On 23 March 2011 21:48, YouWho? <[email protected]> wrote:

>
> Nisargadatta's teaching on "I Am" is largely misunderstood. Even in my
> book, "I Am That," he tells the kindergatners to focus on the
> knowingness of "I Am." So they made a religion out of "I Am."
>

Sure

The key that is missed is that the emphasis is on the knowingness of
> the "I Am" not just focusing on the "I Am" itself.
>

Not in words right, as in I am a musician, or I am the body in the world,
the sense of knowing that gives rise to the notion that the world is
happening to me?

I told you before that I have an unpublished book of Nisargadatta
> talks to his Indian disciples, in it he says:
>
> "The highest spiritual achievement is the power of discrimination.
> That is the Sadguru. It makes everything easy. Minutely look at
> yourself. It is very fortunate when this happens. Hold on to the feet
> of the One through whom you know that 'you are' and that 'the world
> is.' The knowledge that you are is the qualitative Self. It is not the
> Absolute."
>

Yeah I got it. I had to read it a hundred times because my brain was intent
on making it something else, something IT understood.


> He has said many times that only one or two in a crore understands
> what is being said here.


Did he now :)

Do I get a gold star LOL

Are you going to publish the book?

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