• An interesting conversation to observe for sure! Rupert consistently defining enlightenment as I am, pure being. I think you could tell Adya disagreed, but tried to find points of agreement instead. Rupert is absolutely non compromising on substantialist non duality.
    It’s something I ponder often since I have close friends (loving, caring compassionate friends) that are strict advaita. Trying to find the balance between disagreement and unity. I know a lot of people are absolutely non compromising in certain insights just like Rupert is, but how do you approach talking with, being friends with and loving people of other traditions? I don’t think there’s anyone here but certainly on Reddit and places there is a lot of people both Buddhist and Advaita who fight each other as if it was catholic vs Protestant, dogma vs dogma.
    For me I love my advaita friends and can talk and hang around with them all day. How do you approach situations like this? And how do you think you would behave if you were sitting in that roundtable discussion with Adya and Rupert?

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  • Soh Wei Yu
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    I cannot agree with Advaita views on ultimate reality nor that it leads to Nirvana/liberation, but I accept that it can lead people to better insights into consciousness, which is precious in itself and so is a positive thing. Even vehicles of samsara are the vehicles of Samantabhadra, as Dzogchen teacher Acarya Malcolm Smith said.
    “Indeed, Samantabhadra claims that all vehicles are his vehicles, he then sets out which of those vehicles view keep one trapped in samsara (60), and he then presents the nine vehicles which lead one out of it.
    though my vehicles are inconceivable,
    they are included in two categories:
    samsara and nirvana.
    Further, samsara includes: [53/b]
    the false view and the eternalist view.
    The false vehicle
    is held to be 360 beliefs in a self.
    The nine vehicles of course, are the vehicles of nirvana.”

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  • Soh Wei Yu
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    “Ok, first of all. If you were never a Christian, or a Hindu, or never took teachings from such a master, for example, Hatha Yoga, Ayurveda, etc., then there is no need. But if you have taken teachings from such people, then you can carry this into your Ati Guru Yoga.
    When we do refuge in the DC -- we generally do not do an elaborate refuge tree visualization, we do the One Jewel Unifies All system, so the principle is still the same.
    It is not about including Jesus, Mohammed and so on in some imaginary refuge tree; it is about honoring the sources of all of our spritual knowledge, so the idea is completely different. It is about honoring all of our teachers, no matter what Dharma tradition they come from in the nine yānas. All Yānas belong to Samantabhadra, including the so called samsaric ones. This is the principle that is in play here. The Rigpa Rangshar states:
    Though my yānas are inconceivable, when summarized,
    they are included in two, samsara and nirvana
    This means that all Dharma systems, "Buddhist" and "Non-Buddhist" are vehicles of Samantabhadra. If you have a connection with any of them, you unify them through the principle of Guru Yoga and go beyond limitations.
    M”


  • Soh Wei Yu
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    Then as for how to behave, that depends. Personally I do not try to condition people unless they express interest. If people are here in AtR, I assume they have an interest. But outside, maybe not. For friends and family, sometimes I may not even pass them Buddhist books or AtR material, I pass them The Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle, which is decidedly non-Buddhist and close to the Advaitic variety of insights.
    For Rupert Spira, if I meet him in person, I might possibly bring up the topic of anatman if it is a topic of discussion or he expresses interest after I brought it up. I suspect not, due to how steeped he is in his tradition and worldview. If he is not interested, we can discuss other things, just not on ultimate reality.
    John Tan has another student which he told me years ago. He said half jokingly that he has a few different types of disciples - a computer programming student - someone else, that he passed his essence to him. He has a disciple on yoga, and he passed all his knowledge and essence to him (their yoga and yogic asanas are way too expert for my level to catch up). I am his “anatta disciple”. And of course he has many business students, many people and multimillionaires he made rich.
    I asked him has he discussed anatta with his yoga student? He said no, not at all. That person is spiritual but of the new age variety. He did guide him to deeper levels, very deep levels of I AMness. Different gradations of nirvikalpa samadhi, probably. That is the scope and extent of that student’s interest and view, probably.

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    David Mcdonald
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    Soh Wei Yu Yeah great answer! Have you ever seen anyone like Rupert who is very
    Steeped in advaita realise Annata? I can think of Greg Goode


    Soh Wei Yu
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    David Mcdonald yes there are a number of people i know. But maybe not as well known as greg.
    You can also check out soto zen teacher alex weith (he is in this group but quiet) and archaya mahayogi shridhar rana rinpoche. Both have realization authenticated by advaita masters as profound and asked to teach. Both later progressed to buddhist realisations.
    See
    A Zen Exploration of the Bahiya Sutta
    AWAKENINGTOREALITY.COM
    A Zen Exploration of the Bahiya Sutta
    A Zen Exploration of the Bahiya Sutta

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  • Matt Packard
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    David Mcdonald I just came across the quote below in Daniel Ingram's book, thought it was relevant to this discussion. I've heard Shinzen Young say something very similar.
    "At their very skillful best, true self and no-self teachings are talking about the same thing, just from different perspectives. In short, when the artificial boundaries and misperceptions fall away, there is just what is happening. You could say in some strange way that all this was “you”, or you could equally state that the whole field was “not you”."
    Obv a matter of hot debate around these parts, just sharing his perspective for fun (not trying to irritate Soh, I pinky swear).


  • Soh Wei Yu
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    Misleading.
    Excerpts:
    4. On Non-Dual Experience, Realization and Anatta
    I have just casually gone through some of your forum discussions. Very enlightening discussions and well presentation of my 7-phases-of-insights but try not to over-emphasize it as a model; it should not be taken as a definite model of enlightenment nor should you use it as a framework to validate others' experiences and insights. Simply take it as a guide along your spiritual journey.
    You are right to differentiate non-dual experience from non-dual realization and non-dual realization from the insight of anatta. We have discussed this umpteem times. Non-dual experience in the context we are using refers to the experience of no-subject-object division. The experience is much like putting two candle flames together where the boundary between the flames becomes indistinguishable. It is not a realization but simply a stage, an experience of unity between the observer and the observed where the conceptual layer that divides is temporarily suspended in a meditative state. This you have experienced.
    Non-dual realization on the other hand is a deep understanding that comes from seeing through the illusionary nature of subject-object division. It is a natural non-dual state that resulted from an insight that arises after rigorous investigation, challenge and a prolonged period of practice that is specially focused on ‘No-Self’. Somehow focusing on “No-Self” will spark a sense of sacredness towards the transient and fleeting phenomena. The sense of sacredness that is once the monopoly of the Absolute is now also found in the Relative. The term ‘No-Self’ like Zen-Koan may appear cryptic, senseless or illogical but when realized, it is actually obviously clear, direct and simple. The realization is accompanied with the experience that everything is being dissolved into either:
    1. An ultimate Subject or
    2. As mere ‘flow of phenomenality’
    In whatever the case, both spells the end of separateness; experientially there is no sense of two-ness and the experience of unity can be quite overwhelming initially but eventually it will lose its grandeur and things turn quite ordinary. Nevertheless, regardless of whether the sense of Oneness is derived from the experience of ‘All as Self’ or ‘as simply just manifestation’, it is the beginning insight of “No-Self”. The former is known as One-Mind and the later, No-Mind.
    In Case 1 it is usual that practitioners will continue to personify, reify and extrapolate a metaphysical essence in a very subtle way, almost unknowingly. This is because despite the non-dual realization, understanding is still orientated from a view that is based on subject-object dichotomy. As such it is hard to detect this tendency and practitioners continue their journey of building their understanding of ‘No-Self based on Self’.
    For Case 2 practitioners, they are in a better position to appreciate the doctrine of anatta. When insight of Anatta arises, all experiences become implicitly non-dual. But the insight is not simply about seeing through separateness; it is about the thorough ending of reification so that there is an instant recognition that the ‘agent’ is extra, in actual experience it does not exist. It is an immediate realization that experiential reality has always been so and the existence of a center, a base, a ground, a source has always been assumed.
    To mature this realization, even direct experience of the absence of an agent will prove insufficient; there must also be a total new paradigm shift in terms of view; we must free ourselves from being bonded to the idea, the need, the urge and the tendency of analyzing, seeing and understanding our moment to moment of experiential reality from a source, an essence, a center, a location, an agent or a controller and rest entirely on anatta and Dependent Origination.
    Therefore this phase of insight is not about singing eloquently the non-dual nature of an Ultimate Reality; contrary it is deeming this Ultimate Reality as irrelevant. Ultimate Reality appears relevant only to a mind that is bond to seeing things inherently, once this tendency dissolves, the idea of a source will be seen as flawed and erroneous. Therefore to fully experience the breadth and depth of no-self, practitioners must be prepared and willing to give up the entire subject-object framework and be open to eliminate the entire idea of a ‘source’. Rob expressed very skillfully this point in his talk:
    One time the Buddha went to a group of monks and he basically told them not to see Awareness as The Source of all things. So this sense of there being a vast awareness and everything just appears out of that and disappears back into it, beautiful as that is, he told them that’s actually not a skillful way of viewing reality. And that is a very interesting sutta, because it’s one of the only suttas where at the end it doesn’t say the monks rejoiced in his words.
    This group of monks didn’t want to hear that. They were quite happy with that level of insight, lovely as it was, and it said the monks did not rejoice in the Buddha’s words. (laughter) And similarly, one runs into this as a teacher, I have to say. This level is so attractive, it has so much of the flavor of something ultimate, that often times people are unbudgeable there.
    What then is the view that Buddhism is talking about without resorting to a ‘source’? I think the post by Vajrahridaya in the thread ‘What makes Buddhism different’ of your forum succinctly and concisely expressed the view, it is well written. That said, do remember to infinitely regress back into this vivid present moment of manifestation – as this arising thought, as this passing scent – Emptiness is Form. 🙂
    Labels: Anatta, Non Dual |
    Are all religions' nonduality the same?
    AWAKENINGTOREALITY.COM
    Are all religions' nonduality the same?
    Are all religions' nonduality the same?

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  • Soh Wei Yu
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    01
    Are all religions' nonduality the same?
    John tan commented on one of Adyashanti’s videos back in 2020, “ It is a good video but a bit long. There is also genuine distinction between All as Self which is Non-dual but substantialist and no-self that is Non-dual and non-substantialist. One does not need to take side but have to b objective and unbiased. Hence clearly discerning the differences and implications r key to understanding how the mind reifies and how confusions arise. Therefore on top of experiences which is quite difficult to differentiate clearly the two in experience (all as Self and No-Self) and authentication of pristine consciousness in real time, clearly seeing how the layers obscures is part and parcel of maturing our experiences and insights.”
    Shared:
    "They point to different insights, and there are different insights even for nondual, substantialist and nonsubstantialist. David loy isnt clear about this point
    His original nonduality book, he seems to confuse anatta with no mind state. Not clear about anatta as realization
    He is conflating all is self with no self insight
    The implications are huge [different view and realization]
    (Soh: Read this article on the two different types of nondual insight, one of John Tan's 'must read' articles: 4) Realization and Experience and Non-Dual Experience from Different Perspectives )
    His latest book seems to be clear about anatta realization i think
    I wrote back in 2011 April,
    09 Apr `11, 9:39PM
    Originally posted by An Eternal Now:
    This is why I said most masters are still at the phase of substantial non-dual.
    As for David Loy, he is a little unique. It could be that he has realized Anatta... but his insight is shadowed by his attempt to link up the religions (he was doing inter-religious comparison). Therefore he was unable to differentiate substantial non-dualism from anatta. In his book 'Non-duality', this is clearly the case.
    However it is also likely that he is still in substantial non-dual phase.
    Thusness replied:
    Wow...If I am not wrong, David Loy is a qualified Zen Teacher and a Ph. D in Philosophy. For you to make such a comment , you must be doubtless of your realization.
    I am glad of your confidence and clarity of your realization. This is the difference between having insights (clear seeing of the nature of experiential reality) and having mere experiences of no-mind and non-dual.
    In my opinion, even though the insight is clear, to be like what Ted has remarked in the article Where There Is No Cold or Heat will still take some time. Practice diligently and enter deeply into the 6 entires and exits "where there is no cold or heat". This experience too can be as natural as breathing in our moment to moment of experience if we embrace the right view fully. Have no doubt about it. 🙂
    But not everyone that realises anatta are clear about the different phases of insights, the impact of view experience realization etc.
    The same for alan watts although his insights are clear
    [12:16 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: U have to understand Alan Watts equates Taoism, Buddhism and Advaita as the same because he sees the beauty of unity.
    [12:16 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Also, he sees a state of no-mind in all the teachings
    [12:16 AM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: Sounds like david loy
    [12:16 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Yes
    [12:17 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: This is not that they do not have the insights
    [12:17 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: But they see the beauty
    [12:18 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: However they may not differentiate insight from experience and view
    [12:18 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: And may not see the importance of that...
    [12:18 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: So it depends
    [12:19 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: All have different conditions, how one penetrates the teaching differs.
    [12:20 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: I find Alan Watts very insightful though his life doesn't reflect that...lol
    [12:20 AM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: Lol
    [12:21 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Actually I m still looking for texts that can differentiate them clearly
    [12:21 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Or books
    [12:22 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: On fact Malcolm is already very unique
    [12:22 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Lol
    [12:22 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Kyle also
    [12:24 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Dzogchen however seems to equate DO from only the afflictive point of view unlike the gelug, they put lots of emphasis on DO not from afflictive perspective.
    [12:25 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: DO is the king of reasoning, it is the middle path and the essence of Buddhism.
    [12:26 AM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: texts that can differentiate advaita from emptiness/D.O.?
    [12:26 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Emptiness cannot b understood apart from DO.
    [12:27 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Texts or books that and differentiate experience from insight and present the view in relation to anatta experience.
    [12:27 AM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: oic..


  • Soh Wei Yu
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    [12:28 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: The same experience when experienced from substantialist view will end up subsuming.
    [12:30 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: But we see buddhism many spoke of a state of no mind but using DO and Emptiness not as the presentation of the right view but as a path of disassociation towards an ultimate awareness.
    [12:30 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Teacher cheb seems to b that approach too.
    [12:30 AM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: yeah..
    [12:30 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: In fact Theravada teaching is more anatta
    [12:30 AM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: ven. hui lu seems different in that regard
    [12:31 AM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: in that video he criticised other religion eternalism and said "permanence" is simply the emptiness and dependent arising of impermanence
    [12:31 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: However they r anatta in no-self but view isn't strong
    [12:31 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Yes ven hui Lu is quite good
    [12:31 AM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: oic..
    [12:32 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: What I din see in hui Lu is it remains as wisdom teaching
    [12:33 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Experience wise I prefer that 王洪亮?
    [12:33 AM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: "What I din see in hui Lu is it remains as wisdom teaching" what do u mean
    [12:34 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Although hui Lu comment is good and clear, anatta isn't clear.
    [12:35 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: The experience no mind due to anatta insight then into DO and Emptiness is important.
    [12:35 AM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: "
    再来,第一,令诸众生获得十四种无畏功德,即【1、不自观音以观观者,】因为观世音菩萨修耳根圆通的。不自观音就是不会拿这个音声……以观观者,第一个“观”叫做能观,“观者”就是所观。他不会拿这个音声,来变作一个能观跟所观。意思就是:观世音菩萨已经证得金刚三昧,就是心境一如的意思。不自观音就是不拿这个外在的音声,化为一个能观,一个所观,因为音声就是清净自性的缘起相,没有二相,缘起相就是真如相。所以,不自观音以观观者,观世音菩萨不会拿外面的这个音声,化作一个能观、所观。众生都是这样,听到美好的音声,心都跑掉了,一个能听,一个所听,心就跑掉了,就迷迷茫茫了。观世音菩萨知道,音声是幻灭的,幻灭就是实相的显现,缘起就是实相。【使受苦众生即得解脱,】让受苦的众生就得到解脱,【是为无畏。】"
    "
    大 悟之人不见法。他没有任何东西,因为法法本空,法法不相到。也不见身。为什么?四大本空,五阴本来就没有“我”。所以,什么叫做照见五蕴皆空?色即是空, 受想行识即是空。为什么讲色即是空?色即是空,空就是佛性,色就是佛性的展现。所以,真正的悟道的人,他的心性流露在一切缘起法里面,即于生灭,即得不生 不灭的无为法,也没有所谓有为跟无为,刹那即见永恒,永恒就是刹那,平等不二。 因此我们要了解:不见法,也不见身。身,地水火风所构成的,四大本来就空,五蕴——色受想行识,本来就是不可得。一切法,智者了知一切法,本来就无我。这无我里面,当下就是佛性。所以,佛法讲否定的时候,凡所有相,皆是假相。讲肯定的时候,尘尘都是真心,每一个颗粒微尘都是真心的影现,一切法全部都是真。 当他破除无明烦恼、破除执着、破除分别的时候,完全都是真心展现的,尘尘尽是真,没有一法不是真心,这个是站在肯定的角度。站在否定的角度,是凡所有相不 可得。站在本体界的角度,凡所有相,都是本体界的展现,都是清净心的影现,没有一法不是真实。"
    - ven hui lu
    [12:36 AM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: this is still more like nondual, not anatta?
    [12:36 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: I got to read
    [12:36 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: What is that Zen teacher name?
    [12:36 AM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: 洪文亮?
    [12:36 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Yes
    [12:37 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: U see hui Lu is speaking from highest form of teaching
    [12:38 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Actually very good
    [12:38 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: U should pass your mom
    [12:39 AM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: ok
    [12:40 AM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: I also like 洪文亮。 i think these two, hong wen liang and hui lu fa shi are the only chinese masters i really resonate lol
    [12:41 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Yeah only two that is really clear
    [12:41 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: But u cannot read it from ur understanding
    [12:41 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: It is not suitable for many ppl
    [12:41 AM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: What do u mean
    [12:42 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: This text is very good. But not suitable for many ppl.
    [12:43 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: It involves anatta insight, emptiness and DO, clarity from anatta perspective.
    [12:44 AM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: oic..
    [12:46 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: He should say 尘尘假相都是真心
    [12:48 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: The text that I wrote for u to teacher Chen, paste it here
    [12:52 AM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: 深入观行, 婆酰迦经。
    了悟经旨, 直指无心。
    无执能所, 忘却身心。
    方知见性, 只需明相。
    明相见性, 见色明心。
    真心空性, 随缘显相。
    迷时幻相, 悟时真心。
    山河大地, 原是法身。
    色声香味, 尽是妙心。
    [12:52 AM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Lol
    -------


  • Soh Wei Yu
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    Also, daniel ingram has realised anatta, but not shinzen young. The latter is more of I AM to one mind imo


  • Soh Wei Yu
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    Daniel true self no self article was also written very long ago. Even in mctb1 which was mostly written even before he achieved “4th path”. He never really talks in these terms anymore, unless to a specific audience as skillful means


  • Soh Wei Yu
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    On the other hand, even John Tan said this, while not downplaying there is vast difference between “All is Self” and No Self insights:
    Likewise John Tan said before, John Tan, 2007: “No-self does not need observation. No-self is a form of realisation. To observe is to track the 'self': where is it, what is it - that 'sense of self', who, where and what... till we thoroughly understood it is an illusion, till we know there is awareness, but there never was a 'Self/self'. Isn't awareness 'self'? Well, you can say so if you insist...ehehhe
    (1:59 PM) Thusness: if there is non-dual, no background, no mine and 'I', impermanence, not a form of entity and yet we still want to call it 'Self', so be it. 😛
    (1:59 PM) Thusness: its okie...
    (1:59 PM) Thusness: lol”
    John Tan, 2020: “Brahman or not doesn't matter as long Brahman is not any transpersonal being in a wonderland, but is the very relative phenomena that we misunderstood.””


  • Matt Packard
    Top contributor
    Soh Wei Yu That's kind of what I thought Daniel was saying. He says "You could say in some strange way that all this was “you”, or you could equally state that the whole field was “not you”.
    Anyway - just thought to point that to David who seemed to be looking for common ground with his Advaita friends.


  • Soh Wei Yu
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    The difference is that Daniel did not emphasize enough the vast difference between nondual understood from substantialist nondual vs anatta as explained this excerpt. This can be misleading if not enough emphasis is given on the difference. I also do not think Daniel thinks Advaita is similar to Buddhism, especially not in his more recent videos and posts.


  • Soh Wei Yu
    Admin
    Top contributor
    Matt Packard this part is crucial:
    “Matt Packard
    Misleading.
    Excerpts:
    4. On Non-Dual Experience, Realization and Anatta
    I have just casually gone through some of your forum discussions. Very enlightening discussions and well presentation of my 7-phases-of-insights but try not to over-emphasize it as a model; it should not be taken as a definite model of enlightenment nor should you use it as a framework to validate others' experiences and insights. Simply take it as a guide along your spiritual journey.
    You are right to differentiate non-dual experience from non-dual realization and non-dual realization from the insight of anatta. We have discussed this umpteem times. Non-dual experience in the context we are using refers to the experience of no-subject-object division. The experience is much like putting two candle flames together where the boundary between the flames becomes indistinguishable. It is not a realization but simply a stage, an experience of unity between the observer and the observed where the conceptual layer that divides is temporarily suspended in a meditative state. This you have experienced.
    Non-dual realization on the other hand is a deep understanding that comes from seeing through the illusionary nature of subject-object division. It is a natural non-dual state that resulted from an insight that arises after rigorous investigation, challenge and a prolonged period of practice that is specially focused on ‘No-Self’. Somehow focusing on “No-Self” will spark a sense of sacredness towards the transient and fleeting phenomena. The sense of sacredness that is once the monopoly of the Absolute is now also found in the Relative. The term ‘No-Self’ like Zen-Koan may appear cryptic, senseless or illogical but when realized, it is actually obviously clear, direct and simple. The realization is accompanied with the experience that everything is being dissolved into either:
    1. An ultimate Subject or
    2. As mere ‘flow of phenomenality’
    In whatever the case, both spells the end of separateness; experientially there is no sense of two-ness and the experience of unity can be quite overwhelming initially but eventually it will lose its grandeur and things turn quite ordinary. Nevertheless, regardless of whether the sense of Oneness is derived from the experience of ‘All as Self’ or ‘as simply just manifestation’, it is the beginning insight of “No-Self”. The former is known as One-Mind and the later, No-Mind.
    In Case 1 it is usual that practitioners will continue to personify, reify and extrapolate a metaphysical essence in a very subtle way, almost unknowingly. This is because despite the non-dual realization, understanding is still orientated from a view that is based on subject-object dichotomy. As such it is hard to detect this tendency and practitioners continue their journey of building their understanding of ‘No-Self based on Self’.
    For Case 2 practitioners, they are in a better position to appreciate the doctrine of anatta. When insight of Anatta arises, all experiences become implicitly non-dual. But the insight is not simply about seeing through separateness; it is about the thorough ending of reification so that there is an instant recognition that the ‘agent’ is extra, in actual experience it does not exist. It is an immediate realization that experiential reality has always been so and the existence of a center, a base, a ground, a source has always been assumed.
    To mature this realization, even direct experience of the absence of an agent will prove insufficient; there must also be a total new paradigm shift in terms of view; we must free ourselves from being bonded to the idea, the need, the urge and the tendency of analyzing, seeing and understanding our moment to moment of experiential reality from a source, an essence, a center, a location, an agent or a controller and rest entirely on anatta and Dependent Origination.
    Therefore this phase of insight is not about singing eloquently the non-dual nature of an Ultimate Reality; contrary it is deeming this Ultimate Reality as irrelevant. Ultimate Reality appears relevant only to a mind that is bond to seeing things inherently, once this tendency dissolves, the idea of a source will be seen as flawed and erroneous. Therefore to fully experience the breadth and depth of no-self, practitioners must be prepared and willing to give up the entire subject-object framework and be open to eliminate the entire idea of a ‘source’. Rob expressed very skillfully this point in his talk:
    One time the Buddha went to a group of monks and he basically told them not to see Awareness as The Source of all things. So this sense of there being a vast awareness and everything just appears out of that and disappears back into it, beautiful as that is, he told them that’s actually not a skillful way of viewing reality. And that is a very interesting sutta, because it’s one of the only suttas where at the end it doesn’t say the monks rejoiced in his words.
    This group of monks didn’t want to hear that. They were quite happy with that level of insight, lovely as it was, and it said the monks did not rejoice in the Buddha’s words. (laughter) And similarly, one runs into this as a teacher, I have to say. This level is so attractive, it has so much of the flavor of something ultimate, that often times people are unbudgeable there.
    What then is the view that Buddhism is talking about without resorting to a ‘source’? I think the post by Vajrahridaya in the thread ‘What makes Buddhism different’ of your forum succinctly and concisely expressed the view, it is well written. That said, do remember to infinitely regress back into this vivid present moment of manifestation – as this arising thought, as this passing scent – Emptiness is Form. 🙂
    Labels: Anatta, Non Dual |”
    Are all religions' nonduality the same?
    AWAKENINGTOREALITY.COM
    Are all religions' nonduality the same?
    Are all religions' nonduality the same?

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  • Matt Packard
    Top contributor
    Sure, totally


  • Soh Wei Yu
    Admin
    Top contributor
    This is a also a nice excerpt from the link above
    John tan commented on one of Adyashanti’s videos back in 2020, “ It is a good video but a bit long. There is also genuine distinction between All as Self which is Non-dual but substantialist and no-self that is Non-dual and non-substantialist. One does not need to take side but have to b objective and unbiased. Hence clearly discerning the differences and implications r key to understanding how the mind reifies and how confusions arise. Therefore on top of experiences which is quite difficult to differentiate clearly the two in experience (all as Self and No-Self) and authentication of pristine consciousness in real time, clearly seeing how the layers obscures is part and parcel of maturing our experiences and insights.”


  • Matt Packard
    Top contributor
    Soh Wei Yu Nice. I think Adya is really good at being inclusive and diplomatic while still pointing very clearly.
    Sometimes it doesn't hurt to give benefit of doubt and look for common ground, which is how I took what Daniel was doing there. Sort of like Adyashanti in the discussion with Rupert.
    Thought maybe it was relevant to David's question. I understand your concerns with it, noted.
    (also to ultra mega clarify - I am not taking that position myself! No self has really helped to cut through residual stuff around an ultimate essence, and brought much clarity)


  • Matt Packard
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    Soh Wei Yu Man you are totally seek and destroy with anything substantialist 😀


  • Soh Wei Yu
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    Need to be clear thats all.
    Not an issue of semantics.
    Excerpt based on john tan:
    “You'.
    A true and genuine practitioner must give rise to all these insights, and understand the causes and conditions that give rise to the experiences and not get mixed up. Many people get mixed up over different 'types' of 'no self'.
    For example, no-self of non-dual, no-self of anatta, non-inherent existence and impersonality, are all not refering to the same experience - but rather they are different results of dissolving certain aspect of the tendencies.
    Hence a practitioner must be sincere in his practice to clearly see, and not pretend that one knows. Otherwise practice is simply more mix-up, confusion, and nonsense. It is not that it cannot be known, it is just that the mind isn't clear enough to see the causes and conditions of arising.
    The Tendency to Extrapolate a Universal Consciousness
    AWAKENINGTOREALITY.COM
    The Tendency to Extrapolate a Universal Consciousness
    The Tendency to Extrapolate a Universal Consciousness

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  • Matt Packard
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    Soh Wei Yu Actually one of the best pieces of advice I got from Advaita teacher was something like "If you are going to use words you have to define them precisely." (when talking about matters of insight)
    It's very easy to take ideas and run with them and assume you know what's being said. I know I'm guilty of that sometimes. So clarity and precision are incredibly important. Cheers for your efforts.









  • Soh Wei Yu
    Admin
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    Typo: *discussed anatta with his yoga student


  • Soh Wei Yu
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    “I do not try to condition”
    Im guilty of sending 7 stages to a lot of reddit people who i thought may possibly benefit though. John tan didnt like that, of course 😂
    But some did progress from I AM or one mind to anatta after my sharing haha
    But i dont push further if they did not resonate.

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    David Mcdonald
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    Soh Wei Yu I’m one of those who benefited hugely! Don’t stop what you’re doing!


  • Carter Spinks
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    Soh Wei Yu and for that I am very grateful! 🙏


  • Aditya Prasad
    Top contributor
    David Mcdonald I recently posted to this group a piece that I hope helps accomplish something like that. It's still quite clunky though.


  • John Hoag
    When I try to watch, it shows
    This video is private
    How can I access it..?


  • Matt Packard
    Top contributor
    It's interesting because I enjoyed some of Rupert's stuff a few years ago, but felt he kept really leaning on his 'awareness first' model (basically subjective idealism), and ultimately didn't find it was going anywhere. I think his teacher, Francis Lucille, and HIS teacher, Jean Klein are at least a little more balanced and no so much in that subject only camp. But still very much substantialist.
    Adya is obv on a different level, but is a very gracious guy and very good at meeting people where they are and looking for common ground. That's why he's such an incredible teacher.
    For me, anyone on the path of awakening is a potential friend, because ultimately even first awakening is a rare and special thing in this world. I will have much more in common with that person than the average normie, even if we don't agree on finer points.
    But being 'uncompromising' can mean different things. If it means rigid, dogmatic, and unwilling to meet people where they are, then I don't find it too useful to be around. As Angelo said of people in the Tony Parsons camp (something like) 'I don't think that's uncompromising, I think it's unskillful'.
    If you are trying to communicate something, and the person is not agreeing, you are not going to get any farther by repeating it louder. Meeting people where they are and trying understand how they think is the path forward if you are genuinely trying share something with someone.
    I put experience first and conceptual frameworks second.


    Carter Spinks
    Top contributor
    Matt Packard well said.


  • Jarko Taivasmaa
    There are many kinds of people, conditions, temperaments, so many kinds of teachings are needed...
    whatabout in that one star system and that one planet there where ET:s have totally different kind of nervous systems 🤔😅😂 teachings here on planet earth seem to be like kindergarten level teachings in its best for them 😂🛸
    still this is all Mystery and it is unfolding its own without any individual wills and whatever we think about it.
    For sure there could arise experience what is good teaching or not for oneself and for others... put hard positioning oneself on the top seems to be attachment to structures or more subtle of states realization... in me arises feeling that it is distasteful...
    Just my two cents...

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    Jarko Taivasmaa
    PS. I felt that that roundtable conversation was beautiful unfolding of different kinds of insights and in the end they were many giving value to Meister Eckhart. Then I was feeling into Eckhart and he seem to have great love transmission. I like how Adya is talking about love/heart awakening in his teachings.


  • Jack Houston
    Off topic but where does one, as a young adult, find IRL friends interested in awakening/the path? 99% of my friends haven't even heard of the pop spiritual big timers of Eckart Tolle, Chopra etc..


    David Mcdonald
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    Jack Houston I personally only have 1 friend (who is advaita) who lives around me. Most friends are people just online from all around the world. It’s hard because this isn’t a popular topic really.
    Going to retreats, even online can help!


  • Soh Wei Yu
    Admin
    Top contributor
    I recommend finding a sangha.
    Which city do you live in?


    Jack Houston
    Soh Wei YuWashington D.C. area


  • Soh Wei Yu
    Admin
    Top contributor
    Sky Above Great Wind | Zen Community Washington DC
    SKYABOVEZEN.ORG
    Sky Above Great Wind | Zen Community Washington DC
    Sky Above Great Wind | Zen Community Washington DC
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