You are talking about this narrator like it is a real thing. So look again—right now:The narrator has a point of view, behind the eyes and between the ears. The narrator points to the sense of perspective - if the head moves, the picture changes. If the sound is closer, it gets louder. If there is a head that moves and an experience of moving closer or further, it fits with the story that Tom exists, that it is his point of view, etc. It is a most persistent illusion.
Where is this narrator?
Not the idea of it. Not what it says about itself. Not the echo of its last line.
Can you find the one saying it? Where exactly is Tom?
If it’s seen that it’s just more thought,
can it still own anything?
Can it be anything? Can it do anything (e.g. narate)?
Or is it just as empty as the rustle of leaves—
gone before it even arrived?
That’s the last stronghold:
a thought about a thought claiming there's someone having thoughts.
The so called narrator is just another thought about narration and timeframe.
Not a self, not a location, not a watcher. Just a string of soundless words, echoing no one. Just language. Is it possible that "I" is just what is happening right now right here, not pointing to anything real but just part of the structure of language?
You can try this exercise - it takes about 20 minutes and you will need a pen a paper. This exercise is broken into 10 minute slots. 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. Do not just repeat the first examples but descrbe what is happening at the moment...
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?
Finally...
Are thought right about anything? Tell me one thing that thoughts are right about...
They can "talk" about whatever (e.g. unicorns, Santa, self, others, enlightenment, awakening, Superman). Is any of it real? Point to it! What are you pointing at?
Whose expectation is this? Yours? Did you thought of it? Did you assess it as an expectation?But there is still expectation. Expectation of a shift, like a trap door should open. The experience of the now seems profound, but like the "I" is a visitor not a resident. False, though when not watched it seems to be the default, enabling it to say "see, this is who you are and how things should be."
Expectations are one of the most frequent blocks to seeing what ‘reality’ actually is. We can blame Guru stories and the attraction to drama in our society for focusing on stories of the initial epiphany that people have as they wake up. This puts into our head, the idea of “bells and whistles”. We expect high drama to confirm that a significant shift has occurred. However, for some it could be a "wow" while for others is just a smurk - because they suspected it all along.
Some common misconceptions, that I want to make clear, will never happen:
That you will experience permanent bliss.
That you will never get sick again.
That you will be able to stop your thoughts.
Money problems will be a thing of the past.
You will be able to manifest prosperity.
You will never hurt others again
You will never develop dementia
If you have kids, you’ll be the perfect parent
you will be physically beautiful
You will never have any more interpersonal conflicts
You will never again get angry
You will never be hurt
You will be loved (approval of others)
You will always know what to do (control)
You will never experience pain.
You will always feel good (control feelings / bliss)
Please read carefully and feel the disappointment. Then have an honest LOOK and tell me: If there never was you but just patterns, why would the patterns dissapear after "you" was seen as not real?The patterns were always there but not the "you". These are just thoughts that need to be examined one by one for the illusion of each of them is seen. The illusion of "good-bad"," ugly-beautiful", "pleasant-unpleasant", "positive-negative", etc. However, their existence doesn't prove the existence of an "I" - it's just more correction that needs to be done once it's seen that there is no anchor to hold them together, which will not happen in a day.
That “visitor” is just another thought, claiming there’s somewhere else to arrive—some deeper “residency” to attain.
But right now, look:
Is there an actual place where the “I” could become a resident?
Where is the border between visitor and resident?
Who would move from one to the other?
What isn’t already just this?
Thought says “this isn’t it,” but it’s made of this.
The expectation says, “a trap door should open”—but it’s just more thought, already appearing here.
So here’s the real trap:
The idea that you’re not home.
Let that fall away.
Without that idea, what’s left to wait for?
Right now—what is not already fully, utterly here?
Please LOOK! Don’t just answer. The so called shift happens in looking not understanding. DO NOT answer in bulk! Stay with each question. I'm not assessing your knowledge, these are pointers where to look and stay. Every pointer is a different angle, targeting different aspect of the belief.
Don't explain it, don't paraphrase it, don't circle it in metaphors.
Right now—no thinking, no commentary—just what's here.
Before the “narrator” kicks in.
Before “you” interpret what’s seen.
Right now:
Where is the "one" waiting for a shift?
Where is the trap door?
Where is the boundary between “before” and “after”?
Can you find anything that isn’t already happening effortlessly—without anyone?
Where is the separation, the watcher, the center?
If you say “I still feel like I’m the one seeing this,” then look right into that:
What is the “I” in that sentence?
Can you find it?
Or is it just another thought—claiming center stage? Just language?
Don't think about it. Don’t reach for insight.
Just fall into this.
Right here.
Right now.
What’s missing? What is not how it is supposed to be (the root of expectations/doubtful thoughts)?
Love
Rali

