--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "matrixmonitor"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> "Nevertheless, in a nearly Zen-like epiphany... 
> 
> Faqir Chand was NOT satisfied with these attainments and sought 
> for something higher and more permanent. 
> 
> Eventually Faqir realized that no matter how subtle or blissful 
> a meditation experience may be, it did not in and of itself 
> constitute the ultimate in spiritual realization. 
> 
> Rather, the ultimate truth was that no experience could capture 
> or contain the transcendental mystery of Being. In the highest 
> stages of development man does not develop a keen sense of 
> omniscience, but a radical and irrevocable understanding of 
> unknowingness." 


YES !!!

*Exactly* what I and (I think) a number of others
on this forum have been trying to express.


Weavers' fingers flying on the loom
Patterns shift too fast to be discerned
All these years of thinking
Ended up like this
In front of all this beauty
Understanding nothing

- Bruce Cockburn, "Understanding Nothing"



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