tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5920148054251610469.post244400744120175220..comments2022-11-16T12:05:39.586+02:00Comments on Lux inside: Letter to RakendraLuxhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07817955230612644912noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5920148054251610469.post-15287385159308485912008-05-24T22:31:00.000+03:002008-05-24T22:31:00.000+03:00Hi, everybody,Rakendra was so kind and answered to...Hi, everybody,<BR/><BR/>Rakendra was so kind and answered to my question, I thank him and I share the answer with you.<BR/><BR/>A loving day to all,<BR/><BR/>Luciana<BR/><BR/>***<BR/><BR/>Dear Luciana,<BR/><BR/>Nice to hear from you and nice of you to share your experience. What to say… All kinds of experiences happen when we meditate and emptiness is certainly one of them.<BR/>Nothingness too!<BR/>We are not our body, we are not our mind, we are only a witnessing consciousness, so it can easily be felt that there is no body, no mind, no 'me'.<BR/><BR/>Your friend can be right if 'you', as a personality were still there. But if 'you' as a personality also were not there, then it is another kind of experience.<BR/><BR/>So the question really is… 'who' was experiencing this nothing, this endlessness? Forget about all kinds of experiences and where they come from, etc..., simply<BR/>turn your focus on the ONE WHO IS EXPERIENCING, not on the experience itself. The experience does not matter, it is still an object. Move from the object to the subject.<BR/><BR/>And… always trust YOUR experience, let other say what they want, they may be right, they may be wrong, what is important is YOUR experience.<BR/>Trust in that and let life take you deeper.<BR/><BR/>Have a look at this video, it may also answer your question: <BR/>http://www.ted.com/talks/view/id/229<BR/><BR/>Enjoy your meditation<BR/>Thank you for your sharing<BR/><BR/>With Love<BR/>RakendraLuxhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07817955230612644912noreply@blogger.com