I think that what your mum says will do. The sense of I am never changes. Anyway I think you have to try and see for yourself. What happens doing this you have to find on your own, because if I tell you (as I did) you will be expecting that. Try and see. All I can say is that it is worth trying (at least for me, now I am doing it every day several times) Sent via BlackBerry from Vodafone
-----Original Message----- From: Mark Ty-Wharton <[email protected]> Date: Sun, 29 Aug 2010 01:09:55 To: [email protected]<[email protected]> Cc: godszen<[email protected]>; Advaita<[email protected]> Subject: Re: Emptiness Let me get this absolutely straight (what you are doing) so I can do the same thing and see what is true for me By watching "I am sense" you mean? The sense of myself that I have had since I was a small boy - the me that knows it is me - the same part my mum might have said "I don't feel any different now I am seventy to the way I felt when I was three, I remember some things like they happened yesterday, I am still the same person" about? Not my identity - that which I attach to the sense which makes me who I am by what I do in life? So I watch the sense of consistently being the same person my whole life - and get bliss? Then I disappear? Then? Sent from an iPhone On 28 Aug 2010, at 17:11, [email protected] wrote: > If you keep doing the I am sense watching, all becomes appearance empty of a > sense of beingness, you included. > Sent via BlackBerry from Vodafone > > -----Original Message----- > From: godszen <[email protected]> > Sender: [email protected] > Date: Sat, 28 Aug 2010 07:05:21 > To: Advaita-Zen<[email protected]> > Subject: Re: Emptiness > > there is no emptiness here, on the contrary, > it's quite palpable, even thick, heavy, unbearable > at times > > On Aug 28, 12:51 am, [email protected] wrote: >> Emptiness is not the absence of subject and/or objects, it is the absence of >> the feeling/sense of beingness of the observed subject/objects. >> Sent via BlackBerry from Vodafone
