It took me a while to work through your latest post. I found it challenging and may not have addressed all the questions.
Sitting here scanning my front room, in direct experience there doesn’t appear to be any ‘thing’, no ‘objects’ just seeing. It’s as though seeing, colours and shapes are all arising in one space. When colour and shape is recognised by mind, mind labels it. Then there is a tendency to feel that the labelled ‘thing’ exists. Then the labelled thing feels separate. It’s as thought the act of labelling creates separation.Now, stay with this moment when the mind can’t label what is seen. What is actually present in direct experience? Is there any “thing” there at all, or just seeing (colour and shape), without separation, without inherent meaning?
Without the label, there’s colour and shape arising with seeing, no ‘object’, just this experience of colour, shape and seeing and a ‘knowing’ that is whats happening. I’m not sure it’s even that. All I can say about it, is it’s just is/this.Without the label, is there an object? Or just experiencing/what IS/this? I like this as it is more like a pointing word, like an arrow to what is silently happening right now, and now… (free from conceptual elaborations and the subject–object distinction).
In DE, recognition seems to be the same as labelling. Recognition is not discernable as a separate process, it can’t be seen happening, it justs happens, like labelling just happens.Also… What is recognition in direct experience?
Look closely—does recognition happen to someone? What is there to be recognized, other than this?
This morning, there were birds chirping while I was meditating. What seem to happen is sound arises with hearing and instantly the sound is known as ‘birds chirping’. Again, this all seems to happen by itself, automatically. I’m not aware of any process of recognition taking place. Rationally I know it has, as the mind has applied a label. The way I experience it is, hearing, sound, thought label - ‘birds chirping’ all togetherWhen a sound arises and is “recognized,” what exactly is happening? For example, the sound of "birds chirping"... Does the sound have any birds in it? Is there a moment where there is just sound, and then suddenly a knowing of what it is? Does recognition/labelling come as a separate event?
When a sound is not known, and no label appears, there’s a feeling that the mind is wanting to label the not known. It’s quite a strong impulse, like the mind has come up with a label.If you stay with something that isn’t immediately recognized—before a label appears—what is different?
Is there an actual thing waiting to be identified, or does the mind’s labelling create the sense of a distinct, recognizable something?
I watched the video. Thought was trying to see relationships between the random shapes, trying to establish patterns, looking for repetitions, looking for something known, something to hook in to. The raw experience is just the seeing.Look at an unfamiliar shape or listen to an unknown sound—before a label arrives, what is there? What is the raw experience, without assuming something needs to be recognized?
Paying attention to how sound happens. So there’s hearing. A sound arises with hearing. Also here, is an assumption that sound is external to ‘me’. When this is looked in to, no boundary can be found between the sound and hearing. There’s no point to be found at which sound passes from the outside in to ‘my ear/me’. Sound, hearing, and awareness oseem to be one experience.Furthermore, notice the sounds you’re hearing, like the chirping of the birds. Notice the habitual thought, "Those are birds." Notice the habitual thought, "I hear that." Now just pay attention to how hearing happens. Take your time with it. Can you find a dividing line between the sound and the hearing of the sound? Are you doing the hearing? Or is it truer to say that hearing is just happening? Then look to see whether there's a dividing line between the hearing of it and a separate entity, a "you"/"awareness" doing the hearing. In other words, what does it mean when you say, "I'm hearing that sound"? Are there really three entities there in direct experience, an "I"/Dot/awareness/entity and hearing and a sound (of birds)? Or is there just one experience of hearing, with no one as a hearer in any shape or form?
1. implies 3 ‘things’ – subject, experience, objectSo which one of the following describes best DE:
1. I am hearing sound
2. hearing sound
3. hearing
2. implies 2 things – experience, object
3. implies – experience
So 3 best describes DE.
With thanks,
Dot

