Postby Esteban » Sun Nov 16, 2014 7:19 am
1) Is there a separate entity 'self', 'me' 'I', at all, anywhere, in any way, shape or form? Was there ever?
No, there were only thoughts with feelings attached to them.
2) Explain in detail what the illusion of separate self is, when it starts and how it works from your own experience. Describe it fully as you see it now.
The illusion of self is like a flower in a painting that imagines itself to be separate from the rest of the painting. The illusion starts very early in childhood, with the acquisition of language, which labels objects, including the child, thereby fostering the illusion of separation. A particularly powerful label is the word "I." With language, comes thought, and the building of the wall begins.
I remember being 3 years old and having a feeling of innate wisdom and largeness that seemed to say "this is what you were before you were born." I had a tremendous, unfettered curiosity about the world around me. I asked questions all the time, about everything. By asking questions about letters and their sounds, I taught myself to read. When I began reading a newspaper aloud one day, my parents were floored. I was showered with praise. Unfortunately, this turned my attention inward: I thought I must be pretty great if these adults are so impressed with me. I began using my abilities to garner more and more praise. This increased my feeling of separation and also made me very self-conscious and uncomfortable with myself, even as I reveled in my glory. When I began going to school, my teachers loved me, but the other boys didn't like me much. I was mercilessly taunted and bullied for years. I felt that I was both better and worse than everybody else. I was lonely, sad, and miserable. I retreated more and more into myself and built a formidable wall out of thoughts -- thoughts of superiority, of inferiority, of this thing called "me," separate from everything else.
As I see it now, it was all just an illusion generated by thought. Everything just happens: thoughts, feelings, the words we speak, artistic creations, bodily sensations and functions -- so what need could there be for an "I" in any of this? Why is an "I" needed for thought anymore than an "I" is needed for a wave to reach the shore or a leaf to drop from a tree?
3) How does it feel to see this? What is the difference from before you started this dialogue? Please report from the past few days.
It feels peaceful, quiet, still, and joyous. Everything seems alive. There are moments when the seeing is clearer than others; still, the bell can't be un-rung. Sometimes I find myself being "me" again, but those moments don't last long. Other times, the "me" is doing its thing, but I don't identify with it. Everything just happens, so I just let it be.
When I came to LU, I was already close to seeing. For the past month or so, I had changed from a person whose mind ran overtime at full speed, to one with a much quieter mind. The reason for that newfound quietude is that I had clearly seen the futility and banality of thoughts that mostly revolved around this "me" character. Still, I felt that I needed a dialogue tailored to my individual questions in order to finally crash the Gate. In a way, I'm not surprised that the seeing happened so quickly, but, in a way, I am.
4) What was the last bit that pushed you over, made you look?
I'm sorry, I don't quite understand the question. If you're asking what made me want this seeing, I can only say that I have wanted it from a very early age. I just never fully bought into the notion that I was just a body that lives and dies. I wanted to know who or what I really was. Unfortunately, growing up in midwest, USA in the 60s and 70s, there were no "gurus" next door that I could talk with, and no Internet to help me find one. If you're asking me what brought about the "Aha!" moment, it was Alex's beautiful question: "If a thought arises and there are no concepts like "I/me/mine" attached, is there any difference between a thought and a sound that arises?" My initial reaction was "Huh?," followed about two seconds later by "Ooooh!"
5) Describe decision, intention, free will, choice and control. What makes things happen? How does it work? What are you responsible for?
Please give examples from recent experience.
They're all just thoughts, illusions. I have no idea what makes things happen -- they just do. Nobody is responsible for anything, because a) things just happen, and b) there's no one to be responsible for anything, anyway. In my recent experience: I woke up today with the intention (thought) to answer these questions right away; however, I ended up just lying in bed with the seeing, then I listened to some music. Choice and decision are basically the same thing, and that is thought. I finally decided/chose to start working on the questions about two hours ago. Why did I decide/choose this when I did, and not 5 minutes sooner, or an hour later? I don't know; it just happened. I "made" my decision/choice after having to decide/choose between getting to work on the questions, and listening to music again. A decision/choice came: get to work on the questions. Somehow, the hand reached for the iPad, and here we are. As for "free will" and control," I gave up on those at least 20 years ago, so I honestly don't have any recent experiences to relate.
6) Anything to add?
I am overflowing with gratitude to LU and especially Alex, who knew exactly how to back me up against the Gate, then made me crash through it. Also, I would be remiss if I failed to mention my friend, Graham Ellis, writer of deviant (his word, not mine), humorous, and lethal little books on non duality. He seriously damaged the foundations of my little walled fort, so that I only needed a few expertly placed whacks from Alex to bring it all down. Much love to you all.