Post by amit on Sept 22, 2020 4:33:14 GMT -5
Lets try describing it like this. The mind is asked by the organism to solve the problem of spiritual alienation/disconnection from Source. It accepts the task and looks in memory and sees that it has not been solved before so searches externally to find more data, as it does for any other problem it is asked to solve (where's my lunch?). It finds quotes by gurus, practises, and in the case of Niz, the idea that one can end the search by trusting that one is already what is sought. It parades these posssible solutions before the organism to see if there is any that fits the particular character it serves, and if resonance happens, the head is in the Tiger's mouth, and there can be a process of consolidating that resonance and the search ends. For example the process of consolidation could be to include the problematic examples described by ZD in the OP as Oneness manifest, and if successful, the process completed and consolidated.
If this is the nature of the search then it is not a matter of limiting the mind, but recognizing that its role descibed here is beneficial. It may even be that the mind has the capacity to resonate, and without it, there can be no resonance. Niz was asked "What discovers?", he replied "The Mind".
The mind is a tool which can be utilised for benefit or suffering (For example if the character has been conditioned to believe that it is unworthy, then mind may select suffering in life, rather than benefits). Not to recognise this would be to the detriment of the organism.
If this is the nature of the search then it is not a matter of limiting the mind, but recognizing that its role descibed here is beneficial. It may even be that the mind has the capacity to resonate, and without it, there can be no resonance. Niz was asked "What discovers?", he replied "The Mind".
The mind is a tool which can be utilised for benefit or suffering (For example if the character has been conditioned to believe that it is unworthy, then mind may select suffering in life, rather than benefits). Not to recognise this would be to the detriment of the organism.