Two realities made from the Same
The individual has a location from which to perceive the world. What if this localization dissolves and there is a realization that there is more to “all of this” than what the I can perceive?
The experience here is that life has been changing significantly and also everything is the same. There are two different perceptions, one is through Tim, the other is where Tim isn’t the subject, but rather just another object that something is aware of.
Tim just keeps on being Tim, nothing much changes, but when this other vantage point is “active”, I am not Tim.
Tim, everyone and everything else is something that is happening, but it isn’t happening to the ME.
At those moments (which here have become about 90% of the time) it’s so obvious that I can’t be Tim, because Tim is just an object of observation.
So the clarify, when life happens through Tim’s eyes and ears, it becomes limited to the conditions that make up Tim’s focused reality.
The other is when the I viewpoint is reducing and everything opens up. This is not another perspective, but instead WHAT IS before there is this contraction that “causes” the sense of I.
In non dual language, this is an example of the me-ing vs being.
It’s a description of the apparent progression of consciousness from a contracted ME experience to gradually opening back up to a none contracted state.
So the ME state, contraction, is nothing else but the same just in another state! Just like vapour, liquid or ice all being water.
Interestingly from this none contraction there is no preference for anything to be a particular way. “Here” everything is as it is, nothing needs to change.
This communication, if it resonates, can be met with an openness, in which the “second reality” is a possibility.
To “bathe” your mind, which can’t understand any of this”, in more contemplation, here is a referral to Rupert Spira, who has the gift of beautiful language to express this.
If you want to keep this communication going, leave a question or a comment, to which there can be a response.