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Patrick Sweeney continues his
beautiful discussion of nondual consciousness, the nameless, effortless,
self-liberating quality of awareness in which all distinctions between self and
other, this and that, inside and outside fall away completely, leaving only the
brilliant clarity of this very Moment, exactly as it is. Although this "Ordinary
Mind" is and always has been the ever-present condition of consciousness, the
separate self somehow rarely seems to notice that which it always already is—in
fact, it is fair to say that the majority of our actions and intentions as human
beings are in avoidance of this simple recognition, with all its ego-shattering
implications. However, we have all experienced this radical One Taste many times
in the course of our lives, if even for the briefest of moments.
Patrick
mentions accidents, orgasms, and death as typical moments of spontaneous and
profound realization, but these experiences tend to occur whenever the normal
continuity of life becomes suddenly disrupted—during which people tend to report
radically altered states of experience, including a sense of time dilation, an
overwhelming feeling of peace or oneness with the world, and everything simply
becomes much more vivid, vibrant, and present. Unfortunately, it can be all too
easy to miss these experiences without a stable contemplative practice, which
helps train our capacity to be persistently aware of ourselves and our
environments, making it much easier to recognize our own Original Face whenever
it chooses to reveal itself.
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