Hi Dee,
... I understand - I meant that I experienced visual sensations. No, it doesn't have any understanding.
Mug on table - eyes shut - the mind asks if the mug is on the table but when the question stops, there is no way of knowing.
That’s well observed: mind has no way of knowing.
Whatever answer it provides is speculation, isn’t it.
The question can't be answered without vision. There is no way to experience mug on table.
Not only CAN the question be answered, but it HAS been answered:
With eyes shut “there is no way to experience mug on table.”
And that is what the exercise is designed to show: the difference between the speculating mind, offering all sorts of contradictory stories (maybe there’s a mug, maybe there isn’t) and experience, providing a simple, clear and consistent response (can’t be experienced.)
However- I've been looking all day! The mind labels so quickly! I still see that things are in front of other things. I see perspective. Mug on table. I see light, dark, colour (and then those labels come in quickly) perspective.
That’s also well observed: mind labels very quickly.
Apparently it seems the speed and variety of this labelling is what has made us humans such an evolutionary success.
There is no demand here to stop the labelling. Labelling just needs to be paused long enough to allow experience to be observed, directly.
One way is to systematically question what is ‘seen’, ‘heard’, ‘smelled’, etc. Challenge the observation mercilessly in this way: is this what is experienced, or is this a label?
For example:
Is ‘perspective’ really experienced? What is perspective? A concept. A physics concept involving objects and the notion of distance.
Looking again: is distance really seen, or is it assumed?
Are objects really seen, or are they assumed?
I tried looking around quickly while driving.
Please exercise caution Dee, looking in direct experience is an exercise in sustained focus, perhaps not very safe when driving.
I saw light, dark, colour in the distance - I knew they were "in the distance". There's something I'm not getting. There seems to be a fine line between seeing light, colour, dark (the sensations) and labelling.
As mentioned above: challenge the assertion.
”
I knew they were ‘in the distance.’”
And how was this ‘known’?
Did experience reveal this, or was it mind asserting a concept?
The experience here is that this ‘
fine line’ depends more on the readiness to challenge a status quo, than on any special ability.
No new exercise Dee. Use the previous ones (mug, music, etc), practice this challenging, and see where it leads.
All the best
Dridhamati