No 'Thing' Stands out from Being
- Duration: Video: 1 hour, 53 minutes, and 26 seconds / Audio: 1 hour, 54 minutes, and 2 seconds
- Recorded on: May 18, 2017
- Event: Seven Day Retreat at Mercy Center, CA - May 2017
A man wants to know if consciousness has an agenda.
A participant wonders why anyone would want to be awareness if it doesn't go anywhere or achieve anything.
A man asks Rupert how he will know if he is doing work that is the highest use of his love and intelligence.
A man asks for clarification on a particular sentence Rupert wrote on the eternal now.
A man asks if his experience in the middle of the night is a collapsing of the ego structure.
Rupert elaborates on the understanding that the problem lies with beliefs and not with concepts.
Rupert offers insights on the value of thinking.
In this clip it is seen that all seven billion of us have parts to play in God's dream.
Rupert uses a metaphor to illustrate what happens after the death of the body/mind.
A woman explores the visual realm where duality is at its most persuasive.
The implications of the understanding 'nothing ever happens to me' are discussed.
The two main types of thoughts are discussed from a factual rather than a judgmental perspective.
A professor wants to know if the extreme amount of effort she applies to her work is coming from a sense of separation.
A man wants to know if consciousness has an agenda.
A participant wonders why anyone would want to be awareness if it doesn't go anywhere or achieve anything.
A man asks Rupert how he will know if he is doing work that is the highest use of his love and intelligence.
A man asks for clarification on a particular sentence Rupert wrote on the eternal now.
A man asks if his experience in the middle of the night is a collapsing of the ego structure.
Rupert elaborates on the understanding that the problem lies with beliefs and not with concepts.
Rupert offers insights on the value of thinking.
In this clip it is seen that all seven billion of us have parts to play in God's dream.
Rupert uses a metaphor to illustrate what happens after the death of the body/mind.
A woman explores the visual realm where duality is at its most persuasive.
The implications of the understanding 'nothing ever happens to me' are discussed.
The two main types of thoughts are discussed from a factual rather than a judgmental perspective.
A professor wants to know if the extreme amount of effort she applies to her work is coming from a sense of separation.