Don't Allow Yourself to Know What You Are
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- Äas pĆidĂĄn 28. 12. 2023
- A person shares a glimpse they have had and their ongoing search for happiness.
Discover more of Francis Lucille's wisdom in the Playlist "Non Duality Philosophy":
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The Advaita Channel Team.
7:51 What do you believe yourself to be?
8:40 What is this I?
9:10 I is existence/awareness
10:14 Stay with what is certain
11:10 The death of the candle
12:25 Living from the simplicity
Francis is like thatâŠtwo or three sentences and you have got the truth on the palm of your handâŠ. Wonderful semplicityâ€ïžâ€ïžâ€ïž
I love how every confused mystic ends up with Francis after they find Rupert. đ
can u elaborate pls
They're both very lovely beings.
@@luismoref yes. I feel incredibly greatful to both.
thanks and blessings for your comprehensive answer. really appreciated. actually my question was more regarding the confused mystic part. but still your explanation is really good. couldnt said it better@@soalianfp9397
Who is Rupert?
Yesternight was laid up w pain and listening to this removed my attention from the phenomenal me and the pain dissipated and I could sleep. Thx Francis.
There is no Doer.
There is no one not to do.
There is no procrastinator.
No procrastinator means no one left to âdo.â
No one left to do means thereâs no one left to discipline.
No discipline needed means thereâs nothing to plan.
No plan requires no words.
No words need no thoughts.
No thoughts mean no self.
No self = No Doer
Beautiful discourse-thank you for sharing your experience, and thank you for your simple guidance.
â€ïž
Thank you both. Helps me a lot too.đ
Beautiful sharing. Thank you dear! â€â€â€
Thank you!
Thank you đ
So simple, so true; who or what I'M I? being and awareness all the rest it is only imagination....
So simple â€
Brilliant advice. Iâm in a similar place đ
Brilliant!!!
Thanks for sharing truth. đŻâ„đ¶ đâź Happy Holidays to everyone
Beautiful
holy shit,mind blowing
Superb â€
đ„đđ
đđ
đ€ simply living
Another help could be:
Try not to be.
Its impossible
Beeing shines like the sun without any effort , Its self evident
-everything is-
â€
~â€~
I appreciate Francisâ laser focus on the being/awareness or sat/chit unity (identity) and its essential/foundational aspect. It seems his emphasis on this has been increasing lately, although maybe itâs simply a matter of (as the kids say) curation.
Something that often comes to mind though is, âWhat about ananda?â I suppose Francis might say that as you become increasingly intimate with the sat/chit recognition and realization, ananda will gradually ârevealâ itself (as also what you âareâ). And yet I have to wonder if all three are not always âthereâ and some glimmering sense of them isnât a good place to âstartâ.
In that context, I like to think of âanandaâ as âmeaningâ and/or âcareâ. So if we ask ourselves âIs there something or nothing?â and in answering this question come to the sat/chit realization, we might also ask ourselves, âSo what?â or âDoes this ârealizationâ have any significance or meaning?â That is, âWhy do you care?â Maybe Heidegger was getting at this with his focus on âcareâ (Sorge). It strikes me that this âcareâ or âmeaningâ is intrinsic to the âconsciousnessâ that is engaged in the very inquiry that Francis urges us to undertake. Itâs not âout thereâ, itâs intrinsic to what we âareâ, intrinsic to being/awareness. Care is right there from the very beginning and that meaning/care can be realized in the manifest realm as âhappinessâ. Care, or an orientation toward meaning, is with us from that first inquiry into our âbeing/awarenessâ itself.
So, yes, sat/chit, but letâs go for the whole enchilada and recognize the sat/chit/ananda âidentityâ from the beginning. That may require a degree of rethinking of ananda though (or of the meaning of âmeaningâ).
Incidentally, thatâs another thing I appreciate about Francis. Despite being an ardent apostle of âhappinessâ, (perhaps in the face of yet another round of anxious supplicant questioning) he doesnât always seem happy, at least in the âhappy faceâ sense of the word. But the care is always there, thatâs deep and palpable.
It's easy to get stuck here because we hold onto our concept of peace or bliss. It's better to think along the lines of non suffering/non searching/always okayness. Don't look for the good stuff. Just look for the absence of the bad stuff, and then nothing more is needed.
@@Asitismusic Thatâs actually something Iâm trying to take into account here. âAnandaâ gets translated as bliss, happiness, love, peace, and even âsecurityâ, and of course there are those who attempt to address those phenomenal âpositivesâ and/or âvariablesâ along some of the lines you suggest. âAbsence of dissatisfactionâ seems to be the most popular.
But in using âmeaningâ I am trying to get at something that would round out a ânoumenalâ (to use a term Francis seems to prefer) triad, something that âqualifiesâ along with being and consciousness as that which âmust beâ, an âinvariableâ, a quality just as intrinsic and essential to that which âisâ.
Iâm happy to take the approach you mention in certain contexts, but if you follow my initial argument perhaps you can help me situate âanandaâ more essentially in a Borromean knot of sat/chit/ananda. As I say, Francis makes a great start with his question âIs there something or nothing?â establishing the sat/chit identity, and Iâm sometimes tempted to simply say that âanandaâ references a kind of âtouchâ or âinteriorityâ to consciousness itself.
Maybe itâs not important though (particularly for those serenely ensconced in the âokaynessâ you mention) and maybe Iâm just horsing around, but somehow the whole question has an abiding fascination for me, and I always find Francisâ take on the sat/chit identity to be of value.
@@hanayama8721 I think I understand what you're saying. Some teachers touch on this. The Ananda part is not as immediately obvious as the other two.
I think this comes with familiarity in some sense. Once you really get to know yourself as the aware space, its qualities become more and more obvious and at a certain point all three qualities of the triad are evident.
It has to do, in a sense, with 'trumping' the mind by asking the right questions. It is difficult for the mind to say no when asked "am I aware?", more difficult still to say no when asked "do I exist" or "is something happening?". But when asked "is this peaceful" it is difficult to say yes, at least in the beginning. For me the right question has to be found in order to bring the mind into alignment. "Is it possible for this to suffer" "is it possible for this to lose or gain anything" are more appropriate questions.
Im not sure if I'm understanding you correctly but I don't know in what way 'care' or 'meaning' comes into this, as there is nobody there to care. It doesn't have to mean anything and in the broader sense is a meaningless experience. "So what" is in some ways a valid response, because awareness is completely normal and flavourless, but that's the beauty of it. It's just fine the way it is, it doesn't need any meaning assigned to it.
Sorry this is a bit of a jumbled response. It's an interesting discussion though!
@@Asitismusic So we actually agree that the âananda part is not as immediately obviousâ. I consider that in my initial comment on Francisâ focus on bringing people to an awareness of the essential nature and identity of sat/chit, and agree that it may be a shrewd heuristic move.
And I may be going out on a (phenomenal) limb in using the term âcareâ as a way to unpack the meaning of âmeaningâ, but if you say that there is nobody to âmeanâ, I can say that the same goes for being and awareness as well. There is ânobodyâ to âbeâ or to âbe awareâ. The same goes for meaning. It is simply essential to being/consciousness. Itâs not âmeaning forâ a given âselfâ, itâs âmeaning asâ. I think âcareâ is suggestive as well, if we can free it from a âsomebodyâ, but Iâm not going to take it any further here.
Perhaps we could say that consciousness as such has a dual aspect, one that might be described as the root of all âcognitionâ or âobjectivityâ and another that might be described as the root of âfeelingâ or âsubjectivityâ. The intuitions of the âtrueâ and the âbeautifulâ may have something to do with these two kinds of awareness/meaning.
So âchitâ is the central term and âsatâ (which can be translated as both truth and existence) has to do with a capacity for what we call âobjectivityâ and âanandaâ has to do with a capacity for what we call âsubjectivityâ.
Francis often speaks of âtruth, love, and beautyâ, but I think love and beauty might be grouped with peace or happiness and grouped within a triad which recognizes beautiful objects (beauty), beautiful subjects or âothersâ (love), and the beauty of the Subject itself (peace/happiness). That is, all three âfeelingsâ have to do with a recognition by awareness of the intrinsic âbeautyâ of awareness, and how this may show up in some manifest âformâ. We are thus âtouchedâ by âanotherâ which is actually our own essential being. It is the unconditional âYesâ we give to all three. Iâm ok with âok-nessâ as well.
Awareness of myself as ananda/no separation/love seems to arise when I notice that all beings share "my" awareness and being.
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Wow this is really great. It made me think about Sat Chit Ananda. I always said "yes we are Sat Chit Ananda, that's who we really are" but I never actually tested it. So I can clearly see Sat and Chit, existence and awaremess... I am that I am, being and being conscious of that. But where is Ananda? Existence and awareness is evident but it's not immediately obvious that I am Ananda too. Can you please elaborate on that?
Knowing myself as ananda/no separation/love seems to arise when I notice that all beings share "my" awareness and being.
If one feels with the head many words cant discribe if you feel with the hart you know all
This simplicity is beautiful
Hello, It is possible to find teachings who say we receive an unique identity sparkle of original Creator's light. Saying we only may know that we exist and that we are aware, is not a victory nor a subject of contentment because we still do not know the uniqueness of our being as the Creator has wanted it for us. Who am I, has to have an answer in an altered state of mind, beyond the limits of perception in this world. So, because the solution always comes from a higher dimension, we have to ask and to receive the Creator's answer in an altered state of mind. It may be very important, in order to fullfill the goal of our coming in this world.
Its confussing still