Hi
There is a natural tendency to narrate through the first person point of view using the language of I/me/my. This is a conditioned habit deeply ingrained in us. But once I dropped the "I" the narrating experience was pretty fluid, just focusing on the sense experience. Seeing trees. Feeling the heat of the sun. Legs moving, feet hitting the pavement, creating pressure.
yes, using "I" is a habit. What is here does not need concepts to be.
Awareness is the existence of knowing. For example, bare feet are touching the floor. The floor is cool. The sensation of coolness is known through direct experience. Awareness exists.
Awareness = being aware = knowing. There is this knowing. It is here now, here now, never yesterday or tomorrow. Do yesterday and tomorrow exist outside of thoughts ?
There is seeing and there is labeling of all what is seen. That's OK. The labels serve to design objects and to communicate. The label is not real. If a chair is labeled "table", it won't change anything. We use the word "awareness" to point to this nothingness, this emptiness full of presence. When this is seen, this is it. All other stuff is about thoughts, stories about me, you, others, the world, etc ...
While I can clearly see that awareness cannot be uncoupled from sensory experience, I also cannot seem to uncouple awareness from a sense of self. It's really frustrating.
How can you say that ? During deep sleep, is awareness coupled with sensory experience ?
A sense of self arises only when you are awake or when you dream. Is there awareness or awarenesses ? Is there one knowing principle or a lot of personal knowing principles ?
In direct experience, the eyes see the words. The words are known. There is a knowing of what the language means. That knowing feels like a self.
Would you please, describe what you mean by "knowing" and by "self".
I see that it's a thought, but it's a thought describing an experience.
Yes, some thoughts describe experience, others point to objects, others point to other thoughts and some thoughts point to nothing.
No, the verb is not separate from the subject. As described above, though, I'm stuck on the fact of the verb and the subject being known. The man is running. Something seems to know this.
Yes, there is knowing of a running man. Is the running man separate from the knowing of it ? Only the use of language seems to separate the knowing from the known. Language cannot express the experience as it is. There is always one word at a time. Example : there is an apple on the table. Real experience is raw and unique and whole. You cannot describe the whole experience at once. We use some words for colors, other words for smell and taste, texture, etc ... An experience lasting an eye blink will be described in words during five minutes. Are you clear about the difference of "what is" and its description or thoughts about it ?
Thanks for your patience and continued help
You are welcome, Warissem