--- In [email protected], "jim_flanegin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
> --- In [email protected], Vaj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > 
> > On Aug 11, 2005, at 10:40 AM, jim_flanegin wrote:
> > > Same question, then: where and how is the experience of not 
being
> > > enlightened felt in the physiology?
> > 
> > It's felt by a feeler. Therefore it's dualistic. What is felt? 
> Perhaps 
> > a sense of dis-ease, perhaps tension, maybe anxiety or neurosis. 
> There 
> > are many different experiencers capable of experiencing. There 
are 
> > therefore as many answers are there are styles of dis-ease and 
> > separation.
> > 
> > Not everyone experiences the enlightened state as 
> > sensation-riding-on-emptiness so it is a rather limited "idea".
> > 
> > The idea that physiology is important is IMO merely a style of 
> > conditioning common in TM circles. You were taught that this was 
> > important. And of course it sounds cool to say. The question I 
> > naturally would want to ask is 'why are you accepting that 
> conditioning 
> > (that physiology is relevant  re: "enlightenment") as important?
> > 
> > How are you defining "physiology" as an idea?
> > 
> > The physiology and enlightenment story is a popular TMO drama.
> 
> You are assuming that I have asked the question merely to play out 
a 
> drama that I am conditioned to play out, with no purpose other than 
> reinforcing a story that my small self finds important. That would 
> be an impractical thing to do, without any purpose whatsoever, in 
my 
> opinion. 
> 
> Rather, the reason that I posed the question was because of my 
> personal belief based on experience, that if the idea or 
experience  
> of being unawakened can be identified and *localized* within the 
> physical body's physiology, it can be dealt with, and eliminated, 
if 
> one so chooses.

Sounds like Yet Another Story, to me...





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