Look and get back to me.So I guess I don't know.
It's a tough one . . .
Joseph ♥︎
Look and get back to me.So I guess I don't know.
It's a tough one . . .
Look at knowing. Knowing is now....knowning...
Meanwhile, I can't help noticing that "now" is found within "knowing." But "no" is found within "now." Yet "O" is found within "no."Knowing is now.
Knowing can never be grasped. Knowing knows no object. It is all an illusion. There is nothing to Know. If it is known, it is not real, Only a concept is real and concepts do not exist in Direct Experience. Experience does not exist in Direct Experience. There is nobody home to have an experience.Knowing happens with the very appearance of objects.
Should say -If it is known, it is not real, Only a concept is real and concepts do not exist in Direct Experience.
This really puzzled me at first. Now it seems that "attention" and the naming of things (or at least the "concepting of things") are more or less synonymous. They happen together. Which is to say, attention IS thought interfering with direct experience. Just why attention lands where it does has to do with whatever other objects are pulling at it, or came before it. But I don't think that is what you were getting at.How would attention find a place to land?
I can't quite answer this clearly. It's much easier to answer what I'm not. I might guess that I'm that ungraspable knowing to which all these objects appear. It's ungraspable (what a relief to see you use that word with knowing) and so I don't expect to grasp it. Where am I? Either exactly where everyhing is not, which is nowhere, or exactly where everything is. Don't mean to sound enigmatic . . . these just seem to be the only options left.So what are you? Where are you?
One thought does not know another, as a thought can't know anything. Yet it still puzzles me as to how a syllogism works, but I believe that is beside the point here. I cannot show you anything, certainly not any one thing, that is not a thought. The only thing I can think of is "the perceived everything" but this too is a kind of objectification through thought.Does one thought know another thought? Can you show me any thing that is not a thought?
To this I can only say I have no idea. Certainly there is no begining or end known or perceieved RIGHT NOW.Where do you begin and end?
Attention is just like a thought. we never know where it is going to go next until attention is happening. However,if you remember back when we looked at attention and perception, attention always came after something had already entered our perception. There is much more going on than where our attention is focused. Every bit of every fuzzy(to use your term) thing within the realm of perception, is already present as part of this seamless whole within the present moment of perception. Only then can attention land or go to it. But fundamentally none of this can be grasped, held on to, just like any other thought. The present moment is always ungraspable and for any thing to be known as an object requires a thought labeling a form that has been separated out of the seamless whole of our experience. Once the thought or label occurs it is gone, and requires another thought to come in and claim it as my thought. But this is still only a thought, even if it is a *special* thought we call memory. This is why no matter what we remember, the whole thing is a dream story. None of it has an existence of its own. Fundamentally nothing has ever happened.Just why attention lands where it does has to do with whatever other objects are pulling at it, or came before it. But I don't think that is what you were getting at.
Yes. I have no idea what I am. If I am anything, I am the whole of this entire seamless moment, the very knowing of this now. Perception knowing itself and only itself. No lines, no separation. So to recap, if it is known, it changes, and is unreal. The only real unchangeable quotient in the mix, is the knowing itself. Knowing includes knowing and not knowing. Meaning there are present moments when we know what we don't know. Like what is going on in the other room, we don't know until we arrive there.I can't quite answer this clearly. It's much easier to answer what I'm not. I might guess that I'm that ungraspable knowing to which all these objects appear. It's ungraspable...
Yes. One thought does not know another thought. However, this, whatever this is knows itself endlessly, eternally. And a syllogism works for this reason alone.One thought does not know another, as a thought can't know anything. Yet it still puzzles me as to how a syllogism works, but I believe that is beside the point here. I cannot show you anything, certainly not any one thing, that is not a thought. The only thing I can think of is "the perceived everything" but this too is a kind of objectification through thought.
Exactly.To this I can only say I have no idea. Certainly there is no begining or end known or perceieved RIGHT NOW.
Is there such thing as a separate discrete self? Has there ever been?
Definitley not. There has never been such a thing a separate anything. All separation is a tool of thought. Even "tool" is too much. It's just what thought does.Is there such thing as a separate discrete self? Has there ever been?
This is totally clear.Only then can attention land or go to it. But fundamentally none of this can be grasped, held on to, just like any other thought. The present moment is always ungraspable and for any thing to be known as an object requires a thought labeling a form that has been separated out of the seamless whole of our experience. Once the thought or label occurs it is gone, and requires another thought to come in and claim it as my thought.
Isn't it safer to say that we could never know if anything has happened? Thoughts separating things, memories short or long term filing away false separations, bringing them forward as further separations of separations. Even this, though, is then a separation, an attempt at understanding with thoughts and separations which are also false and unknowable.Fundamentally nothing has ever happened
Great to hear you put it that way . . . the essential seems unknowable.I have no idea what I am. If I am anything, I am the whole of this entire seamless moment, the very knowing of this now
Totally understood. But it's also not amazing, because it's just what's happening. But both amazing and not-amazing are just thoughts . . .Every single though creates a separation that we cannot actually experience, except through another thought. When we look though it is clear that a thought experiences nothing. What is this?! I don't know. How amazing.
Yes and no. The word fundamental could be absolute. In in direct experience, the whole thing is ungraspablly known. It is only when we stick to the labels that this and that become codified into an artifact that does not actually have any existence of its own. We create beliefs and ideologies, religions, wars, this way. For the most part, the war is within ourself, created under a false pretense of knowing solidified by belief that that which is known, and already passed, is more real than this ungraspable reality that is free of all strife.But . . .Isn't it safer to say that we could never know if anything has happened? Thoughts separating things, memories short or long term filing away false separations, bringing them forward as further separations of separations. Even this, though, is then a separation, an attempt at understanding with thoughts and separations which are also false and unknowable.Fundamentally nothing has ever happened
Yep.Totally understood. But it's also not amazing, because it's just what's happening. But both amazing and not-amazing are just thoughts . . .
The best words I can come up with is "ungraspable knowing." This must be what others mean by "being" and "amness." Maybe it's awareness as perception instead of awareness of perception. All these words and phrases make it seem abstract, and a step a way from the simple experiencing of stuff in this moment.When the “I” has been seen through, fully and completely, what's left?
Is there a knower of this "ungraspable knowing?"The best words I can come up with is "ungraspable knowing." This must be what others mean by "being" and "amness."
Users browsing this forum: Bing [Bot], Google [Bot] and 219 guests