Also see: 
Dharma Talk - Steve hagen, "In the Seen There Is Only the Seen" July 18
Steve Hagen books are also clear and highly recommended. 
Excerpts:
http://www.awakeningtoreality.com/2010/04/buddhism-is-not-what-you-think.html
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Soh Wei Yu
I
 don’t think Steve is saying there is something unchanging like Advaita.
 Rather, he is talking about the unborn nature of dharma.
Buddhism Plain and Simple page 115, by Zen Teacher Steve Hagen:
With
 the two types of views there are two kinds of minds. As human beings, 
we all have what we could call ordinary minds - the mind that you've 
always assumed you've had. It's a calculating mind, a discriminating 
mind, a fragmented mind. It's the mind of ordinary consciousness, the 
mind of self and other. We generally think of it as "my mind."
But
 there's another mind that is unborn, ungrown, and unconditioned. Unlike
 "your mind," it is unbound, for there is nothing beyond it. To this 
Mind, there is no "other mind."
This
 Mind is nothing other than the Whole. It's simply thus, the fabric of 
the world itself - the ongoing arising and falling away that are matter,
 energy and events.
Speaking of this Mind, the great Chinese Zen master Huang Po said,
All
 buddhas and ordinary people are just One Mind... This Mind is beyond 
all measurements, names, oppositions: this very being is It; as soon as 
you stir your mind you turn away from It.
This
 Mind is self-evident - it's always switched on, so to speak. We can - 
and, in fact, we do - see It in every moment. If we would refrain from 
stirring our minds (rest our frontal lobes, as my Zen teacher used to 
say) and let our conceptualising die down, like the ripples on a pond 
after the stirring wind has ceased, we would realise - we would know 
Mind directly.
(Steve Hagen)
.
.
.
Ultimate
 Truth, on the other hand, is direct perception. And what is directly 
perceived (as opposed to conceive) is that no separate, individualised 
things exist as such. There's nothing to be experienced but this 
seamless, thoroughgoing relativity and flux.
In other words, there are no particulars, but only thus.
....
When
 the Buddha spoke of individuals, he often used a different term: 
"stream." Imagine a stream flowing-eonstantly moving and changing, 
always different from one moment to the next. Most of us see ourselves 
as corks floating in a stream, persisting things moving along in the 
stream of time. But this is yet another frozen view. 
According
 to this view, everything in the stream changes except the cork. While 
we generally admit to changes in our body, our mind, our thoughts, our 
feelings, our understandings, and our beliefs, we still believe, "I 
myself don't change. I'm still me. I'm an unchanging cork in an 
ever-changing stream." This is precisely what we believe the self to 
be-something that doesn't change. 
The
 fact is, however, that there are no corks in the stream. There is only 
stream. What we conceptualize as "cork" is also stream. We are like 
music. Music, after all, is a type of stream. Music exists only in 
constant flow and flux and change. Once the movement stops, the music is
 no more. It exists not as a particular thing, but as pure coming and 
going with no thing that comes or goes. 
Look
 at this carefully. If this is true-how a stream exists, how music 
exists, and how we exist-see how it is that when we insert the notion of
 "I" we've posited some little, solid entity that floats along, not as 
stream, but like a cork in a stream. We see ourselves as solid corks, 
not as the actual stream we are. 
If
 we are the stream, what is it that experiences the flux, the flow, the 
change? The Buddha saw that there is no particular thing that is having 
an experience. There is experience, but no experiencer. There is 
perception, but no perceiver. There is consciousness, but no self that 
can be located or identified.

AWAKENINGTOREALITY.COM
Buddhism Is Not What You Think
Soh Wei Yu
06
In the seen only the seen is also no seer, no seeing and nothing seen
John Tan: If seen is just seen, then there is no movement.
Soh: Movement?
John Tan: In the seen only the seen is also no seer, no seeing and nothing seen.  There is no changing nor unchanging.
Soh: Ic..
Soh: The nancy also said the same.. nothing changing or unchanging
[10:15 pm, 05/10/2021] John Tan: That is ultimate view.
[10:16
 pm, 05/10/2021] John Tan: Conventionally, there is changes and 
impermanence and origination in dependence as the right way of 
expression.
Nancy:
We are infinite reflections without a source 
Echoes spinning 
Fleeting images 
Flowing thought dreams 
Without sides or a middle
Dancing without movement or non movement 
without direction or non direction 
There are no colors or rainbows without us
Without an imaginary persona there is no imaginary heart 
Beating 
Loving all this 
That is not this 
Or that 
Or both 
Or neither 
There is no one to be free or bound 
Or gaze as infinite awe painting the dream scape with colors that cannot be seen
Only felt 
No one to fall into your unutterable beauty 
Or fall endlessly in love with you 
….
At first this felt like, 'I am all this!"
Then it felt like, 'All this!'
Later it was .... 'Not even nothing...'
….
no eyes apart from the seeing....
no ears apart from the hearing
no sound separate from the listening...
no wind separate from your cheek
no love separate from your heart
no inside 
no outside 
the horizon that held the sky apart from the sea
untied itself 
the timeline from birth to death collapsed
as well as the time walker
and left this knowing and feeling that there are no things
simply an atemporal seamless flow without movement or non movement....
no things to be permeant or changing ... 
feels like the first and last kiss .... 
a constant union of what was never apart...
Soh: Sounds like she went through the stages
John Tan: 

AWAKENINGTOREALITY.COM
In the seen only the seen is also no seer, no seeing and nothing seen
Soh Wei Yu
“The
 next understanding you must have after anatta and emptiness is to know 
that all qualities similar to those that are described and sounded 
ontological are always manifesting presently, spontaneously and 
effortlessly after the purification of anatta and emptiness insights. 
That is, spontaneous arising is not just saying responding 
automatically. It is the manifestation of these blissful characteristics
 of nature spontaneously. Non-arising, unmoving, unchanging, pristiness,
 clarity... spontaneously present” – John Tan, 2009
“Mr.
 T: I cannot find a ground a base, to identify with, everything is 
changing constantly. Arising and passing away. All of experience, where 
do I stand?
Kyle
 Dixon: Arising and passing away are characteristics of conditioned 
phenomena. As practitioners of the buddhadharma, our aim is to fully 
realize the unconditioned nature of phenomena, free of arising and 
cessation. That natural and perfect nature, is the true refuge.
Upon realizing that nature, the Buddha stated the following:
I
 have obtained the ambrosia of Dharma,� profound, peaceful, immaculate, 
luminous and unconditioned. �Even though I explain it, no one will 
understand, �I think I will remain in the forest without speaking. �Free
 from words, untrained by speech,� suchness, the nature of Dharma, is 
like space� free from the movements of mind and intellect, �supreme, 
amazing, the sublime knowledge. �Always like space, �nonconceptual, 
luminous, �the teaching without periphery or center �is expressed in 
this Dharmawheel. �Free from existence and nonexistence,� beyond self 
and nonself, �the teaching of natural nonarising �is expressed in this 
Dharmawheel.
— The Ārya-lalitavistara-nāma-mahāyāna-sūtra” – Kyle Dixon, 2021
Labels: Anatta, Emptiness, Movement, Nancy Neithercut 0 comments | |
Soh Wei Yu
Also, John Tan said before:
“This
 is correct.  "Permanent" is not referring to something not undergoing 
change, it refers to the absence of causing of arising.”
Michael Hernandez
His
 comment on not having views is important. A view sets up a refuge of a 
temporal permanence. I have them. It is a world view. If we get down to 
what the view really is it's more that a thought. It's a feeling 
associated with it. 
For
 example I feel a certain way about anti-vaxxers. I have this view which
 is really a feeling that they are ignorant. But that feeling is dislike
 or disgust. It is a subtle tension around the eyes down into the the 
gut. This view can lead to thoughts of reasonings.
A view is my reality right now. 
I
 have a view when I perceive an attractive person. I like their looks. 
It occurs to me to they would be a desirable mate. That view exists 
entirely in my imagination but certainly I feel that attraction. I 
certainly identify with that perception feeling. My eyes might not be 
directed at the person but my peripheral vision has them located while 
all others are blurred out. It is a very temporal experience. And it's 
my view that they are attractive at this time and place. While they 
maybe attractive to another person our attractions on examination don't 
match completely on all points. We slightly different views yet mostly 
agree. That's politics, religion and ideologies. 
They are absolutely based on now as views change.
Soh Wei Yu
The
 most crucial views to penetrate is the false view of 'existence' and 
'non-existence'. Because that is the root of all grasping and suffering.
 You cannot grasp 'something' unless it is established to be existent 
(an attractive person, for example) or that existent thing becomes 
non-existent (such as the death of a loved one). Non-existence of 
something depends on apprehending an existent to begin with. What is 
non-arisen or has never originated to begin with cannot end up in 
non-existence. The extremes of existence and non-existence is the 
essential ignorance which reifies all self and phenomena into apparent 
reality, which is samsara.
Freedom
 from extremes and the viewless view of emptiness however does not 
necessarily mean exactly having no views. Even Buddha had views which 
may be considered religious or even political (just a quick example: he 
was against the Brahmanic interpretation of the caste system, he did not
 support the caste system but was pro equality of all castes). But of 
course he is not attached to these views as he simply had no attachments
 whatsoever (otherwise he cannot be called a Buddha or an Arahant). Some
 views, be it religious, political, ideological, can be harmful and must
 be refuted strongly. Such as the anti-vax ideology. That is however not
 an excuse to have hate for these people. Instead, we should feel more 
compassion for them. However to shun politics/ideology can be another 
form of spiritual bypassing. Spirituality is not an escapism from the 
mundane, it is full engagement and full involvement without attachment. 
Politics is one of the many arenas of mundane life, and even if you may 
be politically apathetic, we do exercise our voting rights in a 
democratic country. Spiritual life and mundane life are not two.
“Actually
 there is no forcing. All the 4 aspects in I AMness are fully expressed 
in anatta as I told you. If aliveness is everywhere, how is one not to 
engage… it is a natural [tendency] to explore in [various] arena[s] and 
enjoy in business, family, spiritual practices... I [am] involve[d] in 
Finance, business, society, nature, spirituality, yoga...

.
 I don't find it efforting… You just don't have to boast about this and 
that and be non-dual and open.” - John Tan/Thusness, 2019
Soh Wei Yu
On how emptiness is not having no views:
[10:43
 PM, 6/6/2020] John Tan: There are two folds to it.  Any view is 
ultimately empty... But freeing one from constructs and 
conceptualization has a different meaning to me. Like when see through 
self, we realized anatta. It is not the freeing, but must also involves 
the arising insight and wisdom.
I
 think I mentioned I am not into without view. The freeing from seeing 
through self is not a form of "not knowing", contrary it is deep wisdom 
that allows one to understand our nature directly.”
From Dharmawheel, Dzogchen teacher Acarya Malcolm Smith says Madhyamaka is not a simple minded “I have no view” proposition:
“gad rgyangs wrote:
He clearly says in the VV that he has no view to defend. Do you think he was wrong about himself?
Malcolm wrote:
He
 states in the VV that he has no propositions/thesis concerning svabhāva
 as defined by his opponents. He does not say he has no views at all. 
For example, he clearly states in the MMK that he prefers the Sammitya 
view of karma.
Your
 claim is similar to the mistaken assertion made by some who claim that 
Candrakirti never resorts to syllogisms, which in fact he clearly does 
in the opening lines of the MAV. What Candra disputes is not syllogistic
 reasoning in its entirety, but rather, syllogistic reasoning applied to
 emptiness.
Likewise,
 he clearly asserts the view in the VV that there is no svabhāva in 
phenomena. Madhyamaka is not a simple minded "I have no view" 
proposition.
...
"Madhyamaka is not a simple minded "I have no view" proposition."
...
gad rgyangs wrote:
then why does the MMK end thusly? MMK 27.30:
I salute Gautama, who, based on compassion,
taught the true Dharma for the abandonment of all views.
Malcolm wrote:
"All views" here is summarized as two in chapter fifteen: i.e. substantial existence and nonexistence.”
“The
 purpose of the view is to open the mind up fully without background, 
duality and inherency.  So that experience is fully open, direct, 
immediate and without boundaries. Chariot and its basis are not a cause 
and effect relationship, they originate in dependence.” - John Tan, 2019
“The
 truth of the matter is that “pacification of views” is directly related
 to the realization of emptiness. If you have not realized emptiness, 
then you have no business talking about a lack of view, because you 
still perceive conditioned phenomena and are therefore cognitively 
endowed with “views.” Those views can only be pacified through directly 
realizing non-arising.
For
 some reason you mistakenly believe that “no view” means something like 
withholding a view, but it has nothing at all to do with that.” – Kyle 
Dixon, 2021

