Only Stillness Can Change Us

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Hand-drawn art by Rupali Bhuva
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Your real self, your true nature is what is closest to you: it is yourself. Each step taken to reach it moves you further away from there. Attention is not inside nor outside, so you can never go to meditation. When you try to meditate you create a state, you have a goal you are trying to achieve. Meditation is not a reduction, not a kind of interiorization. So that when there is still even the slightest anticipation of going somewhere, or achieving something you go away – because meditation is your natural state, presence IS. The mind can be still from time to time, but the nature of the mind is activity, is function. Your body can be empty, relaxed from time to time, but your body is also function. It is therefore a violence against nature to attempt to stop the mind or body functions.

The mind must come to a state of silence, completely empty of fear, longing and all images. This cannot be brought about by suppression, but by observing every feeling and thought without qualification, condemnation, judgement, or comparison. If unmotivated alertness is to operate the censor must disappear. There must simply be a quiet looking at what composes the mind. In discovering the facts just as they are, agitation is eliminated, the movement of thoughts becomes slow and we can watch each thought, its cause and content as it occurs. We become aware of every thought in its completeness and in this totality there can be no conflict. Then only alertness remains, only silence in which there is neither observer nor observed. So do not force your mind. Just watch its various movements as you would look at flying birds. In this uncluttered looking all your experiences surface and unfold. For unmotivated seeing not only generates tremendous energy but frees all tension, all the various layers of inhibitions. You see the whole of yourself. Observing everything with full attention becomes a way of life, a return to your original and natural meditative being.

It is only through silent awareness that our physical and mental nature can change. This change is completely spontaneous. If we make an effort to change we do no more than shift our attention from one level, from one thing, to another. We remain in a vicious circle. This only transfers energy from one point to another. It still leaves us oscillating between suffering and pleasure, each leading inevitably back to the other. Only living stillness, stillness without someone trying to be still, is capable of undoing the conditioning our biological, emotional and psychological nature has undergone. There is no controller, no selector, no personality making choices. In choiceless living the situation is given the freedom to unfold. You do not grasp one aspect over another for there is nobody to grasp. When you understand something and live it without being stuck to the formulation, what you have understood dissolves in your openness. In this silence change takes place of its own accord, the problem is resolved and duality ends. 

Seed Questions for Reflection

What does silent awareness mean to you? Can you share a personal story of a time living stillness helped you undo your biological, emotional or psychological conditioning? How do you reconcile the freedom to unfold found in choiceless living with the freedom to choose?

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13 Past Reflections
EG
Aug 21, 2021
Living in stillness and full observation of thoughts, emotions and the whole self is key to avoiding a back and forth activity in the mind which can perpetuate restlessness and promote mental activity.Unmotivated alertness and quiet looking is how the author names the state of meditation desired. For me, relaxed breathing helps.



NT
Aug 10, 2021
Based on my reading of the excerpt, i really feel like it should say, "because meditation is NOT your natural state, presence IS" (added "not" in the statement).
Hence,logistical question: could it be that we are incorrectly attributing this as "excerpted from I Am"? i just downloaded the pdf of the book and tried to search for this line and couldn't find it anywhere. or did we paraphrase what we thought the author was saying?
DD
David Doane Aug 12, 2021
I don't know about the accuracy of the quote, but I do wonder if meditation and presence are our natural state and we have gotten very far awayfrom our natural state, and that is what the author is getting at. I do appreciate your putting thought and research into the topic.
SR
Somik Raha Aug 19, 2021
Nilesh, thank you for this comment. Our team did review the source and we have reproduced it faithfully here. We added the link to the source on this piece so you can check. As an aside, sometimes these passages do make us reflect more than usual. :)   
MI
Aug 10, 2021
The "simplicity of what is" as writer Joan Tollifson" emphasizes. Thank you for sharing.
CA
Colombe Andree Anne Smith Aug 10, 2021
I a m suffering from a nine year Nazi vice please come and adopt the town is trying to make me have delusional thoughts so I will work for the dead as I have been killed by workers and police 🚨 officers and prozac openers and opuod fiends where I live and where no one visits even when there is none there. I need a homeopath a therapist a 🐕 g and a way to die in a foreign country be where I was born and raised! Please help Colombe Andree Anne Smith
DD
Aug 6, 2021
Jean Klein states "because meditation is your natural state, Presence is." Presence is your real self. Silent awareness of Presence is meditation. It's an abiding in Presence. Meditation isn't trying to accomplish something or get some where. It isn't trying to stop one's body or mind functioning. Meditation is going past one's body and mind and into the oneness of one's real self. For me, awareness occurs in living stillness, and awareness makes for change. Awareness resulted in the undoing of my conditioning. I didn't consciously undo my conditioning or try to undo my conditioning, it happened with awareness, openness, and allowing. Choiceless living is living without making any intentional choices. In choiceless living, I suspend my freedom to choose and allow myself to simply live. The freedom to unfold found in choiceless living and the freedom to choose are reconciled in that I have the freedom to choose choiceless living or not.
BS
Barbara Schutt Aug 10, 2021
So very interesting about choiceless living perspective. Life, just IS, and we are the observers and can find peace in each moment if we do not strive to always be changing things around us. Things will change as they always do on their own.
DD
David Doane Aug 10, 2021
Yes -- I agree.
JP
Aug 6, 2021
Silent awareness or witness consciousness is as J Krishnamurti says is"choiceless awareness", or emptiness or suchnessor isness as the Buddha says. Silent awareness is stillness in the mind. In such stillness bodily sensations ariseand go, thoughts arise and go, emotions arise and go.

I experience such silent awareness when I am fully absorbed in doing what I am doing such as reading, listening to music, and meditating. In such experiencesthe observer and the observed become one. The wave becomes the ocean. It is a spiritual union.

What is freedom? Freedom from whom or what? When the subject-object dividing line is dissolved it is an experience of oneness. In such unitive consciousness there is an experience of oneness, the Divine Union. To put it in Non-dual Vedanticterm, it is Self-realization.

Namste!
Jagdish P Dave
AJ
aj Aug 7, 2021
My favorite minutes are those spent in silent, Divineawareness. I am free in them ... . Amen to your reflection!
MA
Matangi Aug 12, 2021
Present moment is inevitable .your true nature is your higher self no seekingor becoming .just be in the flow of happening
JO
jo Aug 12, 2021
Yes! aka ... synched;)