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See, I'd argue at this point you're more talking about a world model. I've had full disintegration of the sense of self. Nothing there, anywhere. Was pretty shocking. Still, I have a tendency to get absorbed in "selfing". It isn't the same thing. Is certainly not enlightenment.
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And for the habit of perceiving things that way to form, if it ever does. I don't go around persistently feeling like that. When I do, it's starkly different from my "normal" experience of the world.
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(This reply feels like it went to a slightly different tweet than the target?) Yeah, like that. But not finding the self is not the same as not looking for it, which is when the perception really seems to shift.
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I can go around all day observing that whatever is "me", isn't. Nothing much will happen, except I'll probably be a bit sharper. But when something that is attending to or looking for this "me" stops, it all collapses into waves or bits or a number of other, transient phenomena.
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When I'm selfing heavily (lost to thoughts, stereotyped behavior, emotion), the world feels very constrained, tight. When it disappears, it gains a strong sense of dimensionality, that is yet very fluid. Staring at something far away, my world grows. Close to a wall, it shrinks.
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Often this effect ends when something blows my mind a bit and I get preoccupied, lost in something specific. E.g. there is a kilometers-long main street in this town. I was walking down it and it looked like one of those street-warping scenes in Inception - warping as I looked.
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