No, experiencing is just a label describing what "is". Very tricky, I am finding, to verbalize these things without smuggling in a presumed "doer" of some kind - but all I can say is that as I use these word-labels to communicate, it is abundantly clear to me that every word I reach for is "falling short" and here I just mean that every word, every label appears by necessity to be one step removed from the 'IT' or 'THIS' or 'THUS' (the DE), such that putting "it" into words already betrays the truth of "it" ... "this" is all that is happening directly - and it seems that ANY move away from THIS is conceptual. And I mean ANY move. In the flash of a millisecond that it takes for the "experiencer" to show up - to just have what is assumed to be the most basic of human experiences: "I am experiencing," you've already lost the game, so to speak!Is "experiencing" something that can actually be found? Or is it another label describing what is present?
The labels are one step removed. The label "hearing" is not required for "it" to be happening ... "senses" are also a label.When "seeing" is labelled seeing, hearing labelled hearing, sensation labelled sensation, are those labels describing something real, or are they already one step removed?
I did the exercise, and there are no boundaries. It's all just happening. The mind seems to want to notice this thing or that, back and forth, and so it is creating the boundary - then it is a mental construct, it must be a mental construct because nothing is required for these things to be going on.So even though it might look as there are clearly defined senses, what is DE showing? Does the sound appear in a different place to the thought? Can you find an actual line/wall/boundary that divides the thought and the sound? Or is the line a mental construct?
No description survives inspection.
Descriptions are labels - they are not experienced directly. It is utterly impossible to communicate without them but it is evident that they are "empty" or "not the thing" (no-thing), "not THIS" ... reading ahead, yes, "THIS" does seem to be the most appropriate label. It might be interesting to try that - rather than notating things with a label, simply noting "this".
Yes, absolutely. This was something that clicked during the apple excercise: not only is "apple" a label but all of these sense words are labels too - the sensation itself just "is" - as you say, they are very useful for communication, but it is clear now that they are not the thing's "thusness" or "not the thing, itself".Again, using DE labels or any other everyday label is useful as it helps communication - they are good pointers (like fingers pointing to the moon). There is nothing wrong with using them as long as their empty nature is seen (not mistaking the finger for the moon).
Everything is just happening all the time, so to speak.
It's striking how simple it all seems - it's almost ridiculous!
When you consider how much work and effort and suffering is required to hold "yourself" together ... and how everyone is doing it ... how very limiting it is ... strictly limiting ... oppressive, even ... I'm left with a very deep sense of compassion for others ... and myself! Hard to explain. It all seems very unfortunate, in a way. This is wonderful work you are doing!
Pat

