Thank you--this resonates. It's a refreshingly different take from nirodha samapatti as being a lights-out "state" championed by some (mainly Theravada) practitioners. As you say, cessation of feeling and perception--the fading away of the craving for experience to be different from what it is--is always available. It just needs to be recognized.
Thank you--this resonates. It's a refreshingly different take from nirodha samapatti as being a lights-out "state" championed by some (mainly Theravada) practitioners. As you say, cessation of feeling and perception--the fading away of the craving for experience to be different from what it is--is always available. It just needs to be recognized.
Have you read the Upanishads?
Brief history of 108 Upanishads-
ua-cam.com/video/NJvTPrmxkGQ/v-deo.htmlsi=VwsSAGYbwHrQrPbY
Happy new year..🎊
Yes, I studied the Upanishads when I was a student at Naropa University.