Examine
the nature of unborn awareness.
From the Lojong for the Layperson booklet:
The
third slogan looks within at the transparency of our identity. Though it
appears connected to the brain, our awareness is not identical to it. Since we
tend to view our mind as the place where identity resides, quietly observe (but
don’t analyze) the thinking process. Pursue awareness to a deep level. Notice
how perceptions of self are tied to things. The mind depends on the object
perceived and the senses that perceive it – it coexists with everything. If
these “things” are taken away, is there a perceiver separate from what is
perceived? Is there a concrete “you” inside? We may discover our identities are
only created by the thoughts we churn out. Yet beyond the ideas of “me” and
“other,” we find a peaceful spaciousness.
Photo: Moon snail shell (“shark eye”) nestled among white
clover.
Our minds are constantly bombarded by stimuli - a knee scraped, soothing music, a stack of bills to be paid, the aroma of cinnamon rolls baking. The mind compares this information to our memory files of past information then creates emotion and thought that motivates us to act. This is "born" awareness, generated by things outside us. But there is another type of awareness that observes without judging or labeling; it does not separate everything into categories but sees all as a whole. How do you find it? Watch your mind and how it works. At first it may seem like an endless loop of thoughts and sensations, but be patient and keep watching. Eventually the unbiased observer will appear.
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