The following are not testimonies to me but to the authority of your own experience. ~ Prakash
This week all of the questions have dispersed. I am no longer conflicted and I have a new understanding of That from an experiential point of view. I can see now that while I didn't have one single moment of understanding, it has been developing over the last few weeks.
Over the weekend, I spent time reading "Ramana." The message continues to become clear as I continue to spend time with it. One of the things that I have been struggling with, and I have heard others in our class mention, is how to shut off thoughts and the ego. I was under the false impression that doing so was a prerequisite to experience That. Then, while in a relaxed state, I became aware of the presence of That. I realized that it has always been right there and I have always been aware of It. I only now realize what It is.
I will try to describe my experience in words, but it truly was indescribable. I felt like It was energy which illuminated itself. It was a beautiful, happy and free space which I could actually look into and breathe in. I was completely aware that I had a body, but was completely aware that it was not That; it was not who I am. I was also completely aware of thoughts coming up and leaving. They were present, but I was not them. They were a supplement or tool, as was my body, to what I am, but I did not identify with either as me. "That" felt like a space in which my ego and thoughts could simply rest. It was really very beautiful.
When I was ready to come back into my body, so to speak, I wondered if the experience would end. What I discovered was that it didn't. It moved with me. I was aware that That was now looking out of my eyes. I felt that I was seeing things differently and for the first time. I can't explain all of what I experienced, but I can tell that I am changed in some way. I believe that I now know who I am. I am very grateful to have been extended this invitation, it is quite a gift.
Thank you.
Maryann Cuomo
The conversation I had with Kevin made me aware of what I really do know and understand. After my conversation, I thought to myself, I get it; it has been here all along. The elimination of mind and ego brings freedom and peace. When you are no longer your mind, you are free.
During one of the classes, I felt a direct experience. In the last month, I was not looking for a new home but my daughter showed me a house she saw on the internet for sale, I went to see it, the same day I made an offer, the next day I signed the contract and within 30 days (May 29th) we close on the house. Everyone has told me congratulations but I am not sure why.
During the process, I never stopped to think about the what if, it was a huge decision that I did not even consider the options, it just happened.
Lisa Ouzounian
I had the "exit interview" over the phone and it was very interesting. A few points were clarified more for me, one of which is why does the feeling of being "awakened" come and go. In looking at it as the feeling comes and goes when the ego tries to own the experience made sense. The ego comes and goes, and is changing versus That which is eternal. When the ego tries to own something it gives the appearance of coming and going because the ego comes and goes.
Also in looking at S-4 and the interconnections paper that I am going to write, that is clearer now too. Everything is That, which includes nature. If everything and nothing is That and all the same, than nature is all the same too. There is no separation between things in nature, except for the separation that is given to them by the I thought. Writing this paper may not be as daunting as "I" thought.
Michelle Maresca
I flew down to Florida this past week and had an interesting experience on my flight down there. I have issues with flying, or more so I have issues with the possibility of plummeting, the flying part is actually pretty interesting. For the past five years, I have always flown medicated with zanax to take the edge off, but I need to be sharp the next day in Florida so it would be better to not medicate before flying. I decided to fly un-medicated and during takeoff I thought about the question, who am I?. I went through the steps that we do in class while going through the question of who am I?.
The interesting part of this experience was as I was doing this and basically feeling like I was "letting go" I became extremely calm. The flight was extremely turbulent, with the crew encouraging the passengers to please remain in their seats with seatbelts fastened, but I was calm. I felt more at ease than I had when taking the zanax to fly.
It is also interesting that that feeling is still with me. There was a lot going on with my visit down to Florida, but the whole time I have had this great sense of tranquility. At least that is the only way I can describe it. On my flight back, I did not feel the need to take anything before the flight, and I suspect that I will not need to again.
Michelle Maresca
Your presence is like a lighthouse on a dark stormy night, standing tall in the storm letting your light shine through the darkness drawing the ships home. Even through all of your personal trials you never missed a class .... never dropped the ball... never were frustrated always full of compassion and Truth. How can one ever return the Grace you have so generously and selflessly guided into our LIFE? A picture hung on a wall with some flowers hung on it doesn't do IT justice!!! But it's a start,
LOL. Love, R
On Saturday morning, I sat down on my family room couch and read The Enlightened Turtles. The Turtles are asking the questions "what is It all about" They conclude that the mind is a series of thoughts, which does not exist on its own without those thoughts. Next, they conclude that the mind can never know what is aware of thought.
The Turtles had gone as far as they could go when they had reached the silence. One Turtle feared there was nothing, while the inquiring Turtle explained they had reached the Mystery. They defined the Mystery as the place the mind can't go. Therefore, losing the mind was not a bad thing, and in fact, it was absolutely necessary to discover the Mystery. These were very clever Turtles.
So now I don't feel so bad about fearing that there was nothing. One of the Turtles initially had the same concern. But now we all understand that no-thing does not mean an empty void. It means we are all That.
Beverly Brooks
Last week I was driving to work. It was a normal day and I took the normal route. I had stopped at a stop light and was enjoying the sun coming through my car window. I looked out of the side window to a patch of grass on the side of the road. I was amazed because I didn't just see a patch of grass but I saw every blade of grass. Tall or bent they all were there just moving in the breeze. I moved slowly up to the sky and there was tree and again, I saw every branch. I didn't just see grass and a tree; I saw blades of grass and branching on the tree. It took my breath away. I still remember the beauty of that moment.
Jane Carponelli
Throughout this class there has been debate on the right words to use. Is it god, or silence? Is it nothing or blankness? All I can say is whatever it is, unless it is truly seen from within words cannot describe what should be seen. I do commend you on your effort to put words to the spiritual teachings so that it can be intellectually understood.
Jane Carponelli
When you were asking the girl up front those questions of who she was not relating to the body or mind, I was following you and I felt it! The presence. It's not "nothing" there's definitely something there's a strong presence is the best was I can explain it into words. Even that is not sufficient as an explanation. I felt a strong peace, I wanted to laugh! Nothing mattered.
Sandy Jacob
Overall, it was a great awakening experience for me. I realize I am not completely there yet after speaking with you on Skype yesterday. I do wish to continue this path with you. I feel my mind is like a sponge ready to absorb all kinds of teachings and direction in order to get me to understand the self-realized path. The changes that I have seen within myself have been significant, as I have been able to see situations from a different perspective. A perspective of peace, understanding, non-judgment, and less thought. Things that used to bother me before don't anymore, as I'm realizing more and more that our bodies and life here on earth is an illusion, it's not real, since it's not timeless. I feel one with the presence. Thank you, Kevin. I am grateful for your teachings and showing me the way to a different perspective on life.
Sandy Jacob
The professor and students from our Tuesday evening course created an environment that seemed very relaxed. This made it easy for me to share ideas and to, as Professor Edwards indicated in his course syllabus, “notice what is almost always overlooked.” That’s what I found myself doing right up to the point before the video of Maharshi was put in. I was noticing. I noticed that many students in our class were much older than the age group I had grown accustomed to before transferring from Commerce to the DePaul SNL program. I noticed that once our discussion began many students were attending class not because they were required to be there, but because each had a sincere sense of wanting to get something from this course and grow. I also noticed that many within the class felt completely at ease sharing ideas and they displayed a genuine interest in the ideas of total strangers. Then there was Professor Edwards. What a relaxed dude that guy is?! He’s got a way about him that just seems to put you at ease. It was weird, but when sitting there and experiencing the passive energy he had displayed it made me feel as if I needed to relax, take a breath, and slow down. I felt I needed to slow down my day and all the experiences leading up to that moment Tuesday March 31st. Seeing him sitting there like a poker player with a great hand honestly helped me to clear some of my own thoughts of the bogged down dregs of daily routine.
Ryan LaHaie
I am now into my third week of self inquiry and what I have discovered is that I am no closer to discovering who I am then I was when I began the course. When I walked into the classroom 3 weeks ago I was confident I knew who I was. However, I find that at any given moment throughout the day I catch myself now asking the “who am I?” To be honest, I never really took long inward looks to discover who I am, but now I’m beginning to ask.
Ryan LaHaie
There are times during my journey that moments of clarity have appeared. It is not until I make a serious effort to clear my thinking mind of questions that I am offered a glimpse of what it means to find some truth. The only way I am able to describe in words what I experienced was that truth was found in emptiness.
Ryan LaHaie
By cleansing my thinking mind of thoughts there is peace that just sort of lingers. Like everything else peace just is. For me, this newly found peace has a formless existence. I am not sure how to identify or communicate what I have been experiencing, but there is something there.
Ryan LaHaie
I loved your reference to people looking at their physical embodiment as being all that they are. You also mentioned how people may also see the Divine as an even smaller part of themselves. “There is nothing that is not that.” I had an ephihany.
Sharon Gambin
After speaking to Professor Edwards, I realized something. That it indeed has always been here. That the answer to “Who Am I?” has been here the whole time. Since the day I was born, it has always been here.
Maebelle Obispo
So here I am!! Things are falling away; a relationship; material things that previously I felt were necessities;. There are still emotions and thoughts;
I experienced pain and sadness with the loss of the relationship. These feelings and thoughts, however, no longer saturate my Being and define me. I am the Light and I feel at ease, I am That and That is That. (Ha Ha)
I am finding it necessary to "ground" myself occasionally, and my family is looking at me strangely! My voice seems to have changed somehow several people have mentioned it and if I focus on it I can hear the change as well. I realize, it is not my voice but what is behind it that has changed it is not the voice of worry or concern; it does not come from the surface, but it reverberates from the Truth.
Raecheal Karas
Through our discussions and from the readings, I have a heightened appreciation for how the mind and our thoughts can produce static and interference, distorting our perceptions of the world. It's as if the incessant chatter of our minds pulls us farther and farther away from the calmness and serenity of the heart. Since our exploration of the self commenced, I have been more acutely aware of the times and moments when I feel most at peace. I have found that when I quiet my mind, I can almost effortlessly release into my heart. Interestingly enough, when I am able to stop the chatter of my mind, decisions I seemed to have been struggling with become infinitely more clear. What I thought was important seems to become less so, and I find myself returning to the power of my faith and trust in God. When I see and listen through my heart, I can see the pure joy in life and my interactions are driven by compassion and love. And quite honestly, what is more essential to life than joy, compassion, and love.
Anthony Capone
I'm learning to relax a lot more and take a step back – realizing that things will get done and everything will fall into place, regardless of how perfect "I" try to make them. I am gaining a better understanding that it's not the end of the world if things are not in perfect order. I am beginning to think it's more of my ego that projects this sense of urgency and not really me.
Nicole LaBrasca
Through my continued frustration with what I am trying to get from this class, something became clear. Last week, I had written this at the end of my paper, when I was explaining the one experience I had in the past that I have been trying to repeat: �I felt drawn inside myself to see what was truly there deep within. I followed another�s gaze inside to see what was there. All my walls were stripped away until there was nothing left but �I�. I don�t know how to do that on my own. � The point I had been missing up until this class was actually written right there in my own words. �I followed another�s gaze inside� myself. I hadn�t realized I did that. I remember him looking deep into my eyes and I had felt my walls come down, but I never actually realized that I had followed where he led. Inside myself, inside to find �I�. I saw �I�. I�m not sure what he saw, but I saw �I�. I started to do that in class, but stopped myself short. I was embarrassed that I might find �I� right there in class, so I stopped. But I believe I know how to do that. At least I know what it felt like. And I know it wasn�t him, it was me. This is actually the best part. It has freed my ego from him. He�s not a very pleasant person, and now he holds no power over me. Several times since class I have looked part way inside myself. I can do it, I do get it, but I�m frightful to really go in. When you recounted your experience as �trippy�, I�m not sure I want to. I may warm up to the idea later, but for now I am pretty content. I can take my little peak toward �I� and smile, knowing that my thoughts are not me. I now almost feel like two. As I have experiences now, I sometimes think that my reactions are not me, but rather my ego, and it is humbling. My ego is insignificant to �I�. I think that is what is stopping me from going back to find �I� completely. Because �I� is aware of the ego, now my ego is aware of �I�, and knows that �I� has all the power.
I look at the world and the people in the real world and everyone is self serving� they are their egos. Yet I realized that in class there was a connection that I felt with the other students. It was as if there was another non-real world, or maybe a more real world, where we were connected from within.
Patty Bernatz
Several times this week I found myself getting frustrated or mad, at which point I thought to myself that I can control these feelings by recognizing the �I� is rising. At one point, I began to argue with my wife on a silly detail, and I was able to stop the argument by looking inward and seeing where my thoughts were coming from and then recognizing that it wasn�t what she did that aggravated me, it was the �I�. I think this newly found control will do wonders for my marriage.
Chris Sachs
For all of my reflection papers, I have tried to analyze and discover what the Self is. Painstakingly, I spent 8 weeks agonizing over something that appears to be simple and has no monumental effect on who I am. However, I suppose the task of looking inside and discovering more about my thoughts and feeling plus learning about the various parts that make up my ego present in itself a great reward. As I read through some of the books this past week, I began to laugh at how the Gurus seem to toy with us and offer suggestions that make our minds run in circles. Furthermore, I found all of their philosophy to be riddle- like and soothing, which may partially be their intent.
I don�t have much to day this week; I spent some time keeping silent and found the silence to be thought provoking. I heard on the radio (when I wasn�t being silent) the other day an on-air personality talking about individuals who graduate from college and spend a year traveling the world; and how such experience can really put our own lives into perspective and help us understand the life we want to live. After hearing that I reflected on how at first this course seemed bizarre and confusing, then watching the movies the first couple of classes and how strange those people seem; to today where I am able to see through those accusations and labels I put on those people. If anything, I can walk away from this class with a stronger sense of individuality and alikeness, seeing we are all the same, and to treat people with a sense of love and intention. This type of behavior would be a result of seeing things for what they are and not what I perceive them as.
Chris Sachs
As I was reflecting about our class I found a few points interesting. One of them was when our instructor asked us to look around or look at our neighbor/classmate. I thought it was funny how we started to look at each other and then it was very obvious that we did not know what to do. We looked at each other for a brief moment, and then we looked away. Then I would look back and feel strange when the other person was not looking at me. Then I started to look away and then the person started to look back over at me. It was kind of goofy and definitely found it difficult to maintain eye contact. I even found myself trying to find a way out of the situation by asking our instructor if we were suppose to look at each other or stare. It was my attempt to get out of the situation. Then our instructor asked us to stay with it for a while. He meant long enough to get past the initial phase. For a brief moment I was trying this approach with our instructor as we starred at one another. I was not able to make it past that phase. I tried but felt very uncomfortable. I�m still trying to understand why this happens. Is it that we feel like the other person can see our insecurities or are we all that self conscience? For some perhaps it�s a matter of culture. What I mean by this is that in some cultures, you are taught not to look at people in the face or eyes as this is a form of disrespect. It could also feel like an invasion of privacy. These are just some of the thoughts that came to my mind as I tried to figure this out. It was amusing to me how he seemed not to be uncomfortable. As I was starring at the teacher it seemed like a form of concentration or looking into the abyss. I took this as a demonstration of points he made to us earlier in class. He talked about being able to sit in quiet and how this allowed the mind to drop. Our instructor invited us to be quiet but don�t make any effort to be quiet. Give up the intention to be quiet. I also recall our instructor stating that if you want to be beautiful, keep no thought in mind.
Ana Bayron
Finally, I always wondered what meditation was like. I always thought it had to do with listening or concentrating on music or some kind of background noise. I have learned though, that it means to NOT concentrate on any object, in fact, do not use your mind. It does not have anything to do with music or background noise.
Last week�s class was very insightful.
Martha Pantoja
I have realized now that I need to just be myself. This is me. There is nothing more to me than what is in front of me. I am who I am and the only person that needs to be happy with me is me! This is it! There is no reason to search for more because I am everything that I will ever be. I am complete as I am. Wow, I feel like I am starting to sound as confusing as all the other people that I have been listening to throughout this course in the films that we have watched. I constantly wonder (and feel like I now understand) what the laughter is all about.
Martha Pantoja
I want to reflect on this idea of resting in the now, in this moment. I am finding it difficult. Not to be there, but to describe it. It seems so natural. It seems so detached from the human dimension that is sitting here trying to put a form to it and trying to find words for it. It is truly formless. It is beyond words. This is not a new strange place. I have been here all my life. But without the benefit of the knowledge of what it is or what it is I am to do with it. Well, I do nothing, of course. I have been reading and listening to many wise teachers describing what this is and answering very deep thoughtful questions of others seeking to understand. But I know not to seek. Everything I seek is here and always has been. I just need to simply let go. To stay �let go� is the challenge. As the day-to-day stuff tries to get me attached and engaged in its thoughts and its worries and its problems, I remind myself, �let go�. Knowing, now, that this letting go is okay, has been the discovery. Not the letting go, just the knowing that it�s okay. I have been especially aware of it this week and have noticed how everything becomes easier. Nothing else has changed. Same job, same family, same day-to-day. Yet different. In a Mooji interview he describes it as a subtle peaceful energy. Yes! That resonates! Maybe these are the words I am seeking � subtle peaceful energy.
Deborah Strassburger
I enjoy when Kevin speaks about his own story and although he doesn't share�the details with us I believe he has�experienced many struggles and suffering and to see how happy and peaceful he seems is what makes me keep wanting to understand this self inquiry.� Of course�the books say we don't understand it we experience it.� I want to experience it.� I felt a presence in the room when we�were all silent.��It was calming, no fear involved.��But that presence�is before God?� God is a concept so we are moving towards what is before God?�� This confuses me because if there is a presence that can't be seen�but felt could that not be God?
Deborah Dougherty
Tonight�s class was great! I know that self inquiry is not something we understand, but rather something we experience and I feel like I�m beginning to experience it or some aspect of it. I�ve stopped trying to figure out why when I think and then ask myself, �Who�s thoughts are these?� or �Where did they come from?�, that I feel peaceful, content and the thoughts seems to dissipate without any energy or action on my part. Instead of trying to figure it out I�m just letting it �be�. In the past I�ve spent a lot of time and energy trying to change the thoughts I think and everything I tried took action and energy on my part, but that doesn�t seem to be the case with self inquiry. This week I have felt closer to this natural state of being that Kevin talks about, then any other weeks since starting this journey into self inquiry. It�s not been this �aha� moment for me, which I was hoping for, but rather just this all of sudden I�m beginning to feel different. I want to say I understand it but honestly I don�t. What I do understand is that I�m feeling different!
Deborah Dougherty
This class is a real challenge in faith for me, in that everything after I is a concept, that we are not two but one and then my thoughts go to, isn�t self-inquiry a concept? It�s an uneasy place to be, experiencing something that feels right, however not understanding intellectually how that experience comes to be.
Deborah Dougherty
I�ve spent a lot of energy trying to quiet my mind with my mind��..Yikes! It sounds so crazy but it makes perfect sense, as this is how I was taught. Knowing just the little I do from taking this class it is plain to see now that quieting the mind and thoughts this way is impossible. Oh, sure I was using a technique that changed thinking on these thoughts to thinking on something more positive or affirming of myself, but it was all based on thinking and not being. It was all non-stop thinking, round and round we go. It amazes me how when we search for the source of �I� the mind becomes quiet. I don�t understand it, however I am experiencing it when I ask the questions. As long as I don�t try to get my arms around it I enjoy the contentment that seems to follow the asking .
Deborah Dougherty
This class has given me insight into my mind and how "I" has been running my life. I�ve come to believe and experience a presence greater than myself through recovery; however this seems to take it a bit further. I seem to be experiencing peace that I�m not working to obtain through my thoughts. I don�t know if that makes sense or not? The peace just seems to be present. I�ve also found that time is moving so slowly��..not sure if this has anything to do with this, however it is an amazing feeling.
Deborah Dougherty
It is a neat thing to be able to sit in silence hearing the noises of your body and the noises of nature, while some are man-made most are just the stillness of nature. I�m pretty sure this has come from this course, as before I have always had noise going on, I call it �white noise.�
Deborah Dougherty
On page 35, three visitors ask of Ramana, "Kindly instruct me as to how the mind may be controlled."� I found this to be interesting, as my mind is so full of thought, that I wonder if I will ever be able to understand the message.� Suddenly, I realize, that regardless of all the thoughts in my mind, somewhere there is silence.� And, within that silence exists consciousness. The one phenomena that remains constant, is consciousness.� Your constant state of being, the presence/existence, the �I Am� between thoughts is who I
am.
Heather Peteris
Additionally, in the beginning, I spoke of controlling the mind. Ramana speaks of God on this very page, in terms of, bringing your thoughts back to God will
in effect control the mind.� Essentially, this tells me that perhaps I am not arrogant in thinking I am God.� We are all God, once we realize the same.
Heather Peteris
The awareness is felt - whether it be for a second, or for an hour. As the one who is aware, I may not always be aware of the awareness,
however, I know it is always present, as I am presence. Knowing the consciousness is constant, and understanding exactly what is
the awareness of the consciousness, is almost incomprehensible, yet so simple.
Heather Peteris
I hope this does not come across as arrogant, however, I did not feel right, or rather, it did not feel appropriate, submitting a Reflection Paper last week. I feel there is nothing I would have been able to say, that would have come close to what I experienced two weeks ago in class. I was beyond words. This Reflection Paper is beyond words.
Heather Peteris
I am struggling to be aware of the awareness. The one thing I am able to say with confidence, is that had this exact same situation occurred two or three years ago, I would have considered myself somewhat of a mess. I am not sure that I would be as calm as I am today. I do feel that I am more free now, as I fully believe I am consciousness.
Heather Peteris
The story about the Enlightened Turtles was a straightforward and uncomplicated description of self inquiry. It simply stated the steps of self inquiry and the light bulb finally turned on for me. My nature is to over-research a topic which ends up putting me in state of confusion.
Rosemary Marshal
I�m by no means perfect and have bad days just as good, and if my house burned down tomorrow I would be very disheartened and sad. My seeking continues in the sense of cultivation and fullness, but no longer in the question of who am I?
Michael Moran
I'm open to, and tremendously inquisitive about, the idea of simplifying the complicated and extraneous noise and enjoying the singularness and authenticity of me. And if that exists not in the knowing, but in the being -perhaps there is an authentic self that I am not supposed to find, but rather return to. I only hope I know when I arrive.
Bill Lothridge
What I continued to return to, no matter what aspect of the exploration I traversed, was that I really enjoy peace. Most people would, I suppose. So what do I mean when I say peace? I�m referring to those moments when I feel most comfortable - most natural. I usually am free from stress or distraction, from noise or burden, and usually from focus or purpose. At this juncture in my life it seems like peace is almost like suspended animation. I�m neither aware of where I�ve been or where I�m going. It�s when I�m comfortable in just being.
Bill Lothridge
Generally speaking, however, any recent experience I can recall that I was most peaceful, experiencing peace, was when I was thinking of nothing at all. And come to think of it, I didn�t really have to hit the escape key either. It was happening unplanned, outside of my effort or control.
Bill Lothridge
Here again, it�s the questions that seem to trip me up a bit. While I understand what they�re potentially leading to is the suspension of the mind and time when we consider the root of �who am I? and �what is before 'I'?�, the aspect of questioning is by its very nature an aspect of inquisition; with inquisition being a process for reflection, and reflection a pause for consideration (or an �invitation�). Inquiry, therefore, seems to belong to people (the �I� being), who in turn responds based on a consideration of the question asked. With this in mind, this week I felt a distinct and compelling need to suspend �the thinking� (as a subset of the questioning) because it�s clearly counter-intuitive for the peaceful state of what before thinking (mind dropping) belongs to. And just as these thoughts (ironically, about not thinking) came to mind, something even more vibrant occurred to me that I hadn�t considered before now. Perhaps �what is before I?� is a question that doesn�t come with an answer!
Bill Lothridge
In other words, in the same way I�m no more equipped to answer, �What were you before you were born?� I�m in no position to assign words to an experience which is the truest nature of who I am, and certainly not constrained by �me� - much less my mind, my thinking, my vocabulary and my inquiry.
Bill Lothridge
Non-duality. This week I must of said those words a dozen or more times; non-duality, non-duality. The idea that I am not this or that, here or there, before or after - all seems more vibrant to me for some reason. Perhaps it's because two weeks ago I made peace with the fact that THIS was not something to obtain, return to, illuminate or exercise. THIS was omni-present, timeless and spacious...and I am that. I'm beginning to see the silliness and selfishness of "doing", when the doing is so "I" focused and belongs to the ego. There's even a piece of me that is embarrassed about the level of ego that tends to all the "I's" business, but even that is dismissible in the awareness of what THIS represents, and again that I am THAT.
Bill Lothridge
When might, in great numbers, the thirst to end the pain become so great that the simplicity and vastness to which we all are a part become more significantly present and abiding in us? Why would we (do we) choose the hurt? Why does our thirst for winning, growing, improving and ego always trump the miraculousness of what IS already? If there was ever a time for humanity to explore it's truest nature - one would think we've most assuredly arrived. Let's go home to THAT which we all are and so peacefully and lovingly belong to.
Bill Lothridge
When we were in class last week I heard you say �If I am the source of thought than I am God.� I seriously thought about this quote for about a week. Am I God? Who am I? These are some serious questions. If I am not my physical body then what am I?
Matt Serio