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originally posted by: bb23108
a reply to: Itisnowagain
I already answered this - the body-mind. And as long as anyone is apparently associated with a body-mind, they, as the body-mind, are responsible for its actions.
You are one presumptuous online character, LesMis. I have been studying and practicing these matters much much longer than YouTube has been around. You have clearly not studied very closely the Upanishads, Shankara's elaborations, etc. - and if you have, then you missed their essential message.
But this does not surprise me given your forever materialistic stance, at least as your LesMis character is presented online.
Ultimately awareness is beyond the body-mind and is prior to all conditions. You are tending to identify the word awareness with attention, which it is not. Also, a common mistake amongst various you-tubers regarding awareness, attention, and the observer function of the mind - which I have often criticized.
Why is there no fundamental sense of ageing when one FEELS who they are in terms of self-aware being? One IS self-aware feeling, but this is likely the reason your LesMis character cannot grok this. Your character, LesMis, identifies strongly with mentality, and this abstraction knots up the being in terms of feeling altogether to infinity, and even just feeling in and as the whole body-mind.
When I asked you to do that "experiment" it is necessary to compare the "feeling" of yourself back then to the "feeling" of yourself currently. Not as the online character LesMis, but as who you actually ARE.
If you cannot do this, then you should learn to feel into life more, and allow yourself to feel the simple joy of being - apart from all content and abstracted mentality. This self-awareness is feeling-being, beyond all content, never ages - and is self-evident.
That's an excellent question, and I'd like to add my two cents in if I may. Although I question the premiss that one can experience anything physically. Nonetheless, there are simple examples of so-called non-physical experiences. If you wake up from a dream, did you experience it? Where's the physicality of a dream?
In regards to your attempt to use physicality as the litmus test for reality, can you point to any recent scientific discovery which claims that physicality is that essential fabric of reality? Because decades ago, scientific research and discovery has gone FAR beyond the study of physics and are in deeper areas of research that are non-physical in nature. So why do you still view the physical like it is the basic foundation of all existence when science has already moved on?
STRANGER: My notion would be, that anything which possesses any sort of power to affect another, or to be affected by another, if only for a single moment, however trifling the cause and however slight the effect, has real existence; and I hold that the definition of being is simply power.
originally posted by: LesMisanthrope
I felt completely different back then than I do now.
You should learn to see, touch, smell, taste and hear into life a bit more.
originally posted by: LesMisanthrope
a reply to: bb23108
Their essential message and outcome was the varna. Even good old Shankara believed in it. So you've read from the very source, and despite their ludicrousness, you still promote them? Is it because you think the Vedas was the word of god?
originally posted by: LesMisanthrope
I have to feel it? Oh, it’s that you can only feel that what you say is true, reason be damned. You will only go so far as to feel what you are, while at the same time refuting the sight, the sound, the smell, the touch, and the taste of what you are. Sounds like faith.
Yes, you obviously missed the essential message Shankara was speaking about. And no, I do not relate to the Vedas as you suggest.
Self-aware consciousness is fortunately beyond the limits of the conceptual mind. So conceptual mind cannot prove it - as you obviously demonstrate.
That we are self-aware consciousness is self-evident truth. If you can't understand and feel this, so be it.
Prove you just are the biological body-mind. You just assume this as a self-evident truth but have no real proof.
assumption |əˈsəm(p)SHən|
noun
1 a thing that is accepted as true or as certain to happen, without proof
proof |pro͞of|
noun
1 evidence or argument establishing or helping to establish a fact or the truth of a statement
No one is responsible for the body's actions. Are you doing the beating of the heart? Are you doing breathing? Are you doing seeing? Are you doing hearing?
It is the belief that you are the doer which is the illusion - this is what makes life hurt - this is what makes now be full of yesterday and tomorrow. When now is free from the one who is planning something better it is just as it is - peaceful but when it is full of 'me and my life' it is not so peaceful.
originally posted by: LesMisanthrope
You relate to someone else’s readings of the Vedas? I do not understand.
originally posted by: LesMisanthrope
This is why I believe you are parroting another, as you cannot furnish your ideas with any valid reason why you believe them.
originally posted by: LesMisanthrope
Please, explain to me how none of this is not proof. It seems like nothing short of a divine being telling you that you are a body will suffice.
originally posted by: LesMisanthrope
a reply to: BlueMule
Have you ever penetrated the surface of a story, reached into the subtext, and extracted a truth that resonates with you?
It depends on the work, but it is the main reason I read.
That depends on what you think a story is. I think the essence of a story is not on the page. I think it is in a liminal no-mans land between the page and the reader. That liminal zone can be a barren place for one person, and a source of mystical inspiration for another person.
Absolutely so, Tartuffe. I have even written a thread on this very subject not too long ago. For once we agree.
but as for dreams, the assumption that you are a little man experiencing things within the head is illogical.
There is no actual horse in someone's head when they dream of a horse, and there is no little man interacting with it.
To ask "where's the physicality of a dream" is like asking "where's the physicality in a backflip
The biggest difference between dreams and reality..'
.. is that a person can control the dream state in a manner unlike we can control "reality state". For example, a person can train themselves to ask themselves, is this a dream, to the point where it becomes a habit. Then when they dream they can ask, is this a dream, and they find out YES, then you can have a Lucid dream, you can control nearly all aspects of the dream. Now what if you are awake and then ask yourself, is this a dream, then you try to manipulate this world in the same manner? What happens? Nothing!!! HA! There is a big difference between dream states and reality states.
The million dollar question is, when the mind is in the lucid dream state, does it require a body to maintain that state.
Is this the natural environment for the mind, as it dos not seem to have the fetters of physical reality with regards to time and distance acting as a break.
But once that is learnt, and the consciousness has realized its an individual and self aware, which it couldn't do if first it didn't have a body. Does it need a body anymore.?