Monday, 22 June 2026

B THOUIGHTS

 B 

That’s a strong framing, and it maps closely to several Zen and nondual traditions.

A useful way to sharpen it is in a table:

LevelWhat is real?What is not?
Thought as eventThe arising of a thought (“a thought is happening”)
Thought contentThe symbolic representationThe thing itself
Direct realityImmediate experience (seeing, hearing, touching, etc.)The conceptual overlay about it

Your Spider-Man example makes this distinction clear:

  • The thought exists as a mental event.

  • Spider-Man as an actual being does not.

Likewise with the apple:

  • The perception of the apple is direct.

  • The thought about the apple is a model, memory, or abstraction.

Apple in thought is not the same as an actual apple.

Zen often points to this because humans habitually confuse the map for the territory.

But there’s an even deeper question in what you wrote:

“Why do we have thoughts?”

Your answer — because it is possible — is metaphysically elegant, but biologically we can say more:

FunctionWhy thoughts evolved
PredictionTo simulate future outcomes before acting
MemoryTo preserve patterns from past experience
PlanningTo coordinate complex behavior
Social modelingTo infer intentions of others
Self-modelingTo maintain continuity of identity

So from a practical perspective, thoughts are adaptive simulations.

Zen doesn’t deny this. It only denies their ultimate authority.

A Zen teacher might say:

  • Thoughts are useful servants.

  • They become suffering when mistaken for reality.

Your cloud analogy is very close to classical Zen imagery:

Mind is like the sky; thoughts are like clouds.

The sky is not harmed by clouds, and it is not defined by them. The mistake is believing you are the clouds rather than the space in which they appear.

DS X ADC

 A

Dorothea Stockmar is a German painter, writer, and trauma / grief counsellor.

Who she is (Germany context)

  • Born 1953 in Beuthen (then Germany, now Poland)

  • Grew up in Berlin, Germany

  • Lives and works mainly in Celle (Germany), also active in Berlin

  • Works as:

    • painter / visual artist

    • author

    • trauma and bereavement (grief) counsellor

What she is known for

  • Her work focuses on death, grief, loss, and meaning-making after bereavement

  • She combines:

    • art (paintings)

    • writing

    • therapy / hospice work

  • She has been involved in hospice and end-of-life care, including international settings (including Japan in some accounts)

Key personal background (important context)

  • After the death of her child, she began producing much of her artwork and writing around grief, mourning, and continuation of meaning after loss.

  • Her work often explores:

    • connection between life and death

    • transformation of grief into imagery and reflection

    • spiritual interpretations of loss (sometimes including Buddhist contexts)

Why her name appears in your context

She is often cited or featured in:

  • grief / hospice literature

  • interviews about bereavement

  • discussions of near-death experience (NDE)-adjacent interpretations

  • art exhibitions connected to mourning and spirituality

If you want, I can also tell you what she said in that specific “saliva biomarker / sleep / interview” context or how she’s connected to that article—because she’s not a scientist in that study, but her name often appears in media overlap situations.

SIT WRITE HERE

“Summer afternoon—summer afternoon; to me those have always been the two most beautiful words in the English language.” ~ Henry James

LONGY X USE OTHER HAND FOR TASK X MICRODOSE ON NATR EVEN BY WINDOWS

B EGO

 B

Got it — here’s the expanded table with a brief version of each anecdote included.

TimestampStoryAnecdote (what happens)Core Theme
00:00Opening — The Mirror We Cannot SeeThe introduction frames ego as something subtle and invisible—something that distorts perception even when we think we are being “clear” or “correct.”Self-deception and unseen ego
01:38Bankei Yōtaku and the ThiefA thief is caught stealing, but Bankei refuses to punish him. Instead, he speaks to him as an equal, seeing his Buddha nature. The thief is later moved by this recognition and abandons his path.Ego hidden in moral judgment
09:11Hakuin Ekaku and the ChildA young woman falsely accuses Hakuin of fathering her child. He accepts the child without defending himself. When the truth comes out, his reputation is restored, but he shows no attachment to either praise or blame.Ego hidden in reputation
17:57Shichiri Kojun and the RobberA robber threatens Shichiri with a sword demanding money. Shichiri calmly says the money belongs to the monk, not “himself,” and asks the robber to take it properly. The robber is unsettled by his composure and leaves transformed.Ego hidden in possession/control
26:43Dōgen Zenji in the Zendo at NightDōgen is practicing late at night when a temple attendant mistakes him for a thief. Instead of reacting, he continues his meditation, showing that even spiritual authority can be mistaken for ego if clung to.Ego hidden in spiritual practice
36:54Ikkyū Sōjun and the SkullIkkyū encounters a skull and reflects on impermanence and vanity. The moment exposes how even intellectual or poetic insight can become another form of ego performance.Ego hidden in performance/insight
45:54What the Stories Leave BehindThe conclusion ties all stories together: ego is not only pride, but subtle identification that appears in judgment, humility, spirituality, and even wisdom itself.Ego as universal disguise

If you want, I can compress this into a “one-line moral per story” version or turn it into study flashcards.


B

What you’re describing lines up closely with a few philosophical and contemplative traditions, especially non-dual frameworks (like Advaita Vedanta, some strands of Zen, and certain modern phenomenology interpretations). But it helps to separate what is metaphorically insightful from what becomes a literal claim about perception and cognition.

The itch example is useful as a phenomenological pointer: experience is not something you observe from outside. When there’s an itch, pain, or sound, it is immediately presented as experience, not as an object you first locate and then inspect. In that sense, there is no “distance” between awareness and what appears in awareness.

Where things get tricky is the move from that observation to the conclusion that “you become everything” or that awareness is literally a non-personal field that transforms into all experiences. That step is a metaphysical interpretation, not something directly established by the experience itself.

A more grounded way to put the same core insight would be:

  • There is no separate “inner observer” located behind experience.

  • Thoughts like “I am the one who is experiencing this” are themselves experiences arising in consciousness.

  • The sense of being a separate entity is a constructed model the brain generates for continuity, agency, and prediction.

  • What we call “self” is more like a dynamic process than a fixed observer.

From a cognitive science perspective, the brain builds a self-model that integrates memory, body signals, and environment to produce the feeling of “me here, world there.” This model is extremely useful for survival and decision-making, but it can feel like a solid, independent entity when examined from inside experience.

However, it’s also important not to overcorrect in the opposite direction. Saying “ego is purely illusion and awareness is everything becoming everything” can accidentally erase useful distinctions:

  • Your body still has boundaries.

  • Your nervous system still processes signals locally.

  • Other people are not literally extensions of your mind, even if experience of them only appears in your consciousness.

So a more precise synthesis would be:

Experience is always immediate and non-dual in appearance (there is just what appears), but the mind overlays a structure of separation that allows navigation, memory, and social life. The “illusion” is not that nothing exists, but that the self is a fixed, independent observer rather than a continuously constructed process within experience.

If you want, I can map your description directly against Zen, Advaita, and modern neuroscience side-by-side so you can see exactly where they agree and where they diverge.

GOOD BAD MORE LIKE WISDOM IGNORANCE 

Here are 10 clear points summarizing and correcting the ideas in your statement while keeping the philosophical structure intact:

  1. Hindu Advaita Vedanta holds that consciousness (Brahman) is ultimate reality, and the individual self (Atman) is not separate from it.

  2. Buddhism does not affirm a universal consciousness or soul; it emphasizes impermanence and non-self (anattā), even though later traditions sometimes use “mind-like” language.

  3. The Buddha’s focus was not metaphysical explanation of God, but the practical cessation of suffering through understanding experience.

  4. In Buddhism, consciousness is dependently arisen, not a permanent or universal substrate.

  5. The claim that “Buddha accepted Universal Consciousness” is closer to Vedanta than to early Buddhist doctrine.

  6. Modern physicalism (materialism) does not typically claim “something comes from nothing randomly,” but instead relies on lawful physical processes whose ultimate origin is unknown or debated.

  7. The hard problem of consciousness highlights that we do not yet know how subjective experience arises from physical processes.

  8. One major philosophical issue is the “explanatory gap” between objective brain activity and first-person experience.

  9. Competing solutions include emergentism, dual-aspect theories, panpsychism, and idealism, none of which has definitive proof.

  10. The current state of philosophy is not a collapse of materialism into spirituality, but an active unresolved debate about what consciousness fundamentally is.

If you want, I can turn this into a diagram showing how Vedanta, Buddhism, and modern philosophy diverge and overlap.

A


ROUNDEST X SUN

 A

That’s broadly true in a practical sense, but it depends on what you mean by “roundest.”

The Sun is extremely close to a perfect sphere—much more so than planets like Earth or Jupiter—but it isn’t perfectly round. Because it rotates, it’s a very slightly flattened oblate spheroid (bulging a tiny bit at the equator).

The key detail is how small that distortion is: the Sun’s equatorial radius is only about a few kilometres larger than its polar radius, out of a total radius of ~696,000 km. That difference is so tiny that, for most observations, it effectively looks perfectly spherical.

So:

  • ✔️ Yes: it is one of the roundest natural objects we know

  • ❌ Not strictly true: it is not the single “roundest” in an absolute sense, because even gas giants, slowly rotating stars, and some moons can be comparably spherical

  • ⚠️ Precision note: “roundness” depends on how you define and measure deviation from a perfect sphere

If you want, I can compare it numerically with Earth, Jupiter, or other stars to show just how spherical it really is.