Guest guest Posted January 29, 1999 Report Share Posted January 29, 1999 Ed Arrons [eea] Friday, January 29, 1999 2:17 PM NondualitySalon [NondualitySalon] Meditative Dialog: I AM-Not this "Ed Arrons" <eea Wondering where my thoughts fit into this discussion, and whether I need to screw my head on a little tighter. :-) Is it even possible to put this totality into words? Mine seem woefully inadequate. Anyway, I see I AM' and 'Not This' as polar opposites in a range of consciousness from spiritual to material; the range embraces the yin/yang, magnetic polarity of Supreme Awareness and material consciousness. The distinction between awareness and sensory perception seems to clarify the function of both modalities in resolving their duality. I AM is the manifest Allness indwelling Supreme Awareness, G-d consciousness. 'Not This' corresponds to sensory perception and perceptual memory. 'Not This' refers to things which exist in separation and is offered in the sensory mode, ineveryday consciousness as one encounters and dis-identifies with things. Offering 'Not This' seems to perpetuate and reinforce sensory consciousness. In The meditative state one may transcend the perceptual mode and experience/affirm the I AM and Supreme Awareness. There seems to be no point in offering 'Not This' when in unitive awareness. Harsha: I like very much how you expressed it all. The whole process is very eloquently described. In the Absolute Unitive Awareness, there is no one at all to offer or say "Not This." Ed: With the return of everyday and survival consciousness one tends to accommodate separateness. In Meditative Dialog one brings the 'separate' into a unitive flow of interacting resonances. It is the "middle road" where things are in resonance with each other and the All, where the line between spirit and matter, duality and nonduality, time and timelessness is bridged by a meditative awarenes, incorporating both the I AM and 'thingness'. Feedback eagerly sought. Ed, Fondly Harsha: What you say makes sense Ed; especially if it feels right and comfortable for you. It is nice to find a method and/or a path that is yours; that you own in a sense because you took it all the way to the end. Any path you travel, if you want to know where it goes, you should take it to the end. Take it to the very end and then you will own it. You will totally own it. If you own something, it is easy to give it up. If you give up what you own, You are left Alone. In that being Alone is All Oneness which is Pure, Unstained, and Completely at Rest in Its Own Nature. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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