Guest guest Posted February 12, 2000 Report Share Posted February 12, 2000 At 07:01 PM 2/12/00 -0500, you wrote: > " Laura Olshansky " <editor > >> D: O.K. Perhaps it could be looked at this way: In this moment, >> without comparison, how can any judgment be made of >> whether or not it is more or less aware? > >L: >I don't think it's possible. To make judgments, comparisons, >you have to rev up the mind, root around in memory... in a sense, >you have to leave the moment. D: O.K. So presentness is without comparison, with no judgment of " more or less aware " ? We agree? This seems to me to lead to this: ideas about being more aware one time and less aware another time are fragmenting concepts as are ideas about one person or one experience expressing greater awareness vs. another person or experience fragment experience. " Enlightenment " then is " experience-whole, " non-comparison, nonjudgment -- a person who seems to be aware in this way is termed " enlightened " , but such terminology then brings back comparison - thus the term enlightenment is thought-based and comparison-oriented and can be dropped when it's seen to add nothing to " presentness " ... no spokesperson is really particularly helpful, because inevitably the pointer becomes confused with that to which the pointer points, the symbol is mistaken for the reality. >I >> In this moment, what is the need to continue it or make it habitual? > >If my attention is on this moment, then there's no need for anything. But >my attention wanders forward and backward to the present and past ... >gets lost in hopes, fears, plans, memories... the need is to stop that. D: Trying to stop that itself is the mental activity of comparison. Therefore, trying to stop that is futile. Resting here, simply being aware. Attention is present. Contents seem to move back and forth, but attention is always here. There is nothing to stop, just a shift in identification from content to awareness as is. > >> Where is the one situated who wishes to continue >> it or make it a habit, or is that one itself merely a >> habitual response pattern? > >I would say that one is a bunch of mental activity. I don't understand the >idea of it being situated anywhere. D: Yes, so if it's not situated anywhere, we can't really say it exists? Then, the idea of wishing to continue something or make something a habit begins to unravel... the one who wishes isn't there... the desire to continue or make something happen a certain way becomes, as clarity increases, seen to be a nonentity trying to control something that it has no position to control :-) >> > L: If you're asking literally how I know when this condition >>> [awareness] occurs, I don't >> > know, just like I don't know how I know when I'm hot or cold or hungry. >> > I think this is a question for neuroscientists. >> >> D: No, it's a question for you and me. It's urgent and essential. >> It clears away debris. I know awareness through awareness. >> There's no other way, no neuroscience needed or helpful. >> Awareness knowing itself is an explosion of the Unknown, >> sometimes a quiet and gentle explosion, othertimes boom! > >I feel like you've said something very important here, yet, I don't know what >to do with it. D: Oh. Well, maybe do nothing. What is there to do with it? I have no idea of anything to do with it. It's just what it is, the Unknown. Trying to do anything with it is simply the activity of thought, of the known realm. > >I'm sitting here being aware of being aware. Trying to stare at it hard >to see what you mean. It can't be stared at, the only possible starer >for it is *it*. It's just it. I don't know how to apply " how " to it. >Or " who, " for that matter. Or " I " . lol. > >> D: When exactly does a thought come into being >> and when does it leave? .... >> >> For me, it's this way: there's no way to tell when a thought begins >> or ends. Such determinations are arbitrary. There is no thinker >> apart from thinking to make such a determination. This is not, >> for me, about measuring electrical activity in the brain. It's >> a question of the nature of self-identity, the self-organization >> of thought, and the spaciousness from which thought arises, has >> apparent form, and apparent dissolution. > >Well, sometimes, surely, we know when a thought begins. > >If a fire alarm rings and you think, " My God, the building's on fire, " you can >pretty well pinpoint the moment of origin. D: It only seems that way. Because there needs to be previous thought, such as what a bell is, what a fire is, what a body is, what a fire is, etc. >More generally, I don't understand what point you are making >by refraining from calling the arising from spaciousness a " beginning " >and the apparent " dissolution " an " end. " That's all I'm doing. It's just >a way of choosing to use words. They have no intrinsic meaning, >definitions are arbitrary. D: If definitions are arbitrary, then releasing our " mind " from definition might be very helpful. Then, reality beyond definition is clear, and using definitions is done within a context for the sake of a specific communication. By bringing careful attention to the nonbeginning of apparent beginning, one begins to see that the beginningless is itself all that ever is. No appearance ever interferes with or detracts from the beginningless, the pure Unknown that is all there is... which some call God, but that word carries so much " baggage " . >If you define them this way you can say something about the phenomenology >of thinking which is, perhaps, useful. D: Perhaps. I agree that might be helpful in some situations. >> D: What is the nature of a thought. How is a thought >> different from no-thought? I would say that when one is aware of >> no-thought, that this awareness involves thought. > >I would say I agree, except, you are really defining the word " thought " here, and >how can I agree or disagree with a definition? Definitions are arbitrary. > >But i certainly agree that when we recognize that we're not thinking, we're doing >something with our minds, and that in a more complete state of mental >inactivity, such a recognition doesn't (can't) happen. > >> >I am skeptical that anybody, even somebody in Ramana Maharshi's state, >> >has conscious access to all levels of mental functioning. So I suspect it's >> >impossible for anybody to know when " thoughts " stop and start, if we define >> > " thought " broadly. Some " thoughts " probably chug along in subterranean >> >stop-and-go fashion for weeks or months or lifetimes -- I don't know. >> >> D: Yes. Thought is anchored in other thought. The cells of the body >> are thought, their communications with each other thought-forms. >> Our definitions of biochemical processes doesn't change this fact, >> as such definitions are themselves thought. The only way to know >> the nature of thought is to know what is beyond thought, which is >> to be Unknown Knowingness itself. > >Perhaps I've never been beyond thought. There are times when I seem >not to be thinking, but in those moments, I seem to know nothing. It's a little >bit like when you can't think of a word, but you know you know it... except it >applies not just to a word, but to something more general. D: For me, that which is Beyond thought is from where each apparent thought, each moment of experience-perception arises, and in which it dissolves. So that Beyond is here, now, simply unrecognized. Unrecognized by " us " it goes about its business of manifesting us, in no way diminished by our ignorance :-) > >> D: Ah, but Laura - my point here is that whatever the reality to >> enlightenment is, it will never be in any thoughts about the nature >> of enlightenment or what it is like to be enlightened. We need to >> be careful, because we tend to take our manufactured descriptions >> as far more real than is the case. > >I agree completely. > >> L. 1. Such concepts help them find a teacher. >> >> D: Ah, but perhaps such a teacher will delude them further. Perhaps >> their true teacher will then be unrecognized, as that teacher might have >> nothing to do with supporting their concepts. Perhaps they won't >> find their true teacher, it will be their true teacher >> who finds them. > >Perhaps. And perhaps if I fly to Mexico for a vacation, the airplane will crash. >Should I cancel the trip? D: It's not like going to Mexico - it's finding the true teacher. The teacher who is calling you, who is always right here. >> >L. 2. Such concepts help motivate them to find that state. >> >> D: Perhaps such a motivated search for a thought-to-exist >> state is itself a form of delusion. > >If it's a delusion, it seems to be a delusion in a subtle or paradoxical >sense. I find it hard to believe that Ramana, for example, wasn't in a different >state from mine in some meaningful sense. D: That's because you think there's a Ramana entity and a Laura entity and they inhabit things called states. Take away these arbitrary definitions, and what do you have? At the same time, I know what you mean, and there is a valid point you are making. I think that both points are true simultaneously, as sameness/differentness arise simultaneously from Source. >> >3. Such concepts help prevent them from deluding themselves. >> >> D: Perhaps belief in such concepts is itself delusion. > >Perhaps, but so many people have described awakening, I don't >think the idea is purely a delusion. Buddha talks about paths, >boats, crossing rivers ... is he lying to us? D: The question is this: did whatever " awakening " that was indicated by Gautama have anything whatsoever to do with a preconceived idea of enlightenment? From here, the answer to that would be " no " . Love, Dan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 13, 2000 Report Share Posted February 13, 2000 At 12:42 PM 2/13/00 -0500, you wrote: > " Laura Olshansky " <editor > >Dear Dan, > >> Attention is present. >> Contents seem to move back and forth, >> but attention is always here. >> There is nothing to stop, >> just a shift in identification >> from content to awareness as is. > >I wish that shift would happen for me! > >Love, > >Laura D: I see it this way: The wish for the shift is the mind believing there is something to be gained for itself. Pursuing a wish is pursuing something that is a projection of mind. Thus, mind stays as is, status quo. The actual work involved in the shift is occuring now, as we speak. Each apparent mind (there aren't two, ultimately) Works at its own pace, given what it can handle (it is handling its own projections, essentially). Thus, this shift is occurring now. Openness to its occurrence, facilitates. Chasing after it, hinders. Love, Dan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 14, 2000 Report Share Posted February 14, 2000 At 04:20 PM 2/13/00 -0500, you wrote: > " Laura Olshansky " <editor > >Dear Dan, > >> D: Attention is present. >> Contents seem to move back and forth, >> but attention is always here. >> There is nothing to stop, >> just a shift in identification >> from content to awareness as is. >> >> L: I wish that shift would happen for me! >> >> D: I see it this way: >> The wish for the shift is >> the mind believing there is >> something to be gained for itself. >> Pursuing a wish is pursuing >> something that is a projection of mind. >> Thus, mind stays as is, status quo. >> The actual work involved in the >> shift is occuring now, as we speak. >> Each apparent mind (there aren't two, >> ultimately) >> Works at its own pace, given what it >> can handle (it is handling its >> own projections, essentially). >> Thus, this shift is occurring now. >> Openness to its occurrence, facilitates. >> Chasing after it, hinders. > >There's so much wisdom here. I hope you're right >about the shift occurring now. > >Now I'm sitting here trying to imagine everything the >same as it is, except with the part of me that tries to do >things gone. > >lol, I just can't give up. > >My mind just will not believe that this is one party it cannot >ever get to go to. > >Love > >Laura Laura - thank you for sharing these lovely words and your humor with me. There is nothing to let go. The apparent self never truly appears. Simply resting in who I am now, is enough. As there is nothing there to give up, surrender is simply the spontaneous movement of being, the " inner awareness " flowing always into itself, from itself... All this, is That... One can describe how It is... But no desription is It, Itself... First-hand awareness is the only Way ... And first-hand means first-hand... Nothing more to it... yet the " work " is Infinite! :-) Love, Dan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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