Please I am trying to concentrate.Manna wrote:I don't know what you're asking
are my orgasms less than my thoughts or my arm?
is the thought you are having less than the thought and your arm?
Please I am trying to concentrate.Manna wrote:I don't know what you're asking
are my orgasms less than my thoughts or my arm?
When speaking about that moment I noticed that I wrote that I had only one thought but that the experience came with some knowing that I thought about later.I was completely, totally immersed in love with here, this, now. Every little speck of dust floating in the sunlight that was coming in through my window was a world bursting with joy, no wait, it was just find that it was a speck of dust, I don't need to say it was a world. Oh I'll go ahead and say it anyways, every speck of dust seemed like it contained potential worlds of joy. The joy was falling on me like a rain and it seemed to be coming from deep within me. A thought emerged from me and the thought was "I could spend eternity here" That was the only thought that I had about me. It seems to me to answer your question.
I said above that there was only one thought but also the experience came with some knowing that I thought about later.
This wasn't what I memorized. I don't remember ever seeing this before today.Manna wrote: You liked it when your brain was impaired, J, or at least thought it worth memorizing. does it still hold for you? I welcome you to help me change my mind.
Yes. what we think is less than what we knowManna wrote:do you think that perception happens without thought?
For me, it seems that there are knowings [mind-based, intellectual] and knowings [at other levels than mind and intellect]. I'm out of my league in all this, as I haven't studied a lick of what I'm trying to talk about... but sometimes we know at a feeling level, sometimes at a subconscious level, and sometimes [I'm sure] at other levels.Maybe there is always some thought accompanying knowing.
Yes, I've run into such things. At first, they tend to sound impossible to agree with, but after I look closely and force my own understanding, sometimes (sometimes things really are impossible for me to agree with), it's a thing that ends up so right on that I end up memorizing it.daka wrote:In one of our meditation practices there is the expression "exhausted by our elaborations" Most of the real kernels of wisdom knowledge are described as extremely simple, quite obvious, almost hidden by the processes of unnecessarily complex and convoluted conceptualizations.What we think is less than what we know.
ha ha ha. I think he is right, but I don't know if I think he is right the same way that you think he is right.There is a famous American Buddhist psychotherapist, I think his name is Mark Levine. he states that we all have a meta-addiction, and this addiction is to our mind, (to our mental processes, habitual, ingrained, programmed like a computer, and potentially very problematic).
ha! That's ok, it's only true when certain other unmentioned conditions are met. It was a flip answer that seemed to do ok in the spirit of the moment. It has since become apparent that Jack and I use the word "thought" differently, and you also use the word differently than I do, see below.Manna, when you saidabove, I don't believe it.'Brain Dead' [in answer to: what are you without your thoughts]
sounds very much like sleep to me.There is a meditation that has a long complicated name: the 'yoga of the absorption of cessation of gross conceptual, thoughts'. It is much simpler than it sounds. One simply stops paying attention to all of the input from the 5 senses and the mental sense perceiver, and relaxes in that state of 'absorption', for a while.
how do you know you're in that state?It is described as a temporary liberation. it s quite restful and generally appreciated by both the body and the mind. It is not that hard to do, but our minds are used to having free rein, like a horse with the bit in his teeth, and we can get into all sorts of trouble that way.
And it seems you're including things we do seemingly without conscious thought in the things-we-know category. Maybe it is grey - are we born knowing how to breathe, or do we just do it? I wouldn't think a baby puts thought into its first breath, but I can't say I remember. Maybe the first breath is scary, and that is why the baby cries. I bet his own crying scares him too. Am I still alive because I "know" how to be alive? And when I die will it be because I have forgotten?lizzytysh wrote:For me, it seems that there are knowings [mind-based, intellectual] and knowings [at other levels than mind and intellect]. I'm out of my league in all this, as I haven't studied a lick of what I'm trying to talk about... but sometimes we know at a feeling level, sometimes at a subconscious level, and sometimes [I'm sure] at other levels.Maybe there is always some thought accompanying knowing.
Isn't there a 'knowing' that's also at an instinctual level... like birds knowing when and where to migrate...
...
A baby knows how to suckle its mother's breast.
~ Lizzy
Funny you should talk about that. As it happens that was a little of the tale I was getting from my friend who was on the band council when I first went out there and we were taking a long walk to go see the beautiful lake that was there.lizzytysh wrote:
With an American Indian, I would consider the possibility of an Anglo visitor to a reservation knowing all about the trees in a scientific way, but not understanding their power, significance, and meaning, and why they are held reverent. The scientific vs. the spiritual and mystical. Their construction vs. their essence.
~ Lizzy