The Witness
The most important thing you can do for yourself, your life, and others is to find the witness within yourself. The witness is the thoughtless observer, which is in all of us, and the Souls link to consciousness or energy. This is the same link within all living creatures except the brains differ in size and humans are obviously gifted. All creatures are born in the witness state until the brain and mind matures, giving birth to the doer or the ego. Seemingly caught up in doing the witness lays dormant, and overrun by the constant state of activity. Finding the silent observer (witness) is what meditation is about, whether active or inactive it strengthens the mind and leads towards stability. When the witness is worked on the mind slowly gets reacquainted to a new way of existing. An existence where it is required to loosen its grip by a higher power. The power slipping through the hands of the doer it eventually gives in, and the witness is now holding the power and stands alone in close proximity with Awareness (Soul). When the three merge and stand together in being, as a tightly knit group it is called the “Samadhi State”, which is on the edge or on the borderline of the finale surrendering. If you are still witnessing something external or the internal energy, it’s an indication of the witness state and not the Samadhi state, because witnessing stops in the Samadhi state. When all of the accumulated baggage over a life time (doer/mind) and its connection with the witness are given up, then the emergence into Eternity is granted. The result of which is the doer being dissolved, and the witness remains as Awareness’s point of perception in, and of consciousness. They work in tandem to isolate the mind on important manners and not allowing the mind to claim authorship for something that happens naturally in life. The lost of desires and fears are the cornerstones of enlightenment and the end of claiming doership. Life is then lived the way it was suppose to, naturally present, and working towards the common good of all things.






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