MayaRefugee wrote:Greetings,
When we say one is practicing mindfulness what is it that is being mindful?
If the goal is to eventually eliminate the notion of an "I" and you actually do eliminate the notion of an "I" how could you say "I" is being mindful?
Thanks
thereductor wrote:The process is in the process of being aware of the process.
what is it that is being mindful?
MayaRefugee wrote:thereductor wrote:The process is in the process of being aware of the process.
Can this go on to infinity?
BTW, Thanks for the replies....
Peace.
Infinite regress, but why make this complicated?MayaRefugee wrote:Not being rude here but what I meant to ask was:
At 1, the process is in the process of being aware of the process.
At 2 could the process be in the process of being aware that it is in the process of being aware of the process.
Then at 3 could it be aware of what it's doing at 2 and at 4 be aware of what it's doing at 3 and so on to infinity.
Peace.
No need for infinite regress: You are being mindful.When we say one is practicing mindfulness what is it that is being mindful?
MayaRefugee wrote:Not being rude here but what I meant to ask was:
At 1, the process is in the process of being aware of the process.
At 2 could the process be in the process of being aware that it is in the process of being aware of the process.
Then at 3 could it be aware of what it's doing at 2 and at 4 be aware of what it's doing at 3 and so on to infinity.
Peace.
If it were my question, your answer really does not address it.Dan74 wrote: At each stage, "it" is a fiction. Remove "it" and what are you left with? Just awareness.
So sure, if you like to drive yourself insane, think of it as "I am being aware of myself being aware of myself being aware...." and keep going, but there is no need. Simply aware, "the one" being aware is exposed as an unnecessary extra, a concept that divides awareness into subject and object. But there is actually no division like that present. It is just a useful tool for communication.
Does this address your question?
tiltbillings wrote:If it were my question, your answer really does not address it.Dan74 wrote: At each stage, "it" is a fiction. Remove "it" and what are you left with? Just awareness.
So sure, if you like to drive yourself insane, think of it as "I am being aware of myself being aware of myself being aware...." and keep going, but there is no need. Simply aware, "the one" being aware is exposed as an unnecessary extra, a concept that divides awareness into subject and object. But there is actually no division like that present. It is just a useful tool for communication.
Does this address your question?
Just awareness?Dan74 wrote:tiltbillings wrote:If it were my question, your answer really does not address it.Dan74 wrote: At each stage, "it" is a fiction. Remove "it" and what are you left with? Just awareness.
So sure, if you like to drive yourself insane, think of it as "I am being aware of myself being aware of myself being aware...." and keep going, but there is no need. Simply aware, "the one" being aware is exposed as an unnecessary extra, a concept that divides awareness into subject and object. But there is actually no division like that present. It is just a useful tool for communication.
Does this address your question?
Since you've raised it, do you care to elaborate?
And what is awareness?Dan74 wrote:What else?
Then we have no idea of what it is.Dan74 wrote:As far as I can tell awareness is the fundamental, it defies description.
?My point in the above was to say that this preoccupation with "I" who is doing it all should either be done properly like in hua-tou meditation
Is that what Mahasi Sayadaw type vipassana meditation does?or in analysing what is not "I" as in Theravada
Is mindfulness the same as awareness?or simply put aside while practicing mindfulness.
Probably it is not a good understanding of the issue at hand.Conventional preoccupation with it as in infinite regress is not productive.
tiltbillings wrote:Then we have no idea of what it is.Dan74 wrote:As far as I can tell awareness is the fundamental, it defies description.
tilt wrote:?My point in the above was to say that this preoccupation with "I" who is doing it all should either be done properly like in hua-tou meditation
Is that what Mahasi Sayadaw type vipassana meditation does?or in analysing what is not "I" as in Theravada
Tilt wrote:Is mindfulness the same as awareness?or simply put aside while practicing mindfulness.
tilt wrote:Probably it is not a good understanding of the issue at hand.Conventional preoccupation with it as in infinite regress is not productive.

Mahayana stuff.Dan74 wrote:tiltbillings wrote:Then we have no idea of what it is.Dan74 wrote:As far as I can tell awareness is the fundamental, it defies description.
I guess it is what remains when all the fictions are put to rest. But it has never been missing. Makes sense?
We cannot conceive of it, but it is right here nevertheless.
hua-tou meditation? Why would we have a clue as to what that is?tilt wrote:?My point in the above was to say that this preoccupation with "I" who is doing it all should either be done properly like in hua-tou meditation
I am not sure what you are querying here. Clearly "properly" was applied to both clauses.
MayaRefugee wrote:Greetings,
When we say one is practicing mindfulness what is it that is being mindful?
If the goal is to eventually eliminate the notion of an "I" and you actually do eliminate the notion of an "I" how could you say "I" is being mindful?
Thanks
MayaRefugee wrote:Greetings,
When we say one is practicing mindfulness what is it that is being mindful?
MayaRefugee wrote:If the goal is to eventually eliminate the notion of an "I" and you actually do eliminate the notion of an "I" how could you say "I" is being mindful?
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