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  Tuesday, 12 February 2013
  1 Replies
  2K Visits
Dear instructors,

In some cases, when a strong ego surges, I am able to watch it act in the 3 brains. I try to observe as much as possible. But then, when I want to relive the event in meditation, I find that, firstly, the intensity is completely gone, and I have difficulties seeing what happened in what brain.

The question is: is it ok that the intensity of the pain I felt is gone and what can I do to keep the memories of what happened in what brain.

Regards,

Olivier.
11 years ago
·
#3143
Accepted Answer
Like any muscle or skill, self-observation gets stronger the more you use it. Gradually, your ability to recall events will be restored.

Recollection of intensity is not the goal of meditation. Rather, the goal is to observe what happened, as it happened, and simultaneously listen to the voice of intuition (not intellect). For this recollection does not need to be perfect. Most important is to be present in the moment, aware of what you are doing, and receptive to the nudges of intuition, which will lead you to comprehension.

“Nothing is easier than self-deceit. For what each man wishes, that he also believes.” —Demosthenes

"Do not worry; cultivate the habit of being happy." —Samael Aun Weor

11 years ago
·
#3143
Accepted Answer
Like any muscle or skill, self-observation gets stronger the more you use it. Gradually, your ability to recall events will be restored.

Recollection of intensity is not the goal of meditation. Rather, the goal is to observe what happened, as it happened, and simultaneously listen to the voice of intuition (not intellect). For this recollection does not need to be perfect. Most important is to be present in the moment, aware of what you are doing, and receptive to the nudges of intuition, which will lead you to comprehension.

“Nothing is easier than self-deceit. For what each man wishes, that he also believes.” —Demosthenes

"Do not worry; cultivate the habit of being happy." —Samael Aun Weor

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