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Why didn't the Buddha say "the observation of the
body" but "the observation of the body in the body"?
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If we are a researcher,
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we tend to believe
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the object of our study
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is independent of our mind, our consciousness.
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It's like the bacteria lying under the lenses
of the scientist's microscope
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has nothing to do with the scientist themself.
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The observer and the observed are considered
two distinctive, separate entities.
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That's the scientific approach,
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or the approach of common perceiving out there.
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But when practicing mindful awareness and deep looking,
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we should learn to transcend...
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the boundary dividing...
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the subject who observes
and the object being observed.
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Look in such a way that
the subject of observation
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and the object of observation become one.
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Only then, can our understanding deepen.
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Because...
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we should know that
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the object being observed carries within it the color
of the mind, or the consciousness, of the observer.
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Because you can't separate
the observed from the observer.
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Especially when in Buddhism, they always say,
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dharmas are the objects of the mind.
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There's no dharmas outside the mind.
And there's no mind outside the dharmas.
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For that reason,
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the subject who observes...
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enters into the object being observed.
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And the boundary between the observer
and the observed is dissolved.
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Scientists now have also begun to see that.
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They know that the subject of observation
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influences the object of observation.
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It's impossible to remove the observer's subjective mind
or consciousness from the object of observation.
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It's like when people shed light
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on an...
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object of observation, such as...
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an electron.
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Without that light, there's no way to see it.
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But when one directs the light to it,
the light will transform,
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the light will have an effect...
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on that object.
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Because this light is also a source of energy,
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when that light shines on an object
or when it...
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envelops an object,
that object will change.
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The same with our consciousness.
Our consciousness is also a source of energy.
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When we embrace an object with our awareness
or look deeply into an object,
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that object will also change.
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That's the connection between
the subject and the object.
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So, nuclear scientists now
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also advise us that
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if we want to understand deeply
the nature of an elementary particle,
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we have to learn
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to be a participant,
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and not to hold on tightly
to the role of an observer.
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They use the nouns
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"the participant"
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and "the observer".
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If we're an observer standing outside an object,
we'll never understand it.
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We have to learn to be a participant.
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It means we have to participate in it,
we have to be one with it.
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It's like, in French, we have
the verb "comprendre".
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"Comprendre" means to understand.
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But 'comprendre' has the prefix 'com-',
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and the verb 'prendre' meaning 'to pick up'.
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To understand an object
means to pick it up ('prendre')
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and become one with that object ('com-).
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That's the meaning of the prefix 'com-'.
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'Comprendre'
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means 'to understand'.
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Let's say, we want to understand our elder sister.
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We have to put ourselves
into our elder sister's skin.
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We have to be one with her mental formations, her
worries, her griefs, her hopes, and her happinesses.
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We put ourselves into her flesh and her bones, and
are one with her. Only then, can we understand her.
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However, if we're still an outside observer,
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it's impossible to understand her in the true sense.
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So, in India,
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they usually use the example of a grain of salt.
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While standing on a beach, it longed to know
how salty the water in the ocean was.
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They told that grain of salt,
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"If you really want to know
how salty the water in the ocean is,
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"there's only one way: you have to
jump into the ocean and be one with it.
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"Only then, can your understanding of the
ocean's salinity be complete and perfect."
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That's the way they explain
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why, if we want to truly understand something,
we have to participate in it.
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Only when we become one with that thing, can
our understanding of it be deep. Otherwise,...
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our perceptions and understanding of it are
still characterized by discrimination and dualism.
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From the political...
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as well as cultural points of view,
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when there are...
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conflicts
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or disputes,
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more often than not,
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each side considers themself right
and the other side wrong.
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If the two sides sit at a conference table
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and if somebody can help
both sides understand one another,
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naturally they will come to understand the
difficulties and sufferings of the other side
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and come to a...
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treaty
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that makes it easy to live together
in peace and harmony.
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Two siblings or two partners are angry
with one another, are against one another,
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are sad because of one another,
or make each other suffer,
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because this person thinks that, the other person
is completely different from them.
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But if we find ways
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to put ourselves in the other person's shoes,
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and come to see all the sufferings, hopes and
dreams, worries, and difficulties they're having,
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we can see that person in a new light. From that
understanding, we can come to accept them.
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With acceptance, we can come to...
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forgive
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and live in peace and harmony
with them without any problem.
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So, not only when we sit on our cushion
practicing meditation and deep looking
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do we need to dissolve the boundary
between the subject and the object,
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but when going about our daily life also.
If we want to arrive at understanding and love,
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we also need to learn to dissolve the boundary
between the subject and the object.
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That's why "observation
of the body in the body" means...
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we observe the body in such a way
that we participate in the body,
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that we become one with the body,
and the boundary between...
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the subject who observes and the object
being observed i.e. the body, is no longer there.
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Only then, can we be successful in this practice.