Four varied short videos one for the idea that reality is as commonly thought a physical manifestation with Larry King and Neil deGrasse Tyson. Another all about the pineal gland, then the knowledge that what we strive for we already have. The last one about the danger of philosophy if you only see the emptiness without knowing wholeness.
The Simplicity of What Is - Seeking the extraordinary, it is easy to overlook the simple and obvious truth. You are here. You know it beyond any doubt. You don't need a mirror or an outside authority to tell you. It is undeniable.
But
are you the character in the story of your life, seemingly
encapsulated in the bodymind, apparently solid and independent and
autonomous and separate from everything else? Or is that character a
mental image -- a bunch of thoughts, sensations, memories, narratives
and beliefs? Is this sense of separation and encapsulation real, or
is it a kind of mirage? Can you actually find the place where
"inside" ends and "outside" begins? If all the
imagined boundaries are seen to be unreal, what remains? What is it
that is doubtlessly here?
The
mind imagines that "you" can step back and take a look, as
if subject and object are two separate things. Is it true?
The
mind divides and reifies, creating (in imagination) "the seer,"
"the seeing," and "the seen" -- three apparently
separate things. The actuality is undivided, no-thing at all. In this
ubiquitous (and thus unseen) labeling activity, thoughts and images
get overlaid on top of actual experiencing, and we learn to trust
words and images, not actuality.
Words
weave stories. They create mental movies that seem entirely
believable and real. In this movie-world of thoughts and stories, it
appears that "I" am inside this skin, and everything else
is "out there." It appears that "I" am
incomplete, forever in need of improvement or modification. "I"
seek happiness and enlightenment in the future, chase after bigger
and better experiences, compare "myself" to "others,"
and idolize those imagined to possess something special that "I"
lack.
But
is there actually a central agent at the helm doing all of this? Or
do "your" thoughts and actions appear out of nowhere, just
as the brain, the breath, the wind, the clouds, the trees, and the
galaxies appear out of nowhere? How solid is "the skin"
that seems to divide self from not-self?
Investigate
this directly. Return attention to actuality. See for yourself. Can
you actually find the doer, the thinker, the experiencer, the
operator, the director, the one who is supposedly in charge here, or
the one who appears to be trapped, the one who supposedly needs to
awaken? You can find a mental image maybe, but is there anything of
substance there? And for that matter, can you actually find some
nebulous thing called "awareness" or
"consciousness" or "the witness"? Or is there
actually no-thing at all? Not some dead void. But this.
Everything, just as it is.
Looking
closely, isn't every apparent thing made up of
vibrations, perceptions, sensations, memories, stories, ideas,
beliefs, layers of mental-movies -- and finally, empty space? Where
is it all happening (or appearing)? Out there? In here? Is the pain
in my finger occurring in my finger or in my brain? And who is this
"me" who seems to own both the finger and the brain?
And
where does the brain come from? What produces the brain? There is
obviously an intelligence that antedates the brain, the same
intelligence that holds the galaxies together and creates the trees
and the birds and the amazing web of ecological relationships from
the subatomic to the intergalactic. This intelligence, this
beingness, this aliveness is expressing itself as every form. Without
the brain, our life would not appear, just as the TV show would not
appear without the television set. But life itself, intelligence
itself antedates the brain.
The
brain is an object that appears in awareness. Which comes first, the
chicken or the egg? Once again, words divide what is actually
indivisible, creating apparent conundrums out of thin air.
Your
experience appears to be happening independently
from my experience; it seems like another world, as
different as toe and finger. Yet is it possible that both are
occurring in the same field of intelligence, the same One?
The
words are just words. The forms appear and disappear. It seems that
"you" have a problem: the rent is due, your car needs a
tune-up, you can't stop smoking, you want to get enlightened, you
need to find a new guru, you need to be more awake, you need to
relax, or pay attention, or let go, or get a grip. But see that these
are all thoughts, and that the root-thought is the "you"
who apparently "has" all of these problems. Yes, the rent
may be due, and you'll either get the money and pay it, or you won't.
You'll either stop smoking or you won't. And actually, "you"
won't be doing any of this, or at least, not "you" as
thought imagines you: the character in the story of your life, the
separate person. You as the totality, the One Being, are doing (or
appearing as) all of it. And actually, no-thing is happening. Where
is last night? Or yesterday morning? Or a minute ago?
There
is only one moment. Here. Now. This. This one eternal, timeless
moment accepts everything, just as it is, even the resistance and the
upset and the apparent non-acceptance. This one moment is all there
is. This one moment is unconditional love. This one moment is
inescapable, for there is no one to escape, and no-thing to escape
from.
The
mind pretends to go away and imagines that this separation is
possible. It loves to dream, make movies, amuse itself, invent
problems and try to solve them: "Yes, but..What if.?" It
asks. It craves the false security of belief systems, answers,
methods and techniques. But true freedom is right here in the
absolute simplicity of what is.
The
movements of mind are like weather. No one owns the weather. It's not
something to be conquered or eliminated. Simply see it for what it
is: a great show, an appearance -- momentary and ephemeral, a mirage
world.
Everything
perceivable and conceivable is a kind of movie, like waves on the
surface of the ocean. Look deeper and you discover that no-thing is
happening. There is nobody to wake up. The problems are imaginary.
What solution is needed to an imaginary problem?
Seeing
this, there is joy and delight in the whole display, and in the most
seemingly ordinary things: a bird cheeping, a computer humming, a
thunderstorm, a clear day, a hamburger making its way to the mouth.
This, right here, just as it is, is the holy reality, the face of
God, the absolute truth. And the good news: it's not only
unattainable; it's inescapable.
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