Guest guest Posted August 10, 2004 Report Share Posted August 10, 2004 Andy, You asked: " *****Are the above comments drawing an equivalence in the feeling, sensation, and satisfaction of meeting someone in thought alone (absent their physical presence, a presence which can be 'tested' by taste, touch, sight, and smell), and meeting someone in thought & in person? " Yes, that is what I have heard do on several occasions. She told one man whose wife had recently died that his wife had only existed as a story in his mind both before and after her death and if he thinks he needed something to touch, then he should get himself a stuffed animal. Steve D. > > > say's: suffering is an optional > > Missing someone you love is an optional also? > > > > What do you think? > > Missing someone sounds like suffering to me, so I would definitely > say that feeling was optional. > > When deals with someone who is missing someone they love > because they have parted or died, she often asks if they have a > picture of their loved one in their mind. Where does the loved one > really exist? Isn't it just as a thought in your mind? > > > *****Are the above comments drawing an equivalence in the feeling, > sensation, and satisfaction of meeting someone in thought alone > (absent their physical presence, a presence which can be 'tested' by > taste, touch, sight, and smell), and meeting someone in thought & in > person? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 10, 2004 Report Share Posted August 10, 2004 Andy, You asked: " *****Are the above comments drawing an equivalence in the feeling, sensation, and satisfaction of meeting someone in thought alone (absent their physical presence, a presence which can be 'tested' by taste, touch, sight, and smell), and meeting someone in thought & in person? " Yes, that is what I have heard do on several occasions. She told one man whose wife had recently died that his wife had only existed as a story in his mind both before and after her death and if he thinks he needed something to touch, then he should get himself a stuffed animal. *****Is there, then, a difference between what is asserted above and, say, deriving pleasure from reading a menu as opposed to eating the actual meal? See, I understand where BK is coming from. In an Absolute sense I can appreciate such teachings. I've been engaged in them for years, intellectually. But as a living-breathing-hands-on " reality, " that is not where I live, at the moment. Right now, the world that I inhabit and move within (the illusion, as you refer to it) is very real. In several Eastern traditions it is referred to as the relative world, and, while being illusory, for most of humanity - this person included - it holds a very strong pull. It appears that Byron underwent a profound Opening, a Transformation, a falling away of the mindbody identification, that appears - from published reports - to be " available " to a very small portion of the population. She -- like all the other reports I've read of such happenings -- didn't " do " anything to bring this about. It happened. It wasn't the result of prayer, meditation, " good deeds, " or the Work. In fact, the Work didn't exist until post her Opening. It was a Shift that came, unbidden. It seems to me ass-backward to engage in the Work in the hopes of producing or having a similar Understanding happen. This is not to devalue what may arise from doing the Work, but I think that doing it in the hopes of seeing, experiencing, and appreciating Life as BK does is misguided. Many of her perceptions seem to have appeared after her Opening but prior to the Work being generated. Let me try an analogy. Imagine a classical musician, one who has been trained, studied, and been engaged in the profession for dozens of years. Excluding such luminaries as a Mozart and a Beethoven, when the " average joe " hears a piece of classical music, he/she will hear *some* of the things that the classicist does. Not all. Even though it is ALL there for the hearing, some (or perhaps many) of the undertones, the subtilties, will escape the " average joe. " Some of what the classicist hears is just not heard by the " average joe. " So: what BK sees, hears, understands, may be so -- for all of us. But I don't hear it. Not yet. I understand the teaching. I can see, quite clearly in fact, how all others arise in the localized consciousness that is " me " ; that an experience of " reality " is born from the confluence of a subject and an object. And yet -- for me, at this moment -- there is a palpable difference between being in the physical presence of another and simply imagining, fantasizing about their being here. I can fantasize about someone who not in my physical presence and may even experience, to a limited degree, some of the other senses: sight, smell, taste. But the immediacy of being in the other's presence is dramatically toned down. It is simply not the same experience. And it is similar with a menu. Reading it, I can, to a certain extent, smell & taste the food. That experience is not filling, not satisfying, physically, for me. Yes, the world arises in consciousness, and consciousness is all there is. And yet, for me, the relative world, the waking dream of phenomenality, the illusion, is very real. For me, the relative world is compelling. It is not the whole story, to be sure, but it is part of the story. I do not deny the validity of BK's comments to the widower: sure, all experience is a story and the wife that was known by the man was the man's creation, but there is a feeling here that such observations about the nature of loss, while accurate, are not complete, and in their ignoring the relative world of life and death, they miss the mark. And I am aware that this says more about me than about BK and her understanding. But it is my feeling that one can have both: the profound Understanding of the Absolute, and a deep appreciation of the relative world of life and death. Perhaps that is the most mature of all understandings. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 10, 2004 Report Share Posted August 10, 2004 Andy, You ended your post with " But it is my feeling that one can have both: the profound Understanding of the Absolute, and a deep appreciation of the relative world of life and death. Perhaps that is the most mature of all understandings. " You could be right. It appears that way for me. For me, if one truly has an understanding of the absolute then they would have to have a deep appreciation for the relative world. Why leave out any part of oneself? It is all me and it is all God and of course I love myself, who wouldn't? I am just too greedy to leave any of it out. You said " It seems to me ass-backward to engage in the Work in the hopes of producing or having a similar Understanding happen. " I don't understand your " ass-backward " however, Yes, I totally agree with your point. always stresses the point that we do the Work only to know the truth, never to change something or get something. Thank you for so eloquently sharing your beliefs. Steve D. > > Andy, > > You asked: > > " *****Are the above comments drawing an equivalence in the feeling, > sensation, and satisfaction of meeting someone in thought alone > (absent their physical presence, a presence which can be 'tested' by > taste, touch, sight, and smell), and meeting someone in thought & in > person? " > > Yes, that is what I have heard do on several occasions. She > told one man whose wife had recently died that his wife had only > existed as a story in his mind both before and after her death and if > he thinks he needed something to touch, then he should get himself a > stuffed animal. > > > *****Is there, then, a difference between what is asserted above and, > say, deriving pleasure from reading a menu as opposed to eating the > actual meal? > > See, I understand where BK is coming from. In an Absolute sense I > can appreciate such teachings. I've been engaged in them for years, > intellectually. But as a living-breathing-hands-on " reality, " that > is not where I live, at the moment. Right now, the world that I > inhabit and move within (the illusion, as you refer to it) is very > real. In several Eastern traditions it is referred to as the > relative world, and, while being illusory, for most of humanity - > this person included - it holds a very strong pull. > > It appears that Byron underwent a profound Opening, a > Transformation, a falling away of the mindbody identification, that > appears - from published reports - to be " available " to a very small > portion of the population. She -- like all the other reports I've > read of such happenings -- didn't " do " anything to bring this about. > It happened. It wasn't the result of prayer, meditation, " good > deeds, " or the Work. In fact, the Work didn't exist until post her > Opening. It was a Shift that came, unbidden. > > It seems to me ass-backward to engage in the Work in the hopes of > producing or having a similar Understanding happen. This is not to > devalue what may arise from doing the Work, but I think that doing it > in the hopes of seeing, experiencing, and appreciating Life as BK > does is misguided. Many of her perceptions seem to have appeared > after her Opening but prior to the Work being generated. > > Let me try an analogy. Imagine a classical musician, one who has > been trained, studied, and been engaged in the profession for dozens > of years. Excluding such luminaries as a Mozart and a Beethoven, > when the " average joe " hears a piece of classical music, he/she will > hear *some* of the things that the classicist does. Not all. Even > though it is ALL there for the hearing, some (or perhaps many) of the > undertones, the subtilties, will escape the " average joe. " Some of > what the classicist hears is just not heard by the " average joe. " > > So: what BK sees, hears, understands, may be so -- for all of us. > But I don't hear it. Not yet. I understand the teaching. I can > see, quite clearly in fact, how all others arise in the localized > consciousness that is " me " ; that an experience of " reality " is born > from the confluence of a subject and an object. > > And yet -- for me, at this moment -- there is a palpable difference > between being in the physical presence of another and simply > imagining, fantasizing about their being here. I can fantasize about > someone who not in my physical presence and may even experience, to a > limited degree, some of the other senses: sight, smell, taste. But > the immediacy of being in the other's presence is dramatically toned > down. It is simply not the same experience. > > And it is similar with a menu. Reading it, I can, to a certain > extent, smell & taste the food. That experience is not filling, not > satisfying, physically, for me. > > Yes, the world arises in consciousness, and consciousness is all > there is. And yet, for me, the relative world, the waking dream of > phenomenality, the illusion, is very real. > > For me, the relative world is compelling. It is not the whole story, > to be sure, but it is part of the story. I do not deny the validity > of BK's comments to the widower: sure, all experience is a story and > the wife that was known by the man was the man's creation, but there > is a feeling here that such observations about the nature of loss, > while accurate, are not complete, and in their ignoring the relative > world of life and death, they miss the mark. And I am aware that > this says more about me than about BK and her understanding. But it > is my feeling that one can have both: the profound Understanding of > the Absolute, and a deep appreciation of the relative world of life > and death. Perhaps that is the most mature of all understandings. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 10, 2004 Report Share Posted August 10, 2004 > > It seems to me ass-backward to engage in the Work in the hopes of > producing or having a similar Understanding happen. This is not to > devalue what may arise from doing the Work, but I think that doing > it in the hopes of seeing, experiencing, and appreciating Life as > BK does is misguided. Many of her perceptions seem to have > appeared after her Opening but prior to the Work being generated. > Here is another analogy Andy which you may find useful, or not! There is a beautiful island in the pacific where there is no suffering, because everyone there is sane. On the mainland there is lots of suffering, because most are insane. was insane, but she took over ten years to swim to the island, where she became sane. also discovered a boat on the island called " Inquiry " . With this boat anyone on the mainland could travel to the island and also become sane and end their suffering. returned to the mainland and started to tell everyone about the boat and the island. Some could hear what she was saying some could not. Some insisted that the only way to the island was to swim for over ten years. gave them a gentle smile, because she knew that was not true. The boat worked, because there were already many hundreds of previously insane people on the island who were now sane. also wondered why anyone would want to swim to the island and suffer so much, when the boat could take them there so much more quickly. Some wanted to worship as a guru, but once again she gave them a gentle smile. " You don't need me to get to the island " she said, " just use the boat and you will get there, you have to do this yourself " . So the wise ones joined on the island, and they waited for the rest of the people on the mainland to catch up, or not! Loving what is ... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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