Yeah the whole deal with "Unity" SOC, is that it is still in terms of me. *I* 
see the world in terms of myself. *I* see and experience oneness in the world. 
But it is an intermediate step, and was never meant to seem permanent. By 
associating in Unity with everything experienced, eventually that budges and 
de-localizes the sense of "me". Then experience becomes truly the fullness 
moving that you mention. Expansion of perception then becomes the single 
variable in a life lived of unbounded awareness. UC was never a goal, always a 
bus stop.

--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, iranitea <no_reply@...> wrote:
>
> 
> 
> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, doctordumbass@ <no_reply@> wrote:
> >
> > Robin could have been in Unity consciousness, where similarity 
> > predominates, over differences. But that SOC is still relative to one's 
> > singular identity. The identity must shift to a less localized state to 
> > grow beyond the Unity SOC. The core fear of duality is still present in the 
> > Unity SOC, although the perception that this duality is an illusion begins 
> > to take hold, due to the incontrovertible oneness that the heart and 
> > intellect begin to sense, outwardly. 
> > 
> Dr.D this is an interesting POV, what you say makes sense (even though, I 
> don't know what is really the case here). But it does remind me of a series 
> of tapes - probably the spiritual development course - where he speaks of the 
> fullness of fullness, and the fullness of emptiness (both he calls 
> 'fullness'). Obviously emptiness is synonymous of duality here. (I don't 
> think he means the emptiness of the Buddhists). 
> 
> He then goes on to describe, that the fullness, obviously Unity, despite of 
> the fact that it is everywhere, senses, that there is a place where it is 
> not,at least the possibility of such a place, emptiness, and he speaks of 
> Fullness moving because of the fear it has of emptiness - Fullness is on the 
> move - was the phrase he used. I always thought, this is highly 
> allegorically, fullness on the move would be a synonym for Shakti, but may be 
> it is borne out of an experience, just like the one you describe.
>


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