I Am Only 'I'
- Duration: Video: 2 hours, 22 minutes, and 5 seconds / Audio: 2 hours, 22 minutes, and 5 seconds
- Recorded on: Nov 24, 2019
- Event: Weekend Gathering in Copenhagen
A woman asks for a clarification of the John Smith and King Lear analogy and whether John Smith is a lucid dreamer.
A man asks if the veiling of consciousness by the finite mind could be compared with a dissociative psychological state.
A man asks if he needs a teacher if he trusts his experience completely.
An athlete asks Rupert how to live in accordance with the understanding that everything emerges from awareness.
A man asks if different types of minds and states of consciousness are possible.
A man comments that King Lear is always the witness of experience and asks how to get rid of him all together.
A man asks what part the mind plays in asking the question, 'Am I aware?'
Rupert speaks about the power of art to take us to our true nature.
A man asks if there are levels of consciousness on the Direct Path.
A man suggests that both progressive paths and the Direct Path lead to the same place, and Rupert comments.
A man asks if identification with the 'I' of experience is actually a subtle level of the separate self.
A man asks Rupert if he has witnessed spontaneous remission from illness in people who have recognised their true nature.
A man asks how he veils himself from his true nature.
A woman says friends have commented that she has not been herself lately and asks Rupert to help her understand what has changed.
A woman asks if it is necessary to forget our true nature in order to localise as a body.
A man asks if awareness needs human beings to know itself.
A woman asks for a clarification of the John Smith and King Lear analogy and whether John Smith is a lucid dreamer.
A man asks if the veiling of consciousness by the finite mind could be compared with a dissociative psychological state.
A man asks if he needs a teacher if he trusts his experience completely.
An athlete asks Rupert how to live in accordance with the understanding that everything emerges from awareness.
A man asks if different types of minds and states of consciousness are possible.
A man comments that King Lear is always the witness of experience and asks how to get rid of him all together.
A man asks what part the mind plays in asking the question, 'Am I aware?'
Rupert speaks about the power of art to take us to our true nature.
A man asks if there are levels of consciousness on the Direct Path.
A man suggests that both progressive paths and the Direct Path lead to the same place, and Rupert comments.
A man asks if identification with the 'I' of experience is actually a subtle level of the separate self.
A man asks Rupert if he has witnessed spontaneous remission from illness in people who have recognised their true nature.
A man asks how he veils himself from his true nature.
A woman says friends have commented that she has not been herself lately and asks Rupert to help her understand what has changed.
A woman asks if it is necessary to forget our true nature in order to localise as a body.
A man asks if awareness needs human beings to know itself.