Re: realizing selflessness
Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2026 3:54 am
Good. As obsessive as you have been about chasing thoughts (see sig line) I think doing nothing is perfect.
Loving
Loving
Liberation Unleashed Forum The Gate
https://liberationunleashed.com:443/nation/
https://liberationunleashed.com:443/nation/viewtopic.php?t=10146
“Obsessive”? “Chasing”? I spent a week giving special attention in my meditation time to noticing thoughts arise and not grabbing onto them, which helped them to settle down, and you even seemed to think this was a good thing. I’m confused by the tone here.As obsessive as you have been about chasing thoughts
True.The sense of the "self" that I'm trying to see the illusory nature of is, I think, mostly made of thoughts, maybe images especially, plus physical sensations, mainly in my head, especially my face.
I will. :-)Let me know when you see.
Yes, this seems like an accurate diagnosis. Especially this:Ok whoknows, give me your response to this;
The main impediment, as it shows up here, is the felt need to make something happen.
More specifically:
the seeker-pattern that keeps trying to reproduce, control, or get back to peace.
Yes to all the rest of it too.looking for the right method, video, understanding, or inner move that will finally make awakening land
That does seem to be where I am now.The main impediment to “waking up” is the attempt to wake up.
This makes sense, but then the mind goes, "But what do I DO about it?" . . . There's nothing to do? . . . Ugh. OK.Wanting awakening is reinforcing the seeker.
And here we go again: Wishing that if I read this over and over, it will finally make awakening land.What if the one trying to wake up is the one being seen through?
What if the effort to arrive is what creates the sense of distance?
What if nothing is missing except the idea that something is missing?
More specifically:
the seeker-pattern that keeps trying to reproduce, control, or get back to peace.
It shows up as:
wanting to know how the quiet happened
wanting to be able to do it again at will
turning calm into a result to be achieved
Hi whoknows, this is good. But notice this: “I want to produce peace” is still the same movement as seeking. It says, “peace is not here; it must be generated later.”I actually feel mainly like I want to produce peace, not "reproduce" it, since I'm not sure I've experienced it much if at all. And I'm not particularly interested in reproducing "quiet" or "calm," given that those are just on the spectrum of ordinary, ever-changing human moods or experiences: being quiet as opposed to chatter-brained, and calm as opposed to agitated. I'm looking for a peace or equanimity that encompasses or underlies or transcends the entire range of moods and experiences, and I haven't had much of a taste of that.
I may be unfairly discounting the sense of what Rupert Spira calls "awareness," which I am able to access, though usually only very briefly: that sense of quiet, aware, peaceful, spaciousness in which all experience happens and from which all experience is made (in his language, which maybe doesn't entirely jibe with "no-self" language, though I suspect the experiences are the same or similar). But so far, that has felt mostly like merely a momentary reprieve from the dis-ease with which I generally experience life.