Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Re: Suzanne Segal

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

The " late " Suzanne Segal

-- In Loving-what-is@y..., cainsworth6@h... wrote:

> Below is the URL of an interview with Suzanne Segal who like

> had an awakening and never lost the " vastness " . She

> wrote a book called Collision With the Infinite. She has a clear

> way of describing who we really are.

>

> Chuck

>

>

> http://www.theawakeningwest.com/suzanne.html

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Fam,

I read Suzanne Segal's book COLLISION WITH THE INFINITE earlier this year, at

the recommendation of another yoga-advaita--oriented pal, and I had an

extreme reaction to it. Her description of her terror at first at losing the

personal " I, " and the dissociative quality of her experience before it became

an awareness of what she called " the Vastness, " scared the hell out of me

frankly. I was relieved to read, in 's interview reproduced at

realization.org, that she didn't relate to anything Suzanne said about

awakening. There's more than a slim chance that Suzanne's experience had a

lot to do with the brain tumor, so of course there is no real need to feel

unsafe about losing the personal " I " ...but I feel what I feel, until I don't.

So herewith a short piece on that.

Core belief: If I lose the personal " I " I will experience terror and

dissociation.

Is it true?

I can't know that it is true. It hasn't happened. I have had glimpses of

" merging " and actually those were quite pleasant.

How do I react? What do I get for holding the belief? Etc.

I'm afraid to really " let go " and experience myself as part of all that is.

I think my reality is more " real " than the reality of no " I. " I get to keep

my limitations, my carefully constructed persona of Carol who thinks she

wants to be free but is full of B.S. I get to be afraid instead. I

terrorize myself with the possibility of feeling terror and dissociation. I

diminish Suzanne's experience. I think I know what I'm talking about. (Boy,

that one could apply to almost any situation, huh?) Mentally I travel to a

place where I'm terrified, dissociated, and all alone with no relief in sight.

Does this thought cause peace or stress in my life? It's totally stressful

to be so freaked out over something that I can't even know is true!

Who would I be without the story? I would be so much more than I think I am.

I'd be who I really am, " the Vastness. " With or without identification with

the personal " I, " I would be okay. I would love all experiences that come to

me, with no reference point for " good " or " bad, " " pleasant " or " scary. "

Turnarounds:

If I lose the personal " I " I will not experience terror and dissociation.

Could be just as true or more true.

If I DO NOT lose the personal " I " I will experience terror and dissociation.

Yes, I experience terror now, with my personal " I " intact...and I have been

dissociative in the past, when I did not give myself permission to feel pain

or terror.

If I lose my thinking, I will experience terror and dissociation. That is

the real fear, to separate from my thinking, the thing that thinks my lies

are the truth.

If I lose my thinking, I will NOT experience terror and dissociation. I will

be free.

Sigh.

Love,

Carol S.

www.EclecticSpirituality.com

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 months later...

Hello to all!! Was just reading this thread from a few months ago

about Suzanne Segal, and was inspired to write in......

I once asked personally about Suzanne, and she told me that

Yes, she knew her, and that she attended Suzanne's wedding before

Suzanne passed away..... told me that Suzanne was a person who

was full of fear, and she really stressed that part, and then she

said to me, " you see, even the name of her book, COLLISION with the

infinte " , stressing the COLLISION part..... and I said, " Oh, I see,

well, if you had to sum up your own awakening experience in one word,

how would you describe it? " , and then thought about it for a

few moments, and looked at me, and said LOVE.

Glen

> Hi Fam,

>

> I read Suzanne Segal's book COLLISION WITH THE INFINITE earlier

this year, at

> the recommendation of another yoga-advaita--oriented pal, and

I had an

> extreme reaction to it. Her description of her terror at first at

losing the

> personal " I, " and the dissociative quality of her experience before

it became

> an awareness of what she called " the Vastness, " scared the hell out

of me

> frankly. I was relieved to read, in 's interview reproduced

at

> realization.org, that she didn't relate to anything Suzanne said

about

> awakening. There's more than a slim chance that Suzanne's

experience had a

> lot to do with the brain tumor, so of course there is no real need

to feel

> unsafe about losing the personal " I " ...but I feel what I feel,

until I don't.

> So herewith a short piece on that.

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hello to all!! Was just reading this thread from a few months ago

about Suzanne Segal, and was inspired to write in......

I once asked personally about Suzanne, and she told me that

Yes, she knew her, and that she attended Suzanne's wedding before

Suzanne passed away..... told me that Suzanne was a person who

was full of fear, and she really stressed that part, and then she

said to me, " you see, even the name of her book, COLLISION with the

infinte " , stressing the COLLISION part..... and I said, " Oh, I see,

well, if you had to sum up your own awakening experience in one word,

how would you describe it? " , and then thought about it for a

few moments, and looked at me, and said LOVE.

Glen

> Hi Fam,

>

> I read Suzanne Segal's book COLLISION WITH THE INFINITE earlier

this year, at

> the recommendation of another yoga-advaita--oriented pal, and

I had an

> extreme reaction to it. Her description of her terror at first at

losing the

> personal " I, " and the dissociative quality of her experience before

it became

> an awareness of what she called " the Vastness, " scared the hell out

of me

> frankly. I was relieved to read, in 's interview reproduced

at

> realization.org, that she didn't relate to anything Suzanne said

about

> awakening. There's more than a slim chance that Suzanne's

experience had a

> lot to do with the brain tumor, so of course there is no real need

to feel

> unsafe about losing the personal " I " ...but I feel what I feel,

until I don't.

> So herewith a short piece on that.

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...