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James123ParticipantDear Peter,
Moreover, I wish to add that preaching, which is imposing beliefs and ideas are belongs to the ego.
However, pointing out the Truth, completely opposite of preaching. Because, it is non attachment to any beliefs or ideas as before physical birth or deep sleep.
James123ParticipantHi Peter,
The ego is simply attachment to the body.
When it is realized that the body and mind belong to the whole and are one with the environment, the sense of self dissolves.
In that recognition, separation ends and only the present moment remains.From this oneness, love arises naturally—our highest service to humanity.
My words may sound harsh, but they are directed only at the ego, therefore harsh.
Hi Allessa,
It is amazing. Childrens are pure beauty.
Just looking them eyes, amazing. 😍
James123ParticipantAmazing song.
Ms. Alessa,
Thank you very much, it is your beauty ❤️❤️❤️
James123ParticipantDear Alessa,
From perpspective of Truth, Mind simply works perfectly with body.
From perpspective of ego, mind just thinks over and over again. Non stop. Therefore, worry, anger, sadness, fear is inevitable.
James123ParticipantDear Anita,
Choice is the illusion of the ego. Just move your hand — do you truly know how it moves? The body acts, life flows, but the ‘I’ that claims ownership is only a thought. Movement happens, yet the doer is never found.
Dear Alessa,
Exactly 💯
James123ParticipantDear Anita,
The choice is the illusion of ego.
Just move your hand, do you even know how do you move it?
James123ParticipantDear Anita,
Do your best at the moment with love, compassion and give any outcome to God.
James123ParticipantHi Thomas and Anita,
This sounds might be little rude,
But, the Truth is, there is no free will whatsoever.
James123ParticipantHi Peter,
You are completely right. However, i wish to add one more thing.
Jesus did not truly die on the cross. His real death came earlier — when he surrendered completely to God. In that surrender, the “Jesus” as a separate self dissolved. What remained was pure witnessing, not as Jesus the man, but as God’s presence moving through the body.
So when scripture says that God took Jesus to His side, it is not describing a later event. The body perished on the cross, but Jesus had already died before — in surrender. From that moment on, it was no longer Jesus who lived, but God speaking and acting through the body.
That’s all the story and meaning where it comes from.
Best Regards,
With Love,
James123ParticipantHi Peter,
Suffering is a noble truth, for it serves as a turning point. When the so-called mind, or the imagined “person,” can no longer carry the weight of life, it is forced to turn inward. In that helplessness, the false sense of control collapses, and surrender happens. What once resisted now completely gives up — and in that very giving up, the doorway to freedom opens.
Insights arise like flashes of light — sudden, effortless, weightless. They carry a quality of purity and bliss, untouched by heaviness. By contrast, thoughts are like chains: they bind, they weigh down, they ferment into anger, revenge, or sorrow.
Yes, pain may be felt in the body, but it belongs to no one. Because there is no owner, no “me” who claims it, pain remains only as sensation. Suffering does not take root.
Thus, suffering is not an enemy but a teacher — pointing the mind back to its source, until what remains is the lightness of being itself.
James123ParticipantHi Peter,
Suffering is a noble truth, for it serves as a turning point. When the so-called mind, or the imagined “person,” can no longer carry the weight of life, it is forced to turn inward. In that helplessness, the false sense of control collapses, and surrender happens. What once resisted now completely gives up — and in that very giving up, the doorway to freedom opens.
Insights arise like flashes of light — sudden, effortless, weightless. They carry a quality of purity and bliss, untouched by heaviness. By contrast, thoughts are like chains: they bind, they weigh down, they ferment into anger, revenge, or sorrow.
Yes, pain may be felt in the body, but it belongs to no one. Because there is no owner, no “me” who claims it, pain remains only as sensation. Suffering does not take root.
Thus, suffering is not an enemy but a teacher — pointing the mind back to its source, until what remains is the lightness of being itself.
James123ParticipantDear Peter,
The ego, or mind, is remarkably clever. It rushes to label every thought that arises, as if those thoughts belong to “me” — the body and the mind. Yet in truth, thoughts arise and fall within the vast space of consciousness. They function alongside the body, but there is no individual who creates them. This is what the Buddha pointed toward: the body flows with life, yet no one is in control.
Thoughts simply appear and dissolve in the present moment, moving the body into action when needed. This is action without a doer. If this truth is not realized, suffering is unavoidable.
James123ParticipantAs Rumi said: “Lovers don’t finally meet somewhere. They’re in each other all along.”
James123ParticipantHi Peter,
Of course, not a success nor a failure.
It is just What We Truly are.
Thank you very much for great conversation ❤️
With Love,
James123ParticipantHi Peter,
The “I” or ego seems to claim responsibility behind every thought. Yet, when one observes closely, every thought simply arises and falls within the Unnamable—what some call Pure Consciousness. There is no “I” behind them; they are self-arising and self-dissolving.
If observation continues deeply, even the observer and the observed vanish, leaving only the pure, unmanifested presence.
What is often called “total disappearance” is not an event, positive or negative—it simply is. It is the natural state of Being.
It is nothing other than what We truly are.
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Though I run this site, it is not mine. It's ours. It's not about me. It's about us. Your stories and your wisdom are just as meaningful as mine. 