17/ Those thoughts we recycle the most we identify with the most. Those are what we come to call "I", but it's not fixed, it's a loop.
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Replying to @mistermircea
18/ Going back to the doors example. When you break this cycle you essentially free inputs for your mind to witness itself in the present.
1 reply 14 retweets 87 likes -
Replying to @mistermircea
19/ You free up the inputs from the pattern of recycling past into present, and projecting it into the future. You stop creating a 'self'.
2 replies 14 retweets 94 likes -
Replying to @mistermircea
20/ You start feeling a space, and in that space you feel yourself being, without any need to define your being with thought. You simply are
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Replying to @mistermircea
21/ That is why all meditation practices insist on letting go of thoughts. They are there, but in the background, no input, no influence.
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Replying to @mistermircea
22/ There are endless methods of meditation but they all essentially aim to disrupt this conditioned mind that feeds back on itself.
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Replying to @mistermircea
23/ Some break the mind through the mind others go through the body, but the essence is to get you out of your mind and back to your senses.
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Replying to @mistermircea
24/ In that space you realize you always were this and never anything else. You were just hallucinating. Once you see it you'll laugh at it.
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Replying to @mistermircea
25/ Meanwhile the mind remains free & engaged w/ the present, holding on to nothing yet naturally & without interference running on full HP.
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