Soh

A mirror is not cognizant of what is appearing in it. The opposite of cognizant would be ignorant, or oblivious, or “unaffected by”

StillJustJames
Book Contents 📖 TOC | PROEM | TRADITIONS | PRACTICES | INSIGHTS | DISCUSSION | BACK MATTER

The allegory of a mirror is often used to help individuals understand what awareness truly is like. It is said that, like a mirror, awareness reflects all manner of things and yet is never affected by what appears.

Unfortunately, there is a misleading problem lurking within this allegory which instills a very false understanding of awareness in those that take this allegory to heart, in the absence of direct meditational insights of the nature of awareness and of mind. Granted, the misunderstanding is already held to be the truth by most people who have not yet trained their minds, so they find this allegory very acceptable.

While awareness may be like a mirror which is unaffected by what it reflects, awareness isn’t reflecting anything, and in this important way, it is not like a mirror at all. That unaffectedness that is part of this allegory is ultimately true of awareness, but the image of reflections in a mirror is completely misleading.

It is true that a mirror reflects what is before it; but it also reverses that image relative to the viewer. Perhaps we should focus more on that reversal aspect of a mirror’s reflection than we do on its reflectivity, because describing awareness as being like a mirror — even allegorically — conveys an understanding of awareness that is completely opposite that which is necessarily true.

Awareness is not reflective. Images of things are not reflected in awareness. This would imply a dualism of subject and object, which is ok if we are talking about a video camera, or a set of eyes — mundane things, in other words— but it’s not ok when we are speaking of that which can be directly known (imperienced) as the ground or origin of all manifested phenomena, and which is nothing other than the very naturing of all those phenomena. But most of us miss that rather significant bump in the road to enlightened speech, in part because we are taught the allegory before we can counter its false structure with actual insight.

Yet, even in relation to its unaffectedness, this allegory is contrary to our everyday experience and leads us to a proliferation of reified “minds” which are used as necessary explanatory devices to get around the initial error of holding that awareness is unaffected by what appears “in the mirror.” This whole concept of “mind” is a fundamental error which causes us to impose a dualistic structure on a necessarily nondual reality.

Awareness is essentially the aspect of cognizance of the activity of this nondual reality — its responsiveness — and cognizance is not reflectivity. It is what it says: knowing; but not in the normal sense of someone having knowledge of something, especially something abstract, but rather, as a performance in which what is known is shown in the performance. Knowing how to dance is not a set of instructions on how to move — instead, it is the ability to move in certain ways. And having a trained mind is not the accumulation of facts and instructions on how to train your mind, read from some source text — rather, it is having done the practice for some length of time and thereby having accomplished the training of your mind.

So what is it that reality knows? Well, everything — you, me, this planet and the sense of beauty we discover when we see it for what it is, these words, every living thing, even those that we, because of our misunderstanding of reality, call ‘inanimate objects’. This world is the immediate expression of, and the ‘state of awareness’ of, reality — from the entangled perspectives of what is Now.

That idea of reflectivity splits the naturing of this display into two parts and then asserts that one — the awareness of the other part — is not affected by it; yet both are one and only one activity of naturing all that appears. Of course it is affected by the appearances; they are the natural activity of this naturing. It doesn’t mean that this nondual reality is permanently affected by anything at all, as all that appears is impermanent.

Unlike awareness, a mirror is not cognizant of what is appearing in it. The opposite of “cognizant” would be “ignorant,” or “oblivious,” and even “unaffected by,” and that last antonym is exactly what this allegory seems to convey, and is touted for conveying — thus this allegory illustrates the very opposite of awareness’s essential character and confuses all that hear it and try to make sense of what is being said, by imposing a conceptual understanding in the place of a direct imperience of the truth!

Awareness is affected by what it cognizes; unlike a mirror that is “unaffected by” its reflections because it is not cognizant of them — awareness is cognizance in essence and has no other nature.

We are told that awareness is unaffected by what appears in a misleading effort to convey an important point about what is more properly called “pure presence” and this leads me to the first proof that awareness is affected by what appears:

Pure presence is directly known once cognizance of the Now — the Now that is pure presence — is recognized. This recognition is a breakthrough, and the cognizance that marks its arrival is necessarily called awareness. That is to say, the meta-cognitive state that accompanies the direct imperience of the presence that we normally refer to as Now, is nothing other than awareness of the naturing of the appearances arising in that moment of insight. It is pointed out in Dzogchen, for example, that once we become aware of the Now as nothing other than pure presence we are liberated. What is liberated? The cognizant aspect of our naturing — which is what we are referring to when we say “awareness.” This is what is liberated from our normal absorption in the appearances — our forgetting that which we truly are. So what are these appearances? They are the collection of reifications that we hypostatize into our “self” with all that identifies ourself, and to which we have an emotional (egoic) attachment to (i.e., our thoughts, feelings, emotions, sensations, and perceptions).

This reveals that awareness is affected by what appears. How is awareness affected? Three ways: by remaining attentive in approval; by turning away in disapproval; and by remaining neutral, or unattached, so that neither approval or disapproval arises. These two affective responses, and one neutral state, guide, or condition, what can appear next as the coherent natural display of reality.

The second proof that awareness is affected is more subtle, relying on a clarification of exactly how awareness cognizes.

Awareness is not something other than the “presencing” (i.e. naturing) of appearances in the pure presence of the Now. The Now is not a time, and Awareness is not some thing. Awareness is not part of a thing. It is not even an “aspect” of a process — it is the process.

Fortunately, the very word itself, with its “-ness” suffix, signals that it is a conceptual abstraction of some characteristic of something, and that is completely wrong in structure in this case — a dead-giveaway that confusion reigns.

First, there is no entity to have an aspect, and second, because abstracting awareness away, making it a thing-in-itself (which is the linguistic meaning of “-ness”) completely obfuscates that it is not only the essential character of a process, it is the only character of the process, thus it is the process — not some aspect of it.

This is why when awareness is said to be the “ground” of all that arises a subtle erroneous understanding also arises because it is confusing “knowing” for the unknowable “ground” that stands under (understands) the appearances. This may sound like a word game, but what it means is that we can not know the ground, but only the appearances — because the knowing is the appearances.

Effectively, abstracting awareness removes the natural process (from itself), confusing us into thinking that something substantive has been uncovered. And by giving that abstraction substance in our minds we are led directly away from the Truth.

In regard to “pure presence,” awareness corresponds to the arising activity of “presencing,” which is pointed out to us — our first pointing out instruction — as the “knowing” of appearances. Unfortunately, the concept of knowledge is completely dualistic today, so awareness becomes a subject entity and the appearances become an object entity. This very subtle dualism starts the confusion, which snowballs as we go forward.

Pure presence is not something to be known in a positive sense, and is only recognized via this naturing or presencing of appearances Now — the Now being the perspective that we call “self” and take as evidence of the reality of things, but which is not any thing.

Why? Because the essence of pure presence is that (it) is empty of any characteristics or identity, thus there is nothing intelligible at all about (it), and yet, (it) is the presencing of all that appears (note the deficiency of language with its need for a subject in this last group of statements). And it is this point which does not entail awareness in the sense that is normally meant when we use the word “presence” in conjunction with the appearances — what, after all, would there be cognizance of?

Is this Idealism? No. There is no “mind” that is “minding the store” here. No “mind” creating fantasies, nor realities. Certainly no “mind” that is aware. And yet the word “mind” is so often used; but not to denote any actual thing that can be pointed to — it’s used simply to point you away from your foot, brain, and everything in between.

Thus the “purity” that is pointed to is the unknowable ground, since nothing positive can be said (or known) about it — which most mystical religious traditions refer to as “Godhead.” We cannot know if it is a chimerical artifact of our reasoning when we say or understand “Godhead,” or if it is an absolute Truth.

What we may suddenly recognize, however, is the Now in which all appearances present — the appearances that are ephemeral and are void of any inherent self nature, but which are, however, evidential. That is, evidence that can lead us to recognize — when we suddenly notice the “clearing” of the Now (of pure presence) — that the Now is not a time, but is the venue of all that appears.

“Now” is never affected by what appears — what, after all, is there to affect? But “Awareness” is always affected by what is appearing because this abstraction points to the very essence of cognizance, and thus the very essence of the process of naturing, which is always responsive. Or more literally, awareness is the cognizing of appearances now, limiting and guiding the possibility of what can arise “next,” and this is the sum total of the process.

To conflate awareness with pure presence is a mental crutch that conflates knowing with the unknowable — expressing “facts” about that to which no facts apply. When recognized, the Now is known to be pure presence. But pure presence is not a thing — there is no entity in the naturing — so what could be stained by what appears as cognized?

Thus, the problem is that in making awareness something, in the allegory of the mirror, we subtly separate it from the naturing of all appearances — of which it is the only essential character. Then we find the need to prove that it is unaffected by what it cognizes because otherwise there is no “pure” state. Yet we know that the essence of this naturing is cognizance, and cognizance is not the “nature of the naturing of appearances.” Such a construction is mentation gone wild.

In reality there is no entity; so how could there be any entities in the appearances that arise? And these — appearances and reality — are not two things, so why do we make awareness into something that must be kept clean? Perhaps it is only a lack of recognition directly imperienced that provides the fertile soil for the genesis of this confusion.

And finally, if you are not yet convinced, let me ask you: “What do you think happens when you become conscious of something that you have perceived or thought? Where, exactly, is the location of the cognizance that you are trying to describe and how does it come to be?” For in each proposed solution, you will always already have cognizance implied in the structure of your answer, regardless of what you are pointing to.

Soh


  • Soh Wei Yu
    Admin
    Liberating shadows has to do with overcoming the dichotomy of 'self' and 'otherness' imputed upon appearances.
    All the advises above are good.. just like to add this, sorry if it doesn't really address the OP.
    Session Start: Tuesday, 10 July, 2007
    (11:47 AM) AEN: wat u tink: Questioner: In certain situations in life I feel blocked by a fear which prevents me from acting. How can I be free from this obstacle?
     
    Jean Klein: First free yourself from the word, the concept, 'fear'. It is loaded with memory. Face only the perception. Accept the sensation
    completely. When the personality who judges and controls is completely absent, when there is no longer a psychological relationship with the
    sensation, it is really welcomed and unfolds. Only in welcoming without a welcomer can there be real transformation.
     
    We are in essence one with all existence; when we truly observe ourselves there is ultimately no observer, only observation - awareness.

    In simple openness which is welcoming you will come to accept and get to know your negative feelings, desires and fears. Once welcomed and nondirected attention to these feelings will burn themselves up, leaving only silence.”

    (11:48 AM) AEN: btw have u seen ur email?
    (11:48 AM) Thusness has changed his/her status to Online
    (11:49 AM) Thusness: what jean klein said is very true. 🙂
    (11:50 AM) Thusness: however the naked awareness must be practiced to quite a great stability to achieve that. It has to penetrate to the depth of our consciousness otherwise 'fear' will continue to surface and we would have to again accept the sensation till the "personality who judges and controls is completely absent" and that is being naked and bare.
    (11:51 AM) AEN: icic..
    (11:51 AM) Thusness: what you asked in the second question of ur mail is true. All the 3 aspects of self-liberation is regarding 'the sense of self'.
    (11:52 AM) AEN: oic
    (11:52 AM) Thusness: but it is again a form of perception shift that resulted in effortless liberation.
    (11:52 AM) AEN: icic..
    (11:52 AM) AEN: how about the other email... the v long one
    (11:52 AM) AEN: have u read?
    (11:52 AM) Thusness: because it is very long, i have not. 😛
    (11:52 AM) Thusness: ehehehe
    (11:53 AM) Thusness: wat are the 3-2-1 about?
    (11:54 AM) AEN: hahaha
    (11:55 AM) AEN: ...” You're not going to feel fear, you're going to feel, “I hate you so much I want to kill you” or “I'm so angry at you I could rip your head off” or something like that. So that's the way that you can - to some degree, on your own, and at least as a sort of introduction/initiation into it - you can get a sense of your shadow, because it's really helping you feel almost the opposite of what you think you're feeling. Like I say, just feeling your feelings and getting in touch with your feelings and all that, that won't get you in touch with your shadow, because your shadow is the opposite of what you feel, and that's just a pretty good definition of what the shadow is - the opposite of what you're consciously feeling...”
    (11:56 AM) AEN: “
    One of the things that's great about shadow work is it doesn't just have you say, feel into your feelings, get in touch with feelings, how do you feel about it, etc. It actually takes the opposite of how you feel and says “OK, feel that.” Because that's pretty much what your shadow is, is the opposite of what you're consciously aware of. So as I say, using the monster example again, if you are out of touch with your aggression, your anger - and, incidentally, for Buddhists to say, “well, you're never supposed to feel anger,” the point it, well, if you're unconsciously feeling it, you have to consciously feel it first, and then you can try to transcend it or transmute it - but for you to just go around saying, “I'm not going to feel anger now,” that just seals your repression. So the worst possible thing you can do if you have repressed negatives like anger or aggression is to get caught up in one of those practices that say that aggression is the root of all evil because your shadow loves that kind of stuff.”
    (11:56 AM) AEN:
    Ken: Well, that's probably not your shadow - you're just getting in touch with the primary mood of the separate self, and the self-contraction just is a feeling of suffering and a feeling of fear, that's just sort of all it is; and so there's no specific shadow content to that. If you're just on the verge of entering a causal or a nondual state the fear is just fear of dying, it's just fear of death. It's with specific content elements that the shadow 3-2-1 process is meant to work, but there are all sorts of other negative emotions and so on that don't really have this specific type of shadow content, and so 3-2-1 wasn't meant to cover those and wouldn't cover that.
    (11:57 AM) AEN: ...”So a shadow element would be some part of you that is inducing fear and gets something out of it; but in any event you want to just try to increase it, because you are generating these feelings of fear but you don't know how you're doing it. Fritz Perls used to say it's like somebody coming in and they're pinching themselves, and you can see them pinching themselves, but all they tell you is, “I've got a pain here, it hurts.” And you say, “Well, stop pinching yourself!” “I'm not pinching myself!” [both laugh] And you go, “OK, try to make the pain worse.” In other words, if you can see that you're producing the pain of pinching, once you see that you're doing it, you won't ask how to stop. You'll just stop! Because it's a voluntary movement, it's like once you see that you've got your hand in the air, you can put it down.
    (11:57 AM) Thusness: in summary what is it trying to convey? 😛
    (11:58 AM) AEN: i tink its about becoming aware of some of our unconscious parts of our ego identification/momentum?
    (11:59 AM) Thusness: by?
    (11:59 AM) AEN: huh
    (12:00 PM) Thusness: the way of sensing, what did they suggest?

    • Reply
    • 7m

  • Soh Wei Yu
    Admin
    (12:07 PM) Thusness: what is shadow?
    (12:08 PM) AEN: it say “ Because that's pretty much what your shadow is, is the opposite of what you're consciously aware of. So as I say, using the monster example again, if you are out of touch with your aggression, your anger - and, incidentally, for Buddhists to say, “well, you're never supposed to feel anger,” the point it, well, if you're unconsciously feeling it, you have to consciously feel it first, and then you can try to transcend it or transmute it - but for you to just go around saying, “I'm not going to feel anger now,” that just seals your repression.”
    (12:09 PM) Thusness: so what does that mean?
    (12:11 PM) AEN: the internet says shadow is “the part of the unconscious self that a conscious mind sees as undesirable and tries to define as the "other."
    (12:11 PM) Thusness: good
    (12:12 PM) Thusness: and the solution?
    (12:12 PM) AEN: by feeling/being it?
    (12:12 PM) Thusness: yes and no.
    (12:12 PM) AEN: how come
    (12:12 PM) Thusness: it has to be like that jean klein said.
    (12:12 PM) AEN: oic
    (12:13 PM) Thusness: That is just the first step.
    (12:13 PM) Thusness: this is a form of practice like vipassana
    (12:13 PM) Thusness: however the true insight does not arise yet.
    (12:14 PM) Thusness: it is just like practicing insight meditation does not equal the arising of non-dual insight.
    (12:14 PM) AEN: icc..
    (12:14 PM) Thusness: but once u r truly non-dual, then u know it is like that. 🙂
    (12:14 PM) Thusness: just like longchen [Soh: Sim Pern Chong], given enough time, whatever he said will be like Buddha.
    (12:14 PM) Thusness: but he need not read what that is taught by Buddha.
    (12:15 PM) AEN: oic..
    (12:15 PM) Thusness: however by reading it, it may help him and speed up his progress.
    (12:15 PM) AEN: icic
    (12:15 PM) AEN: u got ask him to read the sutras? 😛
    (12:15 PM) Thusness: the difference is he does not like to be labelled.
    (12:15 PM) Thusness: nope
    (12:15 PM) AEN: oic
    (12:15 PM) AEN: labelled as a buddhist?
    (12:15 PM) Thusness: anything
    (12:16 PM) Thusness: as for me, i don't mind...ehehe
    (12:16 PM) AEN: lol
    (12:17 PM) AEN: btw u read jean klein b4?
    (12:17 PM) Thusness: no
    (12:17 PM) Thusness: but i think someone posted some posts b4
    (12:17 PM) AEN: oic where
    (12:17 PM) Thusness: dunno...i thought it is in ur forum?
    (12:17 PM) Thusness: if it is not in ur forum, then i don't know..
    (12:17 PM) Thusness: maybe not.
    (12:17 PM) Thusness: lol
    (12:17 PM) AEN: jean klein is advaita one
    (12:17 PM) AEN: not buddhist
    (12:18 PM) AEN: i tink one of nisagardatta’s student, not sure
    (12:19 PM) Thusness: ic

  • Reply
  • 7m
Soh

MZ: The last 20 min or so was when it got spicy lol [referring to Guru Wiking interview https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l2LZvO9wotM

 
Soh: Actually those are good questions
What is it that gives doubtlessness and certainty, it is this knowingness
So Angelo is pointing out the distinction [knowingness vs conceptual knowing]
This knowingness is also known as rigpa
 
[7:46 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: In one of my advice to u when jax left, do u know where is that piece of advice I wrote?
[8:01 PM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: Oic what flaw
[8:01 PM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: I did clarify im not denying I AM though
[8:02 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: No not that
[8:02 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: First I have told u many times I M is not an experience
[8:02 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: In my realization article to u
[8:03 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: I was asking u what is the difference between knowingness and knowing
[8:04 PM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: Yeah.. actually the initial post i think were your words lol
[8:04 PM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: I also dont see I AM as experience
[8:04 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Now tell me the difference
[8:05 PM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: In I AM there is only I AM as direct authentication, doubtless and certain. No experiencer-experiencing-experience. But the same applies to everything after anatta
[8:06 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Don't rush into it
[8:06 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: U must know ur mistake
[8:06 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: First tell me the difference
[8:07 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: When I wrote the reply to u? It is the same issue again with Anurag.
[8:07 PM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: 2013
[8:08 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: U can send him my reply to abt this to Jax and said we have discussed this many times b4. So as ppl will not mistake I-I.
[8:08 PM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: I AM as a realization is just this doubless I.. a very doubtless sense of existence and presence only. As an experience there is no such certainty and is often fleeting glimpses
[8:09 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Tell me what is the difference between knowing and knowingness
[8:10 PM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: Anatta is more like being sound rather than known sound, except through realization not just no mind
[8:10 PM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: Knowing sound*
[8:10 PM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: Knowingness of sound is just sound reverberating
[8:10 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: I am asking u knowingness and knowinv
[8:10 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: See u can't know the difference
[8:11 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Listen clearly
[8:11 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: I don't want to repeat again
[8:11 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Tiring
[8:11 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Lol
[8:11 PM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: Lol
[8:11 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: To know is to measure and compare. Think about it...
[8:12 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Even to know about sensing and hearing
[8:12 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: U need differences
[8:12 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Silent and sound...to know sound
[8:12 PM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: Oic..
[8:12 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: There must b differences to know
[8:12 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Otherwise there is no knowing
[8:13 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: There is sense presence
[8:13 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: There is no knowing
[8:13 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Think very carefully and go through
[8:13 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Don't just blah
[8:15 PM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: In sense presence there is just the nondual nonconceptuality of various so called shades of colors, in knowing the colors are distinguished from each other and objects are recognised
[8:16 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: There can't b registering of color also
[8:16 PM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: Ic.. yeah no distinction
[8:16 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Knowing requires differences
[8:16 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: So When there is differences, how so u know?
[8:17 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: There is comparison..
But how is it that u know?
[8:17 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: This intelligence..
[8:17 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: This alive creativity
[8:17 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: This unconditioned
[8:18 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: That is the knowingness
[8:18 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: There is the comparison and there is that knowingness
[8:19 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: So direct pointing in Zen is pointing directly to this knowingness
[8:19 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: 直指人心
[8:20 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: It is unconditioned, it is not touched by relative thoughts or conceptual knowledge...
[8:21 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Authentication is not non-dual between subject or object, it is not a non-dual experience.
[8:21 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Authentication is direct pointing to this Knowingness.
[8:22 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Heart to heart direct authentication
[8:22 PM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: Ic.. yeah thats my normal experience these days.. everything is very alive
[8:22 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: This is the I-I authentication
[8:22 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: I m not talking about ur experience
[8:22 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: I m talking about u r unable to bring out this point
[8:23 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: So lack of the Zen sharpness in pointing
[8:23 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: So u must differentiate
[8:23 PM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: Im pointing out people to I AM in atr group lol
[8:23 PM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: Ic..
[8:24 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: In anatta, authentication is everywhere, every instance, every manifestation.
[8:24 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Where manifestation is, clarity is.
[8:25 PM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: Theres this very brilliant aliveness and knowingness whether it be formless, or as the so called trees and sky and everything.. same quality and intensity.
Past few days my sleep a bit hard. I think maybe intensity.. need to regulate my energies
[8:25 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Yes
[8:25 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: I m not talking about ur realization
[8:26 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: I m talking about u r not able to bring this out
[8:26 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: U need to discern correctly
[8:26 PM, 5/19/2020] Soh Wei Yu: I see
[8:26 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Re-read what I wrote to u when Jax left
[8:26 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: It is the same issue
[8:27 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Don't show our conversation
[8:28 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: Show Jax letter and say this this not the first time we have this discussion
[8:29 PM, 5/19/2020] John Tan: U have realized I-I no doubt but the sharpness in discerning need refinement
 
..............
 
Also, the key to bring knowingness to maturity is anatta insight.
"The key towards pure knowingness is to bring the taste of presence into the 6 entries and exits. So that what is seen, heard, touched, tasted are pervaded by a deep sense of crystal, radiance and transparency. This requires seeing through the center." - John Tan many years ago
 
.............
 
On Rigpa:
 
A Lamp to Dispel Darkness
Schools & Systems › Dzogchen | Practices › Meditation | Tibetan Masters › Mipham Rinpoche
English | Français | བོད་ཡིག
Ju Mipham Namgyal Gyatso
From the murals of Shechen Monastery. Used with permission of Rabjam Rinpoche.
A Lamp to Dispel Darkness
An Instruction that Points Directly to the Very Essence of Mind
In the Tradition of ‘the Old Realized Ones’
by Mipham Jampal Dorje
The Homage
Homage to the Lama, inseparable from Mañjuśrī, the embodiment of wisdom!
Without having to study, contemplate, or train to any great degree,
Simply by maintaining recognition of the very nature of mind according to the approach of the pith instructions,
Any ordinary village yogi can, without too much difficulty,
Reach the level of a vidyādhara: such is the power of this profound path.
The Instruction that Cracks Open the Egg-shell of Ignorance
When you leave your mind in a state of natural rest, without thinking any particular thought, and at the same time maintain some kind of mindfulness, you can experience a state of vacant, neutral, apathetic indifference, called “lungmaten”, (a ‘no-man’s land’), where your consciousness is dull and blank.
In this, there is not any of the clear insight of vipaśyanā, which discerns things precisely, and so the masters call it marigpa (“non-recognition, ignorance, unknowing”). Since you cannot define it and say “This is what it’s like”, or “This is it!” such a state is called lungmaten (“undecided, indeterminate”). And since you cannot say what kind of state it is you are resting in, or what your mind is thinking, it is also called tha mal tang nyom (“an ordinary state of apathetic indifference”). In fact, you are stuck in an ordinary state within the ālaya.
You need to use such a means of resting the mind, as a stepping stone, so as to give rise to the non-conceptual state of primordial wisdom. However, if there is not the self-recognition of primordial wisdom which is our rigpa, then it cannot count as the main (meditation) practice of Dzogchen. As The Aspiration Prayer of Samantabhadra says:
A blank state, devoid of any thought whatsoever—
That is marigpa, the cause of delusion.
Therefore, when mind experiences this kind of dull state that lacks any thought or mental activity, by allowing your attention to turn naturally and gently towards the one who is aware of this state—the one who is not thinking—you discover the pure awareness of rigpa, free of any movement of thought, beyond any notion of outside or inside, unimpeded and open, like the clear sky.
Although there is no dualistic separation here between an experience and an experiencer, still the mind is certain about its own true nature, and there is a sense that, “There is nothing whatsoever beyond this.” When this occurs, because you can not conceptualize it or express it in words, it is acceptable to apply such terms as: “free from all extremes”, “beyond description”, “the fundamental state of clear light” and “the pure awareness of rigpa.”
As the wisdom of recognizing your own true nature dawns, it clears away the blinding darkness of confusion, and, just as you can see clearly the inside of your home once the sun has risen, you gain confident certainty in the true nature of your mind.
This was ‘the instruction (mengak) for cracking open the egg-shell of ignorance (marigpa).’
The Instruction for Cutting through the Web of Saṃsāric Existence
When you gain this kind of realization, you understand that this nature of reality has always been this way, timelessly, that it is not created by any causes or conditions, and that it never undergoes any kind of transition or change in the past, present or future. At the same time, you can not find even the tiniest fraction of something called “mind” that is separate from this nature.
You could also say that the state of mental blankness we looked at earlier is indescribable, but it lacks decisiveness, since you are completely unable to describe it in any way. Rigpa, on the other hand, is in essence indescribable, but at the same time it has a decisive quality that cuts through any doubt about what is indescribable. So there is a huge difference between these two kinds of indescribability, like the difference between blindness and perfect vision.
This covers the crucial point of distinguishing between the ālaya and the dharmakāya.
Therefore, because terms like ‘ordinary mind’, ‘mental nondoing’, ‘inexpressible’ and so on are used in two different ways—only one of which is authentic—when you come to know the crucial point of how the same words can have a higher level of meaning, you can come to experience the true meaning of the profound Dharma.
When resting in the essence of mind, some feel that what is to be maintained is a simple clarity, a simple awareness, and so they settle in a state of ordinary mental consciousness, thinking, “This is clarity.” Some focus their attention on the awareness of an absorbing sense of emptiness, as though their minds had ‘become’ empty. But, in both cases, there is some clinging to the dualistic experience of an aspect of ordinary mental consciousness.
When you find yourself in either of these states, look into the innate nature (bab) of that subtly fixated attention—the clarity and the one perceiving the clarity, the emptiness and the one perceiving the emptiness—and, by doing so, you will take away the support for the ordinary consciousness that perceives things dualistically. Then, if you can decisively recognize the innate nature of your own mind in all its nakedness—clear and open, without any limit or centre—and a state of lucid clarity arises, that is what is called, ‘the very essence of rigpa.’ With this, as rigpa sheds the covering layer of experiences involving clinging, its pure and pristine wisdom is laid bare.
This was ‘the instruction for cutting through the web of conditioned existence.’
The Instruction for Remaining in the Equalness which is like Space
This is how you should recognize the pure awareness of rigpa once it is freed from the various layers of ordinary thinking and experience, like a grain of rice freed from its husk—by settling naturally and making use of rigpa’s own self-knowing (or self-illuminating) quality.
It is not enough, however, simply to understand the nature of rigpa; you must be able to remain in that state with some stability through developing familiarity. And so it is very important that, without becoming distracted, you sustain constant mindfulness, so as to continue resting in an utterly natural state of awareness.
When you are maintaining that state, at times you might experience a vague and dull state with no thoughts, while at other times you might experience an unobstructed state (zang thal) with no thoughts that has the clarity of vipaśyanā. At times, you might experience states of bliss on which you fixate, while at other times you might experience states of bliss free of such fixation. At times, you might have various experiences of clarity with grasping, while at other times you might experience a vivid clarity that is unsullied and free of grasping. At times, you might have unpleasant and disturbing experiences, while at other times you might have pleasant and soothing experiences. And at times, you might experience an extreme turbulence of thoughts which carries your mind away, causing you to lose your meditation; while at other times, you might experience unclear states of mind because of a failure to distinguish between mental dullness and vivid clarity.
These and other experiences come about unpredictably and to an extent you can not measure, like various waves produced by the winds of karma and habitual thoughts, which you have cultivated throughout beginningless time. It is as though you are on a long journey, during which you visit all sorts of different places—some of them pleasant, some fraught with danger—but whatever happens, you do not allow it to deter you, and continue on your own path.
In particular, when you are not yet familiar with this practice, and you have the experience of ‘movement,’ as all manner of thoughts stir in your mind, like a blazing fire, don’t become discouraged. Maintain the flow of your practice without letting it slip away, and find the right balance, so that you are neither too tense nor too relaxed. In this way, the more advanced meditative experiences, such as ‘attainment,’[1] will occur one after another.
At this point, investigate the distinction between the recognition and nonrecognition of rigpa, between ālaya and dharmakāya, and between ordinary awareness and wisdom. Through the master’s pith instructions, and on the basis of your own personal experience, have confidence in the direct introduction you receive. While you are maintaining this, just as water clears by itself if you do not stir it, your ordinary awareness will settle in its own nature. So you need to focus mainly on the instructions which clearly show how the true nature of this awareness is naturally arising wisdom. Don’t analyze with a view to adopting one state and abandoning another, thinking, “What is this that I am cultivating in meditation? Is it ordinary awareness or wisdom?” Nor should you entertain all kinds of speculations based on the understanding you have gained from books, because doing will only serve to obstruct both śamatha and vipaśyanā.
At some point, the aspect of familiarity or śamatha—which here means settling in an utterly natural way with stable and continuous mindfulness—and vipaśyanā—which here means the awareness that knows its own nature by itself—will merge together automatically. When this happens, and you gain some stable familiarity with it, you come to understand how the śamatha and vipaśyanā that are the primordial stillness of the natural state and the clear light of your own nature have always been inseparable, and the naturally arising wisdom that is the wisdom mind of Dzogpachenpo dawns.
That was the instruction for remaining in the equalness which is like space.
The glorious Saraha said:
Having gone beyond thinker and thinking,
Remain like a young child, free of thoughts,
This is the way to be. He also said:
Focus on the master’s words and apply great effort—
Then, if you have received the master’s instructions introducing you to your rigpa:
There is no doubt that your inherent nature will arise.
As he says, the naturally arising wisdom that is mind’s inherent nature, and which has always accompanied your ordinary mind from time immemorial, will dawn. This is no different from the inherent nature of everything, and so it is also called the ‘genuine clear light of the fundamental nature (nyukma dön gyi ösal).’
Therefore, this approach of resting in a completely natural state and maintaining the recognition of your own nature, or rigpa, the very essence of mind, or the nature of phenomena, is ‘the pith instruction that brings together a hundred crucial points in one.’ This is also what you are to maintain continuously.
The true measure of your familiarity with this is the ability to maintain the state of clear light during sleep. The signs that you are on the right track can be known through your own experience: your faith, compassion and wisdom will increase automatically, so that realization will come easily, and you will experience few difficulties. You can be certain about how profound and swift this approach is if you compare the realization it brings with the realization gained only through great effort in other approaches.
As a result of cultivating your mind’s own natural clear light, the obscurations of ordinary thinking and the habits it creates will be naturally cleared away (sang), and the two aspects of omniscient wisdom will effortlessly unfold (gyé). With this, as you seize the stronghold of your own primordial nature, the three kāyas will be spontaneously accomplished.
Profound! Guhya! Samaya!
This profound instruction was written by Mipham Jampal Dorje on the twelfth day of the second month, in the Fire Horse year (1906), for the benefit of village yogis and others, who, while not able to exert themselves too much in study and contemplation, still wish to take the very essence of mind into experience through practice. It has been set out in language that is easy to understand, in accordance with the experiential guidance of a great many old realized masters. Virtue! Maṅgalam!
| Translated by Adam Pearcey, 2005.
1 This is a reference to five successive experiences that occur during the development of meditation in general, and śamatha in particular. They are termed ‘movement’ (compared to a cascade of water down a rock face), ‘attainment’ (compared to a torrent in a deep ravine), ‘familiarization’ (compared to a meandering river), ‘stability’ (compared to an ocean free of waves), and ‘consummation’ (compared to a mountain).
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On Intuition:
 
[8:24 AM, 3/3/2017] John Tan: Nothing wrong with awareness practice, just practitioners will skew towards non conceptual clarity. However total opening requires one to see through conventionality understanding the DO and how it binds and bond the mind in a powerful and hypnotic way.
[8:25 AM, 3/3/2017] John Tan: Also awareness without breath and energy practice cannot effectively open up and release oneself.
[8:35 AM, 3/3/2017] John Tan: Pristine clarity and aliveness go hand in hand. When one is totally and non-dually aware, he is also fully alive and open. Experiencing one without the other isn't complete. Although many experience energy release and aliveness in non-dual awareness, they still skew towards clarity and do not know how to open up the energy, the "aliveness" aspect.
[8:54 AM, 3/3/2017] Soh Wei Yu: Oic..
[8:58 AM, 3/3/2017] Soh Wei Yu: years ago Ms X had a miscarriage and tried to conceive since and could not, then Ms Y ask me to see whether she will get pregnant, so I prayed to guan yin then meditate.. suddenly had a strong intuition that two years later she will get pregnant. Now two years later she is now pregnant. Lol
[8:59 AM, 3/3/2017] Soh Wei Yu: Seeing through conventionality means seeing through inherency on convention right, like understand weather is a label collating
[9:15 AM, 3/3/2017] John Tan: Yes and also the relation between inherency, origination and dependencies.
[9:17 AM, 3/3/2017] John Tan: U can sharpen ur felt sense and improve ur intuition
[9:29 AM, 3/3/2017] Soh Wei Yu: Oic..
[8:35 PM, 3/3/2017] Soh Wei Yu: The other day i was playing baseball with a Friend and first few times didn't play well but after few rounds it's like somehow becoming quite good.. it's like the learning and knowing is from whole body mind and environment in total exertion but not from concepts. I think intuition is similar.. but I'm usually not an intuitive person
[8:35 PM, 3/3/2017] Soh Wei Yu: Lol
[8:40 PM, 3/3/2017] John Tan: Developing to sense using felt sense is like learning all those conventionalities...u need time but it starts from calming ur mind and b vipassanic means non-conceptual. Then choose a practice "feel" directly. Means the "knowing" comes from the felt sense.
[8:40 PM, 3/3/2017] John Tan: Like what is meant by being pure?
[8:40 PM, 3/3/2017] John Tan: Being open
[8:40 PM, 3/3/2017] John Tan: Being fearless
[8:41 PM, 3/3/2017] John Tan: What is meant by "inflamed"
[8:41 PM, 3/3/2017] John Tan: By being alive
[8:42 PM, 3/3/2017] John Tan: The mind "thinks" to understand but the heart feels...
[8:43 PM, 3/3/2017] John Tan: Then slowly the sensing ability will improve and communications will turn direct, intuitive and immediate
[8:43 PM, 3/3/2017] John Tan: But that is not wisdom as many Mistaken.
[8:44 PM, 3/3/2017] John Tan: However it is another mode of knowing without the limitation of comparison and measurement which is how the mind works
[8:46 PM, 3/3/2017] John Tan: If I tell u to open up ur body...there r many "hows"...the mind analyses...it attempts to think by searching into memory bank for similar experiences...all these have to put aside
[8:46 PM, 3/3/2017] John Tan: It is a different mode of knowing
[8:47 PM, 3/3/2017] Soh Wei Yu: Ic..
[8:51 PM, 3/3/2017] John Tan: Iet's say I ask u abt digestive system...how do u make ur system purge?
[8:54 PM, 3/3/2017] John Tan: U can read up and understand but ur mind is also full of thoughts...u nvr really feel ur system ... like so u know ur body takes how many hours to digest? When u drink water what happen? How ur body feels? Do u purge after taking breakfast and how ur body feel...how is the sensation like...the circulation, the blood flow, the tightness of ur body...does breathing exercise helps?
[8:56 PM, 3/3/2017] John Tan: It is like practicing body scanning in vipassana