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The teachers spew out words and words and words and nobody understands and the teachers get tangled up in their own verbiage and everyone gets no-where. Too many meditation teachers attempt to explain things that their audience simply do not possess physical, lived reference points for. ( Click here for all “pop songs with truth” posts ♦ Click here for all relationship and couples posts ♦ Click here for all radical meditation posts)īecause: You cannot understand something unless you have reference points for in your own lived physical experience. ![]() ![]() I’m going to present to you (for now, other things later) one of the most hard to understand, terse, compressed descriptions of no-self and radical meditation, The Song of Ashtavakra. ![]() Instead, in this post I’m going to do the very opposite. So what I ought to do is to give a careful, helpful explanation of what no-self and no-doer means, and make the incomprehensible comprehensible. But we think to ourselves “Of course ‘I’ exist.” And we dismiss it all as too remote and too niche as esoteric and religious as “contrary to science” as a mad, bad idea dangerous to mental health. ![]() What I am calling “radical meditation” rests on the basis there is no self – that the “I” that we think we are, just does not exist. What is “radical meditation”? – (1) The Song of Ashtavakra
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