Thanks for the encouragement!it is just a matter of time for thought to reorganise – just keep on noticing what is actually here. Even that happens on its own effortlessly :)
No to both questions. (I didn't explain it well, but with the example I wanted to indicate that even the same sensations - as they are quite vague and not clearly delineated in my experience - could get a very different label.)Can there really be a sensation “connected with wanting”? Sensations are just that – feeling (a want to say sensing but unfortunately English is weird). Can sensations know anything about anything? That is only the field of thoughts ;)
I realize I've been doing that. Probably because - from the habitual thinking mode's perspective - it takes some effort to take off the mental blinders temporarily, I label this as a special mode instead of simply reality.You keep saying “in DE”, is DE a special mode of seeing or is it where we look at what is actually here?
Maybe I should turn the tables and - just in this post - start using TM whenever I'm not talking about reality but about the habitual thinking mode's perspective.
No.As you are not the thinker, can you will that thinking happens in a certain way?
I notice that - superficially - there are two perspectives: DE and TM.
However, TM can only be a part of DE!
I appear to be looking for and returning to DE, but even when deep into mental constructs, I can never be out of it as they still have to appear in experience. It's just that I'm only suing a small portion of the available reality bandwidth then.
Thought differentiates between things, animals and people.How are objects different from ‘others’? Why were objects easier? What about animals?
Without thought they're all sense impressions. No difference, really.
Objects are easier because - in TM - people are covered with a lot more thought-baggage.
Alone in nature, I might burst out in song or do one of Monty Python's silly walks. When people are noticed in the distance, I start walking "normally". Animals, trees, buildings don't have that effect. When other humans are noticed I immediately "know" myself as part of a human community with its norms to make life run smoothly.
There is no person in actual experience: it's obviously a label, a thought composite, like the screen icons you referred to. Seeing, colour and shapes, thoughts and then possibly other sense impressions and related thoughts.However, is a ‘person' actually known? (Or is it just a label?) Is there really an ‘person’ here, or only colour and a thought ABOUT ‘person’? Can ‘a person’ be found in actual experience?
It's easy to see and observe from behind my desk as I'm typing this. In the heat of experience, TM takes the lead. (I'm encouraged that you said it's a matter of time before the not-I "virus" gets to this eventually.)
There is one total impression in which I and the other are carved out as positions to which a story is added in TM. So others are not outside of sensing.When you touch 'another', are there two sensations one of 'you' and one of 'other' or just one/just sensing? Are others outside of sensing? Where is the border that marks where sensing ends and "other" begin?
Touching a piece of trash and touching another human being is still just touching - pressure on the body surface - and it's the story behind it (from TM) that makes all the difference. I probably touch a hundred things every day; with humans thought spins a lot of extra stories.
So in experience no border can be discerned. (Similar to the exercise of sitting on a chair you gave earlier this month.)
Without thought, there is no difference between here and there; space (like time) is a thought category imposed on what we see.Also, is there space where these others exist? What is the difference between “here” and “there” without thought content?
(The irony is, as I'm writing this with full conviction, I see a heron flying by outside and I realize that even though I know, and I talk the talk, I still don't walk the walk. At least it only took me two seconds to realize that.)
Others are not outside of seeing either. Enemy, stranger and friend are all colour and shape, but they come with very different thought content.Are others somehow outside of seeing? What is the difference between seeing an ‘stranger’, seeing an ’enemy’, and seeing a ‘friend’ in DE – they are all colour with different thought content, right?
As thought divides seeing into seer and seen, it must also divide the seeing into colours and then shapes.How is one colour different from another in DE if all there is to colour is seeing?
With the subject-object division, it's easy to see that there is no border in my seeing. This is not so with colours. My every-day looking (without magnifying it a 1000 times) discerns a difference. On this screen, the black letters and the white background allow me to read. (I can only magnify this 500 times.) Of course, to seeing, this makes no difference (the same as in touch).
(1) So there is one seeing and the mind imposes the divisions and the labels.When looking at this picture (...)
Are there many colours? Or is there simply colour (seeing)?
Is there an actual gap between the ‘children’? Or is the gap actually colour?
Where does colour begin and end? In other words, can an actual dividing line be found between where one colour ends and another begins, or is that just a mental construct?
(2) Between the children there is colour, no gap.
(3) Colours and shapes are so much part of my seeing, that I cannot see anything without them. So your instruction to ignore all colour labels is very difficult. So I keep seeing a dividing line. (I keep comparing it with the sitting exercise where I don't find a dividing line between the body and the seat in the sensation of sitting, but in seeing there remains a difference.)
What am I missing here?
Cheers
Frank

