Stress Relief Techniques-15-Raveendran Nair-Malayali Astrologer in Delhi-9871690151
Vipassana meditation
techniques for stress relief.(Collection from various books of Theravada Budhism ).
Part-15.
It's exactly the same for our
use of the words “I,” “me,” “mine,” and “self.” These words refer to the felt
sense that our experience somehow "belongs" to someone. This felt
sense of self is connected to a deeply rooted belief that there really must be
someone continuously "behind" it all, to whom everything happens or
to which everything refers. Our own experience challenges this belief and
reveals it to be just that: a belief.
The sense of self does not
exist anywhere within or separate from the changing play of sights, sounds,
sensations, and thoughts that make up our experience. For example, if we ask
the question, "Who is thinking this thought?" we do not find anyone
separate from the thought itself who is actually doing the thinking. The
thought thinks itself, so to speak. Our experience reveals that there is no
"essence" within any of the elements of the body and mind that
actually corresponds to this word "self," just as there is no essence
of car hidden within the parts that we call “car.”
People often glibly conclude
that there's no self, period. But it is undeniable that the felt sense of self
is part of our experience at times. The sense of self, which seems real enough,
is arising and passing because of conditions, like anything else in this world
of change.
Experience shows us that the
sense of self is typically stronger when there is identification with a
correspondingly strong experience in the body or mind. Thus, we naturally say,
"I am angry," rather than, "There is anger arising".
At other times, when one is
fully engaged in an activity and the sense of separation from the world
diminishes, the sense of self is not so strong.
And when we are in deep sleep,
the sense of self is entirely gone.
Thus, moments of
"selflessness," like moments of freedom, are not as unusual as we
think they are. We often let them go unnoticed.
If we pay attention to our
direct experience with a calm mind, we become more familiar with moments of
selflessness, so that we cease being disturbed or enchanted by them.
By becoming accustomed to this
fact of existence, which has been called the "crown jewel" of the
Buddha's teaching, we gain tremendous ease and freedom.
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