The recognition that all phenomena arise together in non-dual consciousness, dissolving the illusion of separate selfhood.
In Taoist cosmology, the Tao generates the ten thousand things—the infinite multiplicity of existence. Yet this multiplicity isn't separate from the source; all arises as one unified expression. Applied to mindfulness, this dissolves the illusion that you're an isolated observer watching an external world. When fully present, you're not separate from your experience; consciousness and phenomena arise together. The boundary between self and world becomes fluid. Laozi teaches that this recognition brings profound peace: there's no one trying to improve or fix things, just the whole expressing itself. Most anxious presence comes from the exhausting fiction of being separate—a separate self that needs to manage, control, and defend. Non-dual presence reveals this story as just that: a story. When you stop defending that separate position, you discover seamless participation in reality. In practice, this might mean: during mindfulness, notice where you're positing a separate observer. What remains when that position softens? Can awareness simply flow through all ten thousand things—sensations, thoughts, perceptions—without dividing into observer and observed?
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.