of incompleteness, a sense of lack. That goes right to the root of
it all – a sense of lack that everyone is trying to escape in various
ways.
Well yes, this is the problem. Even when you get what you want and
you think you’re satisfied, very quickly dissatisfaction starts up
again: ‘I finally got what I wanted but it didn’t complete me.’ After
twenty years of spiritual seeking you finally have the awakening
experience you always wanted, but you still don’t feel complete. You
make a million dollars and then you realise you still feel a sense of
lack. You finally find the man or woman of your dreams, and you still
want more. This is the problem with trying to complete yourself in time,
trying to complete yourself through getting stuff and having
experiences. There’s always more. There’s always a future.
Buddhists see that everything is impermanent. However amazing,
blissful, or apparently fulfilling something is, it will pass. Whatever
you have you can lose. If you finally got all the money you wanted, it
wouldn’t be enough because you can always have more money. You can be
more successful, more famous, move loved, more spiritual, and so on. You
attain the tenth level of consciousness (whatever that means) and then
you want to be on level eleven. You want to get to the top! The self
wants to be bigger, faster, stronger, more. Basically, we want to be
special in some way – the self wants to stand out against other selves,
and complete itself. It wants to be something, not nothing. We want to
be certain about who we are and have a fixed and complete story about
ourselves. But the nature of stories is that they can never be complete.
And so the seeking goes on and on – always waiting for a permanent
sense of total completion that never comes.
I don’t think people realise how exhausted they are! We live on
autopilot and we don’t question our seeking until this way of living
breaks down, and we call that suffering. When everything is going your
way and you’re getting everything you want – if the seeking mechanism is
working for you – why would you question your reality? But what tends
to happen is that it sooner or later life stops going your way! Then we
find out that we are not in control of life and that we can’t have what
we want. This whole seeking mechanism starts to break down and we
suffer. When you are suffering you might start to ask, ‘Is this who I
really am? Do I really need all this stuff I believe I need?’
Yes.
Some people appear to suffer in extreme ways and others seem to suffer
less, but everyone is suffering in their own way, even if they don’t
realise it. Like we’ve said, ultimately life brings you to the question:
‘Who am I?’ Everyone comes to that question in their own way.
Eventually you might start to ask why you’re suffering and question all
these fundamental assumptions we’ve been talking about. Often people
come to the message of non-duality through suffering, pain or distress.
In other words, when the seeking begins to fail on some level, something
else can begin to open up.
The wholeness or completeness that you are looking for is not be
found in the future. The wholeness that everyone is looking for is
actually already here within this present experience, within this
present moment. The wholeness that you’re looking for – is what you are.
It sounds like a total paradox when you try to understand it with
thought and it really goes against everything that we are conditioned to
believe. It’s not about understanding this with the mind, with thought –
it’s about really seeing this for yourself, in your own experience. In a
way, this offers nothing to the seeker – it is the experience of being a
seeker in the first place, that’s the illusion. And it’s that illusion
that this message exposes.
No one can give this to you or teach it to you. You need to see it
for yourself within your own present experience because that’s all there
is. You won’t see it in someone else’s experience. It’s not a
second-hand thing. It’s about this experience, right now.
It’s not something to find in the future. The wholeness you look for
is already appearing as everything that’s happening now: as these
thoughts, sensations, feelings, sounds, smells. Perhaps this is
the wholeness we’ve been seeking. And perhaps wholeness doesn’t look,
sound, smell, feel or taste anything like your idea of wholeness – your
concept of wholeness! Everyone is looking for their concepts of
wholeness (or enlightenment, freedom, love) but true wholeness is not a
concept. It’s what is already here prior to concepts. So again, here’s
the paradox: perhaps there is only ever wholeness, and within that
wholeness we go out into time and space and look for wholeness! Within
Home, we’re all looking for Home. Everyone is trying to come Home, but
they are already Home. They are what they seek, and do not realise it.
So, the message of non-duality points to this ever-present completeness – in the midst of present experience.
Yes. That’s a great metaphor. You are like a wave in the ocean experiencing itself as separate from the ocean. The wave asks, ‘When and where will I find the ocean? Who can give the ocean to me?’ But the wave was always the ocean, from the very beginning, even in its seeking! It’s the ocean looking for itself. Even within the ocean’s failure
to find itself it is still the ocean; every wave is one hundred per
cent water. As all the authentic spiritual teachers have been telling us
for hundreds and thousands of years, you are what you seek.
Although ‘non-duality’ is just a word, what it points to is the
possibility that you are not who you think you are. It’s the possibility
that what you are is not this seeker, broken or incomplete. What you
are is simply this open space of awareness (consciousness, awakeness,
Being) in which absolutely everything seems to come and go, and that
space is already at rest; it’s already Home.
Well, it’s neither and both – unfortunately that question implies
that it could be one thing or another thing. But space is not impersonal
as opposed to personal. Thought creates opposites but in reality there
are no opposites. When thought appears in the space, immediately there appears
to be a world of opposites: up and down, light and dark, inside and
outside, or impersonal and personal. All opposites depend on each
other;all the pairs of opposites arise and fall together, and the open
space holds all of this. The personal life story is just something that
is appearing and disappearing in the open space that you are. ‘You’
appear and disappear in you! Does that mean that the space is
impersonal? It’s impersonal in the sense that it holds all personal
stories as they appear and disappear. But at the same time it’s not
opposed to the personal, because that would be another story! The open
space is not a rejection of anything. Like we said before, non-duality
is not against duality; it’s the open space in which every thought,
feeling and sensation is allowed to appear and disappear. It is the
ocean that does not reject any waves, because it is all the waves. So it’s not really personal or impersonal – it holds all these concepts as they come and go.
Yes exactly and if we’re not careful the ‘impersonal space’ state can become food for a new form of seeking! ‘One day I’m going to reach or become an impersonal state of pure consciousness.’ It’s another way of being special: ‘Everyone else is stuck in the personal but I’ve transcended it!’ It’s
the same seeking, the same game; it’s just taken on a more subtle form.
This open space is not something that the individual, the character,
the seeker can attain. It’s the same seeking mechanism as: ‘I have gone beyond the self.’ Only
a self would proclaim that! It’s like a wave claiming that it’s beyond
the ocean. The seeker is very sneaky! The seeker cannotreach this open space for the seeker appears in this open space.
Yes, and why can’t we just be the space in which all stories are
allowed to come and go? Why do we need to hold on to any one of these
stories? At the same time, we do not need to reject any story. Again, if
you’re not careful, non-duality just become a new war -a war against images: ‘I’m not that image!’ But the very moment you say you’re not something you’ve defined yourself! You’re defining yourself again, and again, and again when you say ‘I’m not that! I’m not that!’
You start to see the genius of this seeking mechanism. It’s absolutely,
infinitely ingenious!It wants to be something, anything: ‘Let me tell a story about myself, any story! I don’t care what it is!’
What is always open to be discovered is that what you are is not an
image. It’s not any image; not even the image that you’re beyond images!
Not even the image that ‘I am not an image’. You are not the things that come and go, but at the same time (and this is crucial) what you are is not separate from everything that comes and go. What you are, as the space in which everything comes and goes, isintimate
with all of those things, in the same way that the ocean is inseparable
from the waves. So, ultimately there are no separate waves. The ocean
is appearing as the waves. The ocean is the waves. Then you can’t even distinguish between the ocean and the waves.
In present experience, the waves of the ocean appear as thoughts,
sensations, images, feelings, sounds – everything in present experience
is simply a wave. What you are as the ocean is the waves as well! You
are not the thoughts, sensations, images, but at the same time, what you
are, as the open space in which all of these appear and disappear, is
totally intimate with all of this.
Yes,
awareness and all that appears in awareness are absolutely intimate!
The ocean cannot reject the waves, why would it? Awareness, wholeness,
oneness, or we could call it consciousness, takes form as
everything that appears. Consciousness is not some blank empty slate
behind everything. That’s how the mind interprets it. The mind
interprets these words asthings. Consciousness is not a thing – it is everything that appears. This is why you cannot talk about non-duality! You cannot talk about intimacy.
Rooted in that knowing that this is impossible to put into words, we
are still free to play with words. We know we cannot use words to
capture non-duality; we’re just using them as pointers. We are pointing
to something that ultimately cannot be understood by the mind, it cannot
be captured.
Every wave that appears contains the ocean. That which we are
pointing to is within every experience; whether you are in the office or
sitting on the meditation cushion, walking in a supermarket or
attending a non-duality lecture. Whether there is extreme pain, or
intense sadness, that is still the ocean. It is the ocean appearing as
pain, the ocean appearing as sadness. Oneness is not limited to a
particular experience. It expresses itself as all experience. So, the
invitation is to come back to present experience, and rediscover the
ocean, and that invitation is always there, in every experience, in this experience. This present experience is the ocean that you have always been seeking without realising it.
What is actually happening right now? What is appearing in this
present experience? I don’t mean the story of what’s happening to you, I
don’t mean what do you think is happening; I’m saying look at
what is actually happening now. Come back to the present thoughts,
sensations and feelings and rediscover who you really are in the midst
of these waves of experience. What you truly are must be there within
every experience, otherwise it can’t be who you really are. If it’s
something that comes and goes, it can’t be who you really are. Who you
really are, as the ocean, does not come and go.
Suffering is forgetting who you really are.
We suffer when we don’t see this completeness – this
intimacy – within the present experience. When we don’t see that every
wave that’s presently appearing is part of the ocean and therefore allowed
in the ocean, we start trying to escape this moment to attempt to reach
the next moment. We experience ourselves as not whole or somehow broken
so we attempt to move away from this moment. In truth, that
movement is not actually possible but we try anyway because that’s how
we are programmed. We try to move away from this moment to get to the
next moment, to tomorrow or next year or to ten years time. We start to
use time to achieve this. This is the origin of suffering. We try to
escape what’s happening now. We try to run away from aspects of our
present experience. We try to escape these thoughts, sensations and
feelings and get to a future place where things will be better. That’s
the movement of suffering.
Within suffering you’ll always find seeking. Seeking is the basic
mechanism behind all of our suffering. We label certain elements of
experience ‘bad’ or ‘negative’ or ‘dark’ or ‘dangerous’ or ‘unhealthy’
and that’s because of our conditioning. We have been conditioned to
label things as ‘fear’, ‘sadness’, ‘anger’, and do on, and to judge
these as negative, or not-okay, or bad, or sinful – basically as
expressions of incompleteness, as threats to completeness. Because we
don’t seethe completeness in these waves, because we can’t find
the ocean within these so-called ‘negative’ waves, we try to escape
them and that movement ‘away from’ creates the suffering. Then we create
stories and identities around this suffering: ‘Oh, I’m a victim of my suffering. I’m a victim of fear and pain! Why is this happening to me? How can I escape this experience?‘
Suffering is a great teacher. Maybe it’s the best teacher but we
often don’t see that, because we don’t realise what suffering really is.
Normally, we do all sorts of things to avoid, deny and numb our
suffering. We take medication, drink alcohol or try to distract
ourselves. Of course, there’s ultimately nothing with doing these things
either! But suffering is always an opportunity; it’s an invitation to
discover the completeness in what you are running away from. Which
aspects of your experience right now are not okay? Which waves
(thoughts, sensations, and feelings) of the ocean are being rejected
right now? Which waves are not being seen as part of the ocean?
Basically, what are you at war with? This is always the question that
suffering leads you to.
Within the experience of suffering you’ll always find seeking. You
can believe as much as you like that you’re not seeking, or that you are
free from the self, but whenever there’s suffering there’s seeking.
It’s the story of ‘me’ looking for something, escaping something; it’s
the story of incompleteness or of feeling that there’s something wrong
with you. So, the invitation – not a demand – is to take a look at what
you are at war with right now. What’s the story? What are the images you
are trying to hold up? What are you defending? What are you rejecting?
What are you running away from? Look a little deeper. Perhaps these
images of yourself are not who you really are. Maybe these stories don’t
define you.
We suffer when we try to hold up images of ourselves – ‘I’m strong,
I’m enlightened, I’m a success, I’m loving, I’m kind, I’m happy’ – which
conflict with life as it is. And in the end, all images conflict with
life as it is – no image can match this moment. This moment is the fire
that burns up all images. In this moment there could be pain, sadness,
fear –any image that says that what’s appearing shouldn’t be appearing,
that you should be happy, or free from pain, is a false image.
What I’d say is forget about trying
to become more present; that can just be another form of seeking. It’s a
beautiful idea, but it’s still the same seeking mechanism. ‘One day I’ll be present!’Ultimately, you cannot become more present; for you are
presence itself. Like the word ‘non-duality’, presence is just another
pointer to life as it is. It’s another pointer back to who you really
are. There is already presence and there is only presence. Everything is already appearing inpresence.
There is only this moment. The past and the future happen now; they appear in this presence, asthis
presence. There are memories about the past and thoughts about the
future appearing in this presence. It all happens now. Every sound is a
present sound; you’ve never heard a sound that wasn’t now. You’ve never
heard a sound in the past and you don’t hear a sound in the future!
You’ve never smelled anything that wasn’t smelled now. Ultimately,
you’ve never seen anything that isn’t seen now. It’s all present!
So, it’s not really about a separate entity becoming more present;
it’s about rediscovering presence here and now. Presence could just be
another word for consciousness, awareness or Being; pick your favourite
word! What you are is presence itself, so you cannot become ‘more’
present, just as the wave cannot become more or less ‘ocean’ than it
already is. And that’s always there to be discovered. Life is the
constant invitation to discover this in the midst of present experience.
Life is the constant invitation to discover who you really are in this moment. Who discovers this? Well, who asks that question!
One of the key themes in Non-Dual Psychology is to do nothing more than is necessary in order to rest in our true nature. First, we are introduced to the unconditioned dimension of our being through having it pointed out to us. Then we just rest confidently at the end of the path, deepening and stabilizing this awareness. One could call it a minimalist approach to awakening unconditioned awareness – a kind of ‘Occam's razor’ for spiritual realization.
This theme resonates beautifully with Padmasambhava’s ‘simple, quintessential disposition’ that I shared with you in a contemplation last July:
"There are all kinds of instructions on posture, but just sit relaxed and at ease – that’s the main point. There are many precepts concerning speech and energy, like binding the breath and reciting mantras, but just stay silent like a mute – that’s the main thing. There are many key points of mind to follow, like fixating the mind, relaxing, radiating and absorbing light, concentrating, and many more, but just stay free and easy without trying to change anything, just resting naturally – that’s the main thing.
Let the body rest like a corpse, without movement; keep silent like a mute; leave the mind alone without changing anything. Leave pure presence alone, unmodified, just as it is. Relax, at ease, and hang loosely in the natural state. That is the best disposition of body, speech, and mind. There is simply no better method than that…."The Great Secret of Mind, (p. 165-6.)
♡
Taking this minimalist approach allows us to cut through the clutter of terms, concepts, and practices that make up so much of our usual spiritual endeavor. Our invitation is to let go of all of that and see what is always here – so close that we overlook it, so simple that we won’t believe it’s true, so effortless that we choose instead to make lifetimes of needless work for ourselves.
In this moment, we can let all of that naturally self-release, doing nothing more than is necessary to find ourselves where we have always, timelessly, been; and seeing that all our thoughts and feelings about our spiritual journey are nothing more than the creative display of the nature of our own mind
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To allow everything is unconditional although what is obvious is not to cause any suffering to beings and allow them to explore their natural way of being. We do not need to contribute to the suffering but can help to reduce suffering by increasing our own happiness and do service to the universe in any way we can.
To me the combination of both approaches, letting things be as they are effortlessly or focusing the mind with effort, are not mutually excluding one another but in combination lead to unconditioned awareness and Supreme Bliss - they are in eternal embrace, the paradox of effort and effortlessness. When I try to hard to fixate.... the concept of "I" comes in the way of being free. It does not work. When that happens I allow to be in what is -the breath, the flowing thoughts - they are nothing - as they pass by - the sky opens into infinity. Just allow your mind to be free and pure awareness, Parama Purusha, Supreme Consciousness takes over.
Peace to all Beings and this apparently ever more crazy world. Nobody should undergo any suffering artificially and unnecessarily. Love to all Beings everywhere.
What is it what inspires the present moment? What is it what we share after the light of the sun and the moon and the stars are gone? What will it be that we share forever and all times? What unites past, present, and future? Is it not the ever so beautiful present moment beyond words. One can't even say it's beautiful or love but for convenience sake, let's say we share love.... forever and all times in that which is right NOW.
1. I am a clearing, an infinite zero point... through which the universe moves in all its complexity. 2. There is no center to my existence... just infinite space... that is inseparable from manifestation. 3. There is no seer or perceiver. When I see, I look out from nothing. 4. I am nowhere. There are just forms and appearances. 5. The universe moves in me and through me as I move through it. 6. There is no boundary between me and the World. There is no inside and outside, no place where I stop and others begin. 7. Other people are manifestations in the field of awareness in essence no different from my own body. 8. When people talk to me, it is really no different than talking to myself in a different voice. 9. When people display strong emotions, I can feel these happening in the body of my universe. 10. When I am in a group of people my mind expands and more is happening. ~By Peter
what nobody wants to see and is brushed under the rug
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भोपाल
भोपाल गैस त्रासदी पचीस साल के बाद आया चुकादा और पन्द्रह हजार का मर्डर
करने वाले और इतने ही लोगो को कायमी अंधापन और हेंडीकेप बनाने वाले लोगो को
केवल दो साल का सजा हूवा और क्यों के कंपनी का मालिक अमेरिकन है.और यहाँ
गरीबी बेरोजगारी कुपोषण से त्राहित होकर कोई गरीब गुनाह करता है तो फासी और
उम्रकेद की भी सजाये सुनाई जाती है.