The Revelation of What We Already Are
- Duration: Video: 1 hour, 50 minutes, and 1 second / Audio: 1 hour, 50 minutes, and 1 second
- Recorded on: Apr 12, 2019
- Event: Weekend in Amsterdam - April 2019
We begin this meditation by separating āIā, the knower of experience, from the objects we know. We allow our attention to sink back into its source, the heart of awareness. We then discover that awareness is the medium within which all experience arises and out of which all experience is made.
A man wonders if the seer is ever separate from the seen, and asks Rupert to speak about the body as an instrument of perception.
A man asks how to get rid of the voice in his head that says, 'I want to die'.
A woman says she is fearful of death and asks Rupert for guidance.
A woman asks Rupert if death really exists.
A man asks if localisation as the finite mind continues after the recognition of our true nature.
Rupert addresses the belief that the self is located in the body.
A man asks if the recognition of our true nature naturally leads to a change in preferences and desires.
A man asks why, if he is infinite consciousness, he can't know the content of other minds.
A man asks Rupert if thoughts that arise on behalf of the separate self fall away after the recognition of our true nature.
A man asks, if consciousness is pure love, why there is so much suffering in the world.
We begin this meditation by separating āIā, the knower of experience, from the objects we know. We allow our attention to sink back into its source, the heart of awareness. We then discover that awareness is the medium within which all experience arises and out of which all experience is made.
A man wonders if the seer is ever separate from the seen, and asks Rupert to speak about the body as an instrument of perception.
A man asks how to get rid of the voice in his head that says, 'I want to die'.
A woman says she is fearful of death and asks Rupert for guidance.
A woman asks Rupert if death really exists.
A man asks if localisation as the finite mind continues after the recognition of our true nature.
Rupert addresses the belief that the self is located in the body.
A man asks if the recognition of our true nature naturally leads to a change in preferences and desires.
A man asks why, if he is infinite consciousness, he can't know the content of other minds.
A man asks Rupert if thoughts that arise on behalf of the separate self fall away after the recognition of our true nature.
A man asks, if consciousness is pure love, why there is so much suffering in the world.