Beyond Practice
by Peter Fenner
During the Radiant Mind course many people have a clear and thorough
experience of presence. Participants enjoy a state of presence that
is self-maintaining and which doesn't need any further cultivation.
Presence is experienced as a natural and complete way of being that
cannot be enhanced or destroyed. We could say it is an experience
in which "nothing is missing" if we understand this as
shorthand for an experience which goes beyond any thought, concern
or consideration for being either complete or incomplete.
However, some time later, after the Course, it is possible for people to feel
that they have lost the experience of presence-or at least that the experience
has become diluted. This feeling can produce a need or desire to "do something" in
order to recover the experience they are losing. The need to do, feel or think
something is produced in the hope that the action taken will displace or dissolve
the feeling of loss. We interpret this feeling of loss as the recrystallization
of the belief "that I should be somewhere different from where I am." When
this belief starts to resolidify we begin to search for a discipline or practice
which will assist us in recovering the experience of being fully and simply
at home with who we are.
We believe that we shouldn't be experiencing what we are
The re-emergence of a gap between where we are and where we would
like to be is natural and can be anticipated. It stems from a confusion
in what we believe. The gap is ultimately insignificant, since
the thought that "something is missing" is simply a thought-form
that occurs with more or less frequency and intensity, in the same
way that clouds in the sky are thick and dense on some days and
spare or absent on others. However, we can listen to the thought
that something is missing as a description of how things really
are. We earnestly believe that we shouldn't be experiencing our
current thoughts, feelings and perceptions.
From our point of view the particular actions we take are not
a real source for rediscovering the experience of presence. Consequently,
we don't advocate or recommend any specific behavioral changes.
We leave it to you to produce any behavioral or environmental changes
that support you. Depending on your past conditioning you will
be inclined to give yourself a break, find some time and space
outside of work and family commitments, sit quietly appreciating
your experience, meditating, and so on. From our own side we have
created the possibility for graduates of Radiant Mind to review
the course whenever they wish, as an appropriate response to the
recrytallization of the belief that "something is missing." You
may also be motivated to use a method you have learnt from the
Course to bring coherence to your thoughts or slow them down in
order to displace an unpleasant feeling. For example, you might
decide to be quiet and simply "be with" the experience
that something is wrong.
Running from presence
In attempting to recover an experience of intrinsic freedom we
need to be aware that any practice we engage in will consolidate
the belief that something is missing for as long as we believe
that we need to engage in our chosen practice. The very action
of trying to get rid of an impediment or obstruction to being present
validates the belief that the impediment exists. The harder we
work at removing it, the more solid and real the impediment becomes.
This process also conditions and reinforces a belief that presence
is an experience that can be lost and found. To this extent then,
our practice can condition and further prolong the pain and suffering
that it is designed to remove. An effective practice therefore
needs to naturally evolve beyond itself, without retarding or disturbing
any movement towards an experience of unconditioned presence.
The discipline of neither giving into nor resisting our needs
and desires is one such practice. When we sense a need or desire
to do or say something, we don't automatically do whatever it is
that we need to do. But in modulating our need we also watch our
tendency to resist or hold back from fulfilling our needs. We don't
constrain our behavior, or hem ourselves in, by stoically resisting
the energy of our desires. In this way we neither contract in the
face of powerful desires nor give them unbridled expression. Through
this practice we achieve a natural balance between dependence and
independence, speech and silence, action and stillness, giving
and receiving.
Another practice which naturally opens out into an experience
of uncontrived presence is the discipline of neither hanging onto
nor letting go of our experiences.
Our practice is already fulfilled
At a certain point during these practices we can discover that
we aren't in fact doing anything different than what we could otherwise
have been doing. Where previously we experienced practice as a
discipline-as the performance of an exercise we can do, as opposed
to not do-now we experience that there is no practice that is distinct
from living. The feeling that practice consists of doing something
special, is replaced by the realization that we are only ever doing
what we are already doing.
By becoming aware of our deeply embedded and transparent beliefs
about needing to practice we no longer need to do specific things
in order to be present. Instead, we become aware simply by becoming
aware. The doing or not doing of some particular activity ceases
to influence our expanded awareness. We become present in a way
that is deep and solid yet very light and spacious at the same
time.
Likewise, the practice of neither giving into nor resisting our
desires matures into an awareness in which "giving into and
resisting desires" are experienced as assessments we make
about what we should and shouldn't be doing. We experience the
impossibility of giving into a desire as distinct from being present
to the thoughts and feelings that are manifesting at any point
in time.
Similarly, if we had been engaged in the practice of neither letting
go of, nor hanging onto, our experience, we see that we are already
unable to let go of our experience or hang onto it. We experience
the impossibility of holding onto our pleasures and letting go
of our painful experiences. There is nothing else we could be doing.
We discover that we are already doing what we are trying to do.
We have accomplished the purpose of our practice without needing
to practice.
Totally different from giving up a practice
This experience shouldn't be confused with giving up a practice.
It is totally different from ceasing to practice as a deliberate
decision or as a reaction to the challenge of becoming more aware.
The point we are describing is a transition that occurs in the
midst of practice when we discover that we aren't doing anything
different from what we would otherwise have been doing. In the
midst of practice we experience the total impossibility of practicing
a discipline in contrast to not practicing a discipline. Stopping
becomes indistinguishable from continuing. At this point it is
impossible to stop, but equally we aren't doing anything that would
tell us that we are continuing. We could just as validly say that
everything is our practice or that there is no such thing. You
could say we are practicing no practice.
Within this new disclosive space our experience is complete and
fulfilled as it is. This space does not preclude engaging in a
discipline except that here our practice a isn't designed to displace
what we are already experiencing. When we begin a practice we are
not changing what we are doing with the intention of finding something
better or more effective to do. We continue doing what we are doing
simply because this IS what we are doing. If this includes wondering
whether what we are doing is the right or best thing to be doing
we do this-just because this is what we are doing.
This represents an important watershed for at this point nothing
we think, feel or do can displace the experience of presence.
Extracted from an essay "Practicing the Impossible"
prepared for graduates of the Peter's work.
If you are interested in the Radiant Mind Course
a Free
Video Interview is available of Peter Fenner being
asked about the Course, what the unconditioned mind is and how people
can tell if they are experiencing nondual awareness.
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