You don't have to think all the time. [This is] the world's most amazing discovery that's never been mentioned [on the news].
Eckhart Tolle.
I woke up this morning and I watched myself fall from the sensory input that woke me up...noise in the background and the same physical discomfort I wake up with every morning...to thought and story about these things. I imagined, then as I lay there, that image displayed in the Gita of a chariot being carried away on a wild run by five wild horses. In this analogy, the five horses are the five senses, the chariot is the human body, the charioteer is the intellect, and the reins are the mind. Hmmm! There I was watching myself being pulled away.
Ironically, a few hours later, I tuned into Eckhart Tolle's video, and he mentioned the imagery of the chariot. (I am getting a bit desensitized to these 'coincidental happenings'. They are becoming 'normal' occurances.lol) He added the thought and story component to the chariot ride, stating that in today's society focus on 'thinking' has taken over the attention on sensory input that Lord Krishna was referring to in the Gita.
I agree. 'Thinking' is a real problem in our culture. We are getting lost more in thought than we are in sensory input. In fact, I believe, we are so lost in our heads with its stories, beliefs, dramas...we often don't even notice what the body is feeling. We are not "embodied" enough. It is like we, as the charioteer (intellectual mind), have fallen off the chariot (the body) and are being dragged along, not by the senses but, by thought.
As, I lay there in bed this morning, prior to listening to Eckhart Tolle, I was thinking about my own chariot ride, about my tendency to live in my head rather than in my body or in the moment. I remembered what I am learning from Dr. Sue Morter, and I began to breathe into my body...into the areas of so called 'pain', visualizing the breath going up and down the sushumna (she refers to it as the 'The Central Channel'). Using the reins of my mind, I brought my attention back into my body and back into the moment. Of course, I had to crawl back into the chariot to do that, with a willingness to experience the bumpy ride (pain sensations).
Note: The above pic came from a search for free clip art image. Wikimedia Commons.
Wish I could credit the amazing artist.
I could see so clearly that distinction in experience from when I was lost in head and story and when I was back in body, breath, moment. Two totally different 'felt experiences'. When I was 'embodied', however, I could see how illusionary the other experience was.
The question arises:
Who can see? Who is the experiencer?
Eckhart Tolle, in the below linked video, tells us that we have two idenities. We all carry a bag of thoughts around with us filled with some good stuff, and a lot bad. This bag becomes our 'problematic' identity. We then spend our lives trying to solve "the problem of me." In order to solve this problem, we go to thought and story. We get lost there.
There is also another formless sense of presence identity that is not inside the bag but carrying the bag. We don't recognize that Self when we are too identified with the thoughts in the bag we are carrying and too busy trying to solve the problem of 'me".
When we go to bed at night and slip into deep sleep, however, the horses slip away, the chariot slips away, the charioteer slips away and there is just the reins. Huh??? When we are in deep sleep or 'unconscious'...sensory input slips away, the thoughts slip away, the body slips away and there is just consciousness. Consciousness doesn't have to direct anything or do anything. It just is. That is who we are....
I spoke yesterday about the four levels of consciousness according to Yoga. And though it seems to be counterintuitive...we eventually want to live in a state of deep sleep until we reach Turiya. We do not have to literally fall asleep, go into a coma or become physically unconscious to do this. Deep sleep is not a slipping into 'unconsciousness' as we know it. It is actually returning to a higher level of consciousness. It is returning to our formless essence. From there, we want to awaken on the other side to Turiya....where we are aware that we are awareness experiencing awareness. We can reach this higher state without having someone hit us over the head with a mallet. We can do it through our practice
Consciously recognize the being Self as your essential Self
How?
First of all, we need to redirect our focus. Tolle reminds us that we are so focused on the painting on the canvas (sensory perceptions, thoughts, emotions) that we are not aware of the canvas the painting is being painted on. We need to recognize that there is something beyond what we are seeing physically...something from which and on which the physical is created.
There is much more to reality than what we experience in the first level of consciousness: waking. In this stage it is all about the chariot and the horses. Here, we are too identified with physicality to recognize there is anything beneath it.
And there is much more than what we experience in the second stage: dreaming. This stage is all about the charioteer...the intellect. This is the mental stage I find myself in more than I like...pulled away again and again by thinking, feeling, emoting. So much so that I often forget I am standing in a chariot (body).
I thankfully am growing as a lucid dreamer. I can conceptualize in my dreams that I am dreaming. I catch myself more and more, like I did this morning, lost in thought and sensation. I can wake myself up from it, realizing that it isn't 'real'. This lucid dreaming can help us get to the third stage Tolle was referring to. When we realize we are not standing in Truth and begin to commit to finding that Truth we may fall from lucid dreaming into the third stage: deep sleep.
Yet, many of us fear the process of going from dream state to deep sleep state. Why? Because, in order to get there, we need to let go of what we are clinging to that keeps us in the first two states. We need to let go of the concept of "me and the problem of "me". We need to let go of this personality we call "me" that we created. We need to let go of our attachment to the physical world...to the chariots we are standing on. We need to let go of our attachment to the sensory input as being all there is to reality- the horses. We need to let go of our attachment to thought and story. We need to let go of our attachment to the intellectual or conceptual mind- the charioteer and we need to drop the reins, allowing mind to just be. We need to let go and in a sense we need to die to be reborn.
In order to fall into deep sleep state...the formlessness of who we are...into Universal mind. we are having to fall back into what seems like the unknown to us...dark, emptiness. We will lose who we thought we were in our dreaming and waking states. That's like dying to what we knew. Well, to what we thought we knew. In actuality, we are falling into the only known truth. We are not achieving a new state here...we are discovering what was always there.
From Deep Sleep, if we stay here long enough, the light will enter, and we will reach the fourth state: Turiya. We will remember Who we are and we will allow Self to recognize and remember Itself. We will experience Sat-Chit-Ananda.
We don't literally go to sleep to return to this state. Just the opposite. We must wake up on the other side of Deep Sleep. Meditation might help:
True meditation is not an achievment but a discovery....
But...!!!
The first step is realizing that we do not have to be pulled along on this crazy chariot ride most of us are on! We need to discover through practice that we do not have to think all of the time. Secondly, we need to get out of our minds' and return to the body, the breath, and the moment. We need to make sure we are solidly standing on our chariots before we drop the reins and completely let go.
And whatever your intentions, wishes, and dreams are, always remember that everything happens in the body first! Dr. Sue Morter, page255
All is well!
Dr. Sue Morter ( 2019) The Energy Codes. Atria: New York
Eckhart Tolle (May 16, 2025) You Don't Have to Think All the Time. Part 1 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-6rvCtu6SM