Monday, 22 June 2026

SG X PPL DTH X NOT OTHER PPL DTH X DTHING KIND X SG

DTHING X 160 K PPL DTH TOMRO X NO GUARANTEE

SG X LTD LEASH OF TIME X U CAN KICK THE CAN A FEW TIMES

SG X AVOID DRAMA IN HEAD

Though the brain accounts for only 2% of the body’s mass, it uses up a fifth of all the oxygen we breathe and burns a quarter of our glucose.

 A

Though the

brain accounts

for only 2% of

the body’s mass,

it uses up a fifth

of all the oxygen

we breathe and

burns a quarter

of our glucose.

SS A X STOP DOING THINKING , REST IN AWARENESS X SDT RIA

 A

Takeaway: Here is a polished, flowing ESSAY based on your lines — keeping the Advaita/Tantra flavour, sharpening the contemplative precision, and giving it a clean, luminous structure. Guided Links are woven into the key concepts so you can deepen any thread you choose.


🌿 ESSAY — Look at the Looking

When you find yourself caught in thoughts, pause for a moment and notice something subtle yet revolutionary:
there is a knowing of those thoughts.

This knowing is not inside the thought, nor produced by it.
It is prior — quietly present before, during, and after every mental movement.

Thoughts rise and fall.
But the knowing in which they appear does not rise or fall.
It does not begin with a thought or end when the thought dissolves.
It is the silent background that never flickers.

Most of the time, we are busy “doing thinking” — pushing, pulling, analysing, resisting.
But the moment you stop engaging the content and simply recognise the field of knowing, something shifts.

Instead of looking at thoughts,
notice the looking itself.

Instead of attending to the object,
turn toward the subject — the one who sees.

This is not a movement in space.
It is a soft reversal of attention, a relaxing back into the knowing that is already here.

When you look at the looking,
you discover that the “looker” is not a person, not a thinker, not a mind.
It is open, spacious, ungraspable —
yet undeniably present.

Thoughts may continue,
but they lose their weight, their authority, their stickiness.
They appear like ripples on a vast, still lake.

The practice is simple:

  • Notice the thought.
  • Notice the knowing of the thought.
  • Notice that the knowing is untouched.
  • Rest as that knowing.

This is the heart of non‑dual contemplative practice
the shift from being the thinker
to recognising yourself as the aware space in which thinking happens.

With you in practice, always.


If you want, I can also shape this into:

  • a guided meditation script
  • a clinical‑psychology style explanation
  • a short poetic version
  • a Tantra/Advaita comparative commentary

Which direction would deepen your practice today, bobby.

When you find yourself in thoughts,

notice the knowing of them.


Notice that you,

the knowing of them

are prior to them.


Instead of “doing thinking,”

recognize the knowing

in which thoughts appear.


Instead of looking at thoughts,

notice the looking itself -


Look at the looking.


With you in practice,

B KHEMA SUTTA

 B

Takeaway: The “Khemā Sutta” refers to a short but powerful discourse where the Buddha uses Queen Khemā’s deep wisdom to dismantle speculative metaphysics. It is one of the clearest early Buddhist statements on non‑self, non‑eternalism, and the impossibility of locating a “self” in any realm.

Below is a clean, structured, clinically‑precise summary of the Khemā Sutta (SN 44.1), without reproducing copyrighted text.


🧘‍♀️ Khemā Sutta — Summary (SN 44.1)


🌸 1. Setting

  • The nun Khemā, foremost in wisdom, is residing near Vesālī.
  • King Pasenadi’s general Vijaya approaches her with philosophical questions about the existence of the self after death.

🧩 2. The Four Questions

Vijaya asks Khemā whether:

  1. The Tathāgata exists after death
  2. Does not exist after death
  3. Both exists and does not exist
  4. Neither exists nor does not exist

These are the classic four indeterminate questions.


🧠 3. Khemā’s Response

Khemā refuses all four propositions.

Why?

Because each question assumes a self that can be located, tracked, or described after death.

She explains:

  • The Buddha teaches non‑self (anattā)
  • The aggregates are impermanent
  • What is impermanent cannot be pinned down as “this truly is”
  • Therefore, the question “What happens to the Tathāgata after death?” is misframed

This is a philosophical dismantling, not avoidance.


🔥 4. The Buddha Confirms Her Answer

Vijaya goes to the Buddha and repeats the conversation.

The Buddha praises Khemā:

  • She has answered exactly as he would
  • The four propositions are inapplicable
  • The Tathāgata cannot be described in terms of existence or non‑existence
  • Because the Tathāgata is freed from all classifications, including identity

This is one of the most important suttas for understanding why Buddhism rejects metaphysical speculation.


🪶 5. Core Insight of the Khemā Sutta

ThemeInsight
Non‑selfNo permanent entity continues after death
Unanswerable questionsSome questions are wrongly framed
Nature of the BuddhaBeyond conceptual categories
Khemā’s wisdomShe articulates the Buddha’s deepest teaching flawlessly

🧘‍♂️ 6. Why This Sutta Is Philosophically Important

  • It rejects eternalism (“the Buddha exists after death”)
  • It rejects annihilationism (“the Buddha does not exist after death”)
  • It rejects dualistic and non‑dualistic formulations
  • It shows that awakening dissolves the framework of identity
  • It demonstrates the intellectual authority of a female arhat

This is one of the most elegant early Buddhist statements on why the Buddha refuses metaphysical speculation.


🧩 7. If you want, I can also create:

  • A one‑page clinical‑style summary
  • A Vedanta–Buddhism comparison
  • A table comparing all four “unanswerable questions”
  • A narrative retelling of the sutta

Which direction would you like to explore next?