Your words touched me, too. I really liked what you said about writing from the NowHere moment. So often we are conditioned to think, ‘I better think about that some before I formulate a response.’ That doesn’t always help. Too much thinking can really muddle up the energy. And that goes not just for responses but for writing as well — as in articles and essays. Sometimes if I write down a few ideas then set the writing aside to think about it more, or to ‘sleep on it,’ then when I finally get back to it the energy is all different and I lose a lot of what was originally coming through.
Also, while it is fine that not everyone who has not had personal experience with something cannot sense deeper meanings in the concepts being expressed, the information can still be absorbed which can later enrich a personal experience when it finally happens. Yup, everyone is at their own level of internal readiness and we can’t write to that but rather only for what we need to express.
I’ve always loved everything you’ve written about either/or vs. both/and. We humans sure can get stuck in habitual thinking patterns. We think our vision is great because we can see but we see what we think. And therefore there is so much that we don’t see. And it is so easy to get caught up in the duality/polarity game that we can’t see the way out of it.
Thank you so much for the response. I’m glad you liked it.