Added: 4 years ago
From: Ouroboros6
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  • Thanks for this :-)

  • I recommend this book, and Ken Wilber's Integral philosophy and practices highly.

    Having spent 30 years trying to "figure things out", through much reading and reflection, I have come to the same basic conclusions as Wilber. Wilber, however, expresses it much more clearly and effectively. I am grateful I stumbled upon his work. He will save you a great deal of time, through this synthesis and analysis of all the worlds and histories explorations of consciousness.

  • thank you for the tender and terse posting, tail-biting snake girl. i wish however to add one thing, of course. you dont really need to read anything in the final stages. you need to quit reading and look at kerplop frogs and feel the wind on your cheek and smile at puppies who hide in tall grass and think they're stalking gazelle in the serengeti.

  • I am in my towel enjoying the sauna with my favorite laptop in a transparent cover while watching this posting.

    Thanks for the sweet voice and the recommendation. Makes my day as it were.

    It is amazing one can be into this all consciousness thing anytime anywhere with anyone. Something about ultimately all is one and one is all.

    But who is One?

    My Tibetan Guru will hopefully enlighten

  • One is... buddha nature that looks to us like a big mind, if we are in samadhi.

  • Thanks for the new perspective.

  • and we are That and more.

  • thank you very much. you have a wonderful voice.

  • The notion of perennial philosophy (Latin: philosophia perennis) suggests the existence of a universal set of truths and values common to all peoples and cultures.

    ~Wiki

  • "Meditation, then, is not so much a part of this or that particular religion, but rather part of the universal spiritual culture of all humankind--an effort to bring awareness to bear on all aspects of life. It is, in other words, part of what has been called the perennial philosophy."

    ~Ken Wilber

    Grace and Grit.

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