You might enjoy this one:
Very much enjoyed!
Nature Exercise
Go out into nature and spend some time watching the movement of the whole. See how clouds move, trees swing, leaves wiggle, grass moves, insects, birds - all move all the time. Then move focus to sensations and see how they too are in constant motion, thoughts come and go, sounds, colors, sensations come and go. Notice that everything is part of one movement. Then close your eyes and see if there is a line between you and out there, between you and life itself. If yes, where is the boundary?
No line. With eyes closed it is clearly an unbroken continuum of experience – sensations, flow of thought, feelings arising. Obviously, sensations were experienced on the body – wind on skin – but not experienced as the defining boundary, just a place where sensation is noticed.
Is there an inside and an outside of Life?
No, the distinction is semantic, but not in fact real. Thoughts make this distinction, just as they localize experience in the body and create separation. But these are false dichotomies in the context of life happening as one ongoing flow.
Is there something which is not included in the movement of the whole?
No, the whole is the whole of life, nothing is outside of this.
Is there a witness that is watching life happening from a distance? Is witnessing part of the one movement too?
This 'witnessing' topic comes up in different ways in different spiritual traditions, and gets confusing. As we've discussed, there is certainly a wide range of thinking/noticing in relationship to life's happening with this mind-body organism. But, this is just thinking, and investigation reveals its rootlessness. The dissolving of the illusion of self has brought presence/being/awareness to the fore as a broader context for the happening of life, maybe as the foundation of life. This is not separate from life, but may be a quality of knowing itself, knowing that life is alive.
Is there anything which is not just happening?
No, everything is happening. In fact, only one thing is happening. There is a myriad of apparent experiences, but only one thing happens.