Let me re-phrase - in all places and times, our body mind and spirit are one.
The contents of whatever thoughts we have may or may not reflect that unity, but they are just thoughts anyways. For example, one may notice that a particular time of sitting will seem like you mind was totally absent,being totally distracted. You might think one might as well not sat at all. But since it is not your body sitting, not your mind sitting, you notice that in fact it has tweaked your perspective just as much as Thanks, Chris Austin-Lane Sent from a cell phone On Dec 4, 2011, at 17:43, Chan JMJM <[email protected]> wrote: > > > Hi Chris, > > Not sure that I fully understand your question. Perhaps I should detail a > little more about "in the zone". > > It is a state without thinking and everything we do is spontaneous, natural > and effortless, while often times in our everyday life, our body, mind and > spirit operating in a loosely connected way. While in the zone, they are one > without separation or distinction. > > This is not a mental state, it is a state of being integrating body, mind and > spirit. Or in Buddhist terms, surpassing the Realms of Desire, Form and > Formlessness. Or in other words, surpassing the hindrance of physical, > mental and spiritual karma. > > Thank you for the opportunity to share. > JM > > > > On 12/4/2011 3:35 PM, Chris Austin-Lane wrote: >> >> >> >> On Sun, Dec 4, 2011 at 8:15 AM, Chan JMJM <[email protected]> wrote: >> In other words, in such a state, our body, mind and spirit are one. In >> modern language, we are "in the zone". We are in a state of most natural, >> effortless and automatic state of being. >> >> >> Are you saying there is some state when body mind and spirit are not one? >> Or are you talking about something other than reality, but the contents of >> our mental beliefs, which do not always hold dualistic beliefs. >> >> Thanks, >> >> --Chris >> [email protected] >> +1-301-270-6524 > > >
