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Eternity Now
Francis Lucille

Truth Love Beauty
Francis Lucille
How can we talk about separation between something that
we perceive and something that we don't perceive?
read a chapter from
Eternity
Now by Francis Lucille
(pdf 162 KB)
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welcoming the totality
separation can exist only between two perceived objects
Francis Lucille
Welcome the totality of it [all], the sensations in your
body, the sound of my voice and the birds, your thoughts. All of that
is at a zero distance from you. All of that is in you.
Even if you create the thought that there is someone who is separate
from that as the observer or the perceiver, this thought itself is one
more appearance from which you are not separate.
Recognize the immediacy of all appearances as a fact. The separation
comes after the fact, as an interpretation of the fact. Separation can
exist only between two perceived objects, between a chair and a table,
for instance. But how can we talk about separation between something
that we perceive and something that we don't perceive? Between
something that is perceived and that which perceives? In order to see,
to establish such a separation, we should be able to perceive the
perceiver, to see it as separate from the perceived. And that is not
possible.
Ask yourself, In my experience, do I stand separate from that which I
perceive? Your experience is the only point of reference in deciding
this question. We are not talking about philosophy here but about
perception, how we perceive the body and the world, our life itself. It
may sound theoretical but it isn't. It is only practical. Practicality
demands that we eliminate anything that has no purpose, no meaning and
which is a waste of energy. Any activity, thought or feeling based upon
the illusion of separation is such an unnecessary burden. And that is
especially true of the way we perceive the body and of the way we
perceive the world.
We can perceive the body and the world free from any psychological
interference, free from the superimposition of a 'me', from fear and
desire, from like and dislike. See just the facts, the facts of the
world, of the body, of the mind as they arise.
See also the tendency of fixation of the attention either in some form
of thought running in circles or some form of bodily sensation, a
localization of the body. The mind always wants to have something, some
object to chew on. The restlessness of the mind has to be completely
seen.
That which triggers this activism is often a sense of lack, a
compulsion. We have to welcome it completely at the feeling level. The
way to welcome it is to give it the space and the time it needs to
unload its psychological content. We can meet those fixations in the
body with total indifference. The last thing we want to do is to try to
eliminate them, to work on them, to interfere with them.
The peace of our true being doesn't get revealed by the elimination of
objects, but rather through our overlooking of the objects, through this
dispassionate welcoming. The object being contemplated with this
indifference liberates the awareness, makes it available to itself.
That which is perceived is part of the mind and we don't share it with
others. That which we share is not perceived. It is the perfume.
It is the perfume of the seer knowing itself, of seeing knowing seeing,
of seeing seeing seeing. When we are among truth lovers and when seeing
seeing seeing----in other words, seeing that sees itself----takes place,
we all feel pulled inside by this seeing in which there is nothing to be
seen.
It is very mysterious how this silence propagates. It comes from the
inside.
~ Francis Lucille
Source:
stillness speaks
Francis Lucille's website:
http://francislucille.com
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The Perfume of Silence
Francis Lucille
In my experience, do I stand separate from that which I
perceive?
advaita
awakening
eckhart tolle
nondual perspectives
meditation
original face
perception and meditation
the eyeless eye
the wonder of wonder
the art of seeing
wildsight
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