HI, Cliff,
Tough stuff indeed. It appears that the mind is putting up resistance to 'getting it' completely.
Uh-huh. What is the mind in direct experience? Does it exist?
I get that thought is automatic, that there is no control, and that it is endless. I see all of that.
Ok. What is it that sees all of that?
My question is - if I see all of that, then why don't I feel different? Why hasn't my experience of the world changed?
This is for you to answer. These are expectations - and what are expectations in Direct Experience?
Cliff, here is an exercise which examines the way in which the mind labels experience - it takes about 20 minutes and you will need a pen a paper.
This exercise is broken into 10 minute lots. For each 10 minute period pay attention to any bodily sensation ie is there any tightening, or any relaxing?
For the first ten minutes write down what you are experiencing right now using the word “I”.
For example: I am sitting on a chair, I am hearing a clock ticking, I am looking at a computer screen, I am feeling hungry. Get right to the point, no past or future fantasy, just a plain description of your experience right here and now.
Then for the next ten minutes continue writing down what you are experiencing but this time without using the word “I”. Just describe the experience as it is happening using verbs. For example: sitting on a chair, typing, breathing, blinking, hearing the clock. (Again, watch what is happening in the body.)
At the end of the twenty minutes compare the two ways in which the experience was labelled and answer the following four questions:
1. Is one truer than the other, and If so, which one?
2. What is here without labels?
3. Do labels affect the experience or just describe it?
4. Did you notice any differences in the body?
Let me know what, if anything, opens up from this exercise, Cliff.
And if it doesn't change my experience of life, what's the point?
I have compassion for the frustration.
Expecting a big difference can obscure a subtle shift.
The liberation is simply in living in reality rather than an illusion. Seeing through the illusion doesn't mean that the experience of life will be different.
Seeing through it is seeing through it. Having thoughts (which are automatic anyway) to the contrary doesn't negate having seen through it.
Much love,
Robyn