According to Adi Shankara Charya, seeing belongs to the senses and mind and can be mistaken (like mistaking a rope for a snake), while knowing belongs to pure consciousness and reveals eternal truth; the world of appearances is like the snake, while Brahman (absolute reality) is like the rope, and true knowing liberates by recognizing that one's true nature is the unchanging awareness that witnesses all experiences, not the changing body, thoughts, or emotions.
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What Is the Difference Between Seeing and Knowing?||| #nonduality #motivation #awakeningtonothingnesAñadido:
According to Adi Shankara Charya, the difference between seeing and knowing is the difference between appearance and reality, between the changing and the eternal, between what is perceived and what truly is.
Seeing belongs to the senses and the mind. Knowing belongs to pure consciousness.
Seeing can be mistaken. Knowing cannot.
Seeing depends on objects. Knowing is self-existent.
Seeing reveals forms. Knowing reveals truth.
A person may see the sun rise and set every day, yet know that the sun itself is not moving around the earth.
In the same way, one sees oneself as a body, a personality, a collection of memories and experiences, but true knowing reveals that one is not any of these things. One is the eternal.
Witness in whose presence all experiences arise and disappear.
Seeing is outward. Knowing is inward.
Seeing is dependent. Knowing is absolute.
Seeing belongs to ignorance when it is mistaken for reality.
Knowing is wisdom because it penetrates beyond appearances and rests in the essence.
The eyes can see a rope and mistake it for a snake in dim light.
Fear arises immediately. The heart races. The mind imagines danger.
Yet the moment a lamp is brought, the snake vanishes.
Nothing new was created. The rope was always there.
Knowledge did not produce reality. It removed ignorance.
This is the central teaching of Advaita.
The world that is seen is like the snake.
Brahman, the absolute reality, is like the rope.
Seeing alone can deceive.
Knowing liberates.
Human beings spend their lives trusting what they see. They see success and failure, gain and loss, youth and old age, birth and death.
They believe these appearances to be ultimate truths.
But Shankaracharya teaches that what is seen is constantly changing, and that which changes cannot be absolutely real.
Reality must be eternal.
Reality must remain the same in all conditions.
Reality must exist in the past, present, and future.
Therefore, the world of appearances, though experienced, cannot be the highest truth.
Knowing begins when a person asks, "Who is the one that sees all these changes?"
The body changes, yet something knows the change.
Thoughts come and go, yet something observes them.
Emotions rise and fall, yet something remains aware of them.
Even in deep sleep, when thoughts disappear, the existence of the self remains.
That unchanging awareness is the true knower.
Seeing belongs to the mind.
Knowing belongs to the self.
The mind is like a mirror, reflecting countless images.
Awareness is the light that makes reflection possible.
Most people become fascinated with the reflections and forget the light.
They chase experiences, believing that fulfillment lies in acquiring more objects, more knowledge, more achievements.
Yet every achievement eventually fades.
Every pleasure eventually ends.
Every possession eventually changes hands.
The seeker who understands Advaita begins to turn inward.
Instead of asking, "What can be seen?"
he asks, "Who is seeing?"
Instead of asking, "What can be obtained?" he asks who desires to obtain.
This inquiry gradually dissolves ignorance.
True knowing is not the accumulation of information. It is the c- >> recognition of what has always been present.
Information belongs to the mind. Knowing belongs to being itself.
The mind collects facts just as a library collects books.
Yet no amount of books can reveal the one who is reading them.
A person may spend a lifetime studying scriptures, philosophies, sciences, and religions.
But if he has not discovered the one who is aware of all knowledge, he remains a stranger to himself.
The greatest mystery is not hidden in distant galaxies or ancient texts.
It is hidden behind the simple feeling of I am.
Before every thought, before every identity, before every memory, there is the silent awareness of existence.
That awareness is the doorway truth.
Shankara Charya points directly to this reality. He does not ask you to become something extraordinary.
He asks you to see what you already are.
The search for truth ends where the sense of separation ends.
The moment a wave realizes it is not separate from the ocean, all fear disappears.
The wave no longer worries about its size, shape, or lifespan, because it knows its essence is the ocean itself.
In the same way, the individual who realizes the self no longer fears gain or loss, praise or blame, life or death.
These belong only to the temporary form.
The essence remains untouched.
The enlightened one sees that consciousness is not inside the body.
Rather, the body appears within consciousness.
>> [snorts] >> Just as clouds appear in the sky without affecting the sky, thoughts and emotions appear in awareness without affecting awareness itself.
Anger may >> arise, sadness may arise, joy may arise, but awareness remains unchanged. It silently witnesses every movement without becoming any movement.
Most people spend their lives trying to control the waves of the mind. The wise discover the ocean beneath the waves.
Once the ocean is known, the waves lose their power to disturb.
This is why true peace cannot come from changing circumstances.
Circumstances are always changing.
Peace comes from knowing that which never changes.
The world teaches you to improve your identity.
>> Ultimately, a search for the self.
A person believes he wants wealth, power, recognition, or pleasure, but beneath every desire is the longing for completeness.
The tragedy is that completeness is sought in objects that are themselves incomplete and temporary.
Therefore, every achievement brings only temporary satisfaction.
For a brief moment after a desire is fulfilled, the restless mind becomes quiet.
In that silence, the natural bliss of the self shines forth.
Mistakenly, people attribute the happiness to the object obtained. They do not realize the happiness came from the temporary absence of desire. The bliss was always within. The object merely removed a veil for a moment.
Understanding this changes everything.
The seeker stops chasing >> shadows and begins looking toward the light.
He realizes that what he seeks is the very source from which seeking arises.
The mind may resist this truth because the ego survives through identification.
It wants to remain the center of experience.
It constantly creates stories about who you are, what you need, and where fulfillment lies.
Yet every story changes.
As a child, you had one identity.
As an adult, you have another.
Countless beliefs, emotions, and opinions have come and gone.
But the awareness that witnessed them all has remained the same.
That awareness is your true nature.
It has never aged. It has never been damaged.
It has never been improved or diminished.
It simply is.
When this is deeply understood, a profound shift occurs.
Life continues, but attachment weakens.
Actions [snorts] continue, but the sense of doership fades.
Experiences >> shadows, and begins looking toward the light.
He realizes that what he seeks is the very source from which seeking arises.
The mind may resist this truth because the ego survives through identification.
It wants to remain the center of experience.
It constantly creates stories about who you are, what you need, and where fulfillment lies.
Yet every story changes.
As a child, you had one identity.
As an adult, you have another.
Countless beliefs, emotions, and opinions have come and gone.
But the awareness that witnessed them all has remained the same.
That awareness is your true nature.
It has never aged. It has never been damaged.
It has never been improved or diminished.
It simply is.
When this is deeply understood, a profound shift occurs.
Life continues, but attachment weakens.
Actions continue, but the sense of doership fades.
Experiences >> Speak of silence.
Ultimate truth cannot be captured by words because words belong to duality.
Every word creates a distinction.
Truth is beyond all distinctions. It is beyond subject and object, beyond seeker and sought, beyond knower and known.
Yet, it is closer than breath, closer than thought, closer than the sense of self.
It is the very essence of existence.
It is what remains when every concept disappears.
It is what shines when the mind becomes still.
And in that stillness arises the highest realization of Advaita.
There is only Brahman.
The one who was searching is Brahman.
The truth being sought is Brahman.
The awareness >> Speak of silence.
Ultimate truth cannot be captured by words because words belong to duality.
Every word creates a distinction.
Truth is beyond all distinctions. It is beyond subject and object, beyond seeker and sought, beyond knower and known.
Yet, it is closer than breath, closer than thought, closer than the sense of self.
It is the very essence of existence.
It is what remains when every concept disappears.
It is what shines when the mind becomes still.
And in that stillness arises the highest realization of Advaita.
There is only Brahman.
The one who was searching is Brahman.
The truth being sought is Brahman.
The awareness
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