Levels 11-15 (text)

My most common phrase is ‘there is …’ this is just the bare awareness of what is, without making or taking it personal.

What you are describing — using the phrase “there is …” — is actually a very refined and psychologically healthy expression of mature awareness practice. It is simple language, but it reflects a deep shift in how experience is related to. Let’s look carefully at why this works and what it represents.


“There Is …”

Bare Awareness Without Personalization


1. What the Phrase Does

When you say:

  • “there is fear”

  • “there is sadness”

  • “there is tension”

  • “there is thinking”

you are doing something very precise:

You are recognizing experience without assigning ownership.

The phrase removes two automatic mental habits:

  1. Identification — “I am afraid.”

  2. Resistance or judgment — “This shouldn’t be happening.”

Instead, experience is acknowledged as an event appearing in awareness.

It becomes simply:

something occurring.

This is what many traditions call bare awareness or simple knowing.


2. Why This Is Psychologically Skillful

The human brain naturally personalizes experience. It converts sensations into identity statements:

  • sensation → story → self-definition

For example:

tight chest → fear → “I am anxious” → “something is wrong with me.”

Your phrase interrupts that chain at the earliest point.

By saying “there is fear”, the nervous system receives a different signal:

  • the experience is recognized,

  • but the self is not threatened.

Research in mindfulness psychology calls this decentering — seeing thoughts and emotions as experiences rather than as self.

This reduces emotional amplification and improves regulation.


3. Why It Feels Gentle

Notice the tone of the phrase.

“There is…” does not push away.
It does not fix.
It does not interpret.

It simply allows.

Because nothing is added, the system relaxes.

Awareness becomes receptive rather than corrective.


4. The Spiritual Dimension

Contemplatively, “there is…” reflects a profound insight:

Experience happens, but ownership is constructed afterward.

Awareness does not say:

  • “this belongs to me,”

  • “this defines me,”

  • “this must change.”

Awareness simply knows.

The phrase mirrors the natural functioning of awareness itself.

It is almost like speaking in the language of awareness rather than the language of ego-centered narration.


5. Why It Prevents Personalization

Personal suffering increases when experience becomes identity.

Compare:

Personalization Bare Awareness
I am anxious There is anxiety
I am failing There is disappointment
I am broken There is pain

The emotion remains fully acknowledged, but the self is no longer collapsed into it.

This creates space without avoidance.


6. Relationship to Pure Mind Abiding (PMA)

Your earlier practices evolved like this:

  • “Fear and Pure Mind” → integration

  • simultaneous knowing → non-separation

  • “Nothing needs to be done” → sufficiency

Now “there is…” expresses the distilled form.

It contains all earlier insights in minimal language.

It is Pure Mind Abiding in its simplest operational form.

No joining required.

No correction required.

Just recognition.


7. Why the Phrase Naturally Emerges Late in Practice

Early practitioners often need structure:

  • breath focus

  • phrases

  • compassion practices

  • intentional reframing

As maturation deepens, language simplifies.

The mind no longer needs explanation.

“There is…” becomes sufficient because awareness no longer needs guidance to include experience.

Simplicity replaces method.


8. The Subtle Wisdom of Grammar

The grammar matters.

“There is” places experience in existence rather than identity.

It emphasizes being instead of ownership.

The phrase quietly says:

experience exists, and awareness knows it.

Nothing more is required.


9. How This Affects Daily Life

Over time, this orientation tends to produce:

  • reduced self-criticism

  • quicker emotional recovery

  • less rumination

  • increased curiosity

  • gentler responses to difficulty

Because experiences are allowed to arise and pass without becoming personal problems.

Life becomes lighter without becoming detached.


10. A Gentle Caution

The phrase remains skillful when it includes feeling, not distancing.

Healthy use:

“There is fear” — while feeling fear in the body.

Less helpful use:

“There is fear” — said mentally to avoid feeling.

The body remains the anchor.

Bare awareness is intimate, not detached.


11. The Deep Recognition Hidden in the Phrase

Eventually one sees:

The phrase is not creating awareness.

It is describing what awareness is already doing.

Awareness naturally experiences life as:

“There is seeing.”
“There is hearing.”
“There is feeling.”
“There is thinking.”

The phrase aligns language with reality as directly experienced.


12. Why This Is a Mature Form of Practice

At this stage, practice becomes minimal because distortion has reduced.

No need to fix experience.
No need to interpret meaning.
No need to create distance.

Just knowing.

And knowing is enough.


Closing Reflection

“There is …” is not a technique so much as a quiet honesty.

It allows experience to appear without ownership, resistance, or story.

Fear may arise — there is fear.
Joy may arise — there is joy.
Thoughts may arise — there is thinking.

Life unfolds, and awareness simply knows.

Nothing added.
Nothing removed.

Just this — already happening.


If you’d like, I can next show something many practitioners eventually notice:

How “there is…” naturally evolves into silent knowing where even labeling becomes unnecessary — and why that is not loss but completion.

yes, please

Good — what you are pointing toward now is not a new practice but the natural quieting of even the last layer of practice language

Yes,

It’s lovely to see this curiosity. What happens at this point is truly simple. Over time, even phrases like “there is” may naturally fall away. Not by force, but because awareness is so familiar with allowing what’s present that it no longer needs mental notes. Experience simply arises and passes in awareness. It’s like the mind’s labeling function can

“Yeah, that would be perfect.”
00:01

I’m glad that resonates! Just remember, there’s no rush. If labels fall away, great—if they come back sometimes, that’s okay too. It’s all part of the natural unfolding.

Yes, How to live and teach from this maturation without turning it into a philosophy or losing humility.

Living and teaching from a place of deep maturation really means staying grounded in the humility of our shared humanity. Even as experience settles into simplicity, we remember that we’re always human—still learning, still navigating life’s joys and challenges. Rather than making it into a philosophy or special attainment, you invite others to meet their own experience as it is—no hierarchy, no final achievement. You share practices as invitations, not conclusions, and emphasize curiosity and kindness. Ultimately, humility flourishes when we live as an ordinary participant in life—not as someone who has arrived, but as someone who keeps walking the path alongside everyone else.

Why ordinary thinking, emotions, and even distraction continue — and why their return does not undo silent knowing.

Ordinary thinking, emotions, and even distractions are part of being human. Silent knowing doesn’t mean the absence of thoughts or feelings. Rather, it’s a stable awareness that recognizes all of these mental events as temporary and natural. When they arise, they don’t undo anything, because nothing needs to be maintained. Silent knowing isn’t fragile—it’s a deeper context in which all experiences occur. So when you notice yourself thinking or reacting, that awareness is still present, observing the flow. In fact, this is where true integration happens—knowing that even the busy mind is part of the whole and doesn’t diminish the deeper simplicity of being.

PURE MIND Abiding: Allowing Suffering

Below is a clear, warm, and grounded report on your theme:

PURE MIND Abiding

Allowing Suffering


Introduction

PURE MIND Abiding (PMA) does not attempt to remove suffering immediately. Instead, it changes the relationship to suffering. Rather than resisting, analyzing, or personalizing difficult experience, PMA invites a simple recognition:

Suffering is present — and awareness is already present with it.

Allowing suffering does not mean approving of pain or passively accepting harmful conditions. It means permitting experience to be known exactly as it is, without adding resistance that creates additional suffering.

In this way, PMA shifts practice from controlling experience to abiding with experience.


1. What Is Suffering in PMA?

In Pure Mind Abiding, suffering is understood as having two layers:

Primary Experience

The direct event:

  • physical pain

  • fear

  • grief

  • sadness

  • contraction in the body

This is natural human experience.

Secondary Suffering

What the mind adds:

  • “This shouldn’t be happening.”

  • “Something is wrong with me.”

  • “I must fix this immediately.”

  • resistance, fear of fear, judgment.

Often the second layer creates more distress than the original feeling.

PMA gently removes this second layer.


2. What “Allowing” Really Means

Allowing is often misunderstood.

It does not mean:

  • giving up,

  • liking suffering,

  • refusing helpful action,

  • becoming passive.

Allowing means:

letting experience be known before trying to change it.

It is an openness of awareness.

You are not allowing suffering to stay forever — you are allowing it to appear honestly.


3. The Core Movement of PMA

PURE MIND Abiding follows a simple movement:

  1. Recognition — suffering is noticed.

  2. Allowance — nothing is pushed away.

  3. Abiding — awareness remains present.

  4. Natural settling — experience changes on its own timeline.

The practitioner does not force the fourth step. It happens naturally when resistance softens.


4. Why Allowing Reduces Suffering

When suffering is resisted, the nervous system interprets experience as danger.

Resistance produces:

  • tightening

  • mental struggle

  • emotional escalation

Allowing sends a different signal:

This experience can be felt safely.

The body gradually relaxes defensive activation.

Paradoxically, suffering often softens when it is no longer fought.


5. The Role of Pure Mind

Pure Mind is not an idea or belief.

It is simply the awareness already knowing experience.

Even during intense emotion, something is aware of:

  • sensations,

  • thoughts,

  • feelings.

PMA rests in this knowing.

Suffering appears within awareness but does not define awareness itself.

This recognition creates space without distancing.


6. Allowing Without Personalizing

A helpful orientation is your natural phrase:

“There is…”

  • There is sadness.

  • There is fear.

  • There is heaviness.

This removes the burden of identity while keeping full intimacy with experience.

Suffering becomes an event occurring in awareness rather than a statement about the self.


7. The Body as the Place of Allowing

Allowing happens most effectively in the body.

Instead of thinking about suffering, PMA invites feeling:

  • tightness

  • warmth

  • pressure

  • trembling

  • fatigue

Attention rests gently with sensation.

The body often completes emotional processes naturally when allowed to be felt.


8. Compassion Emerges Naturally

When suffering is allowed rather than rejected, a surprising change occurs.

Kindness arises without effort.

Not because compassion is practiced deliberately, but because resistance has softened.

Awareness relates to experience gently by its very nature.

Compassion becomes the natural tone of allowing.


9. Why Suffering Still Appears

Allowing suffering does not eliminate difficulty from life.

Human existence includes:

  • uncertainty,

  • loss,

  • vulnerability,

  • change.

PMA does not promise freedom from pain.

It offers freedom from unnecessary struggle with pain.

This distinction is essential.


10. Allowing and Wise Action

Allowing suffering does not prevent action.

In fact, clear action often becomes easier.

When resistance quiets:

  • perception becomes clearer,

  • reactions soften,

  • responses become more appropriate.

Action arises from clarity rather than urgency.


11. Common Misunderstandings

“If I allow suffering, it will overwhelm me.”

In practice, resistance usually intensifies overwhelm more than allowing does.

“Allowing means doing nothing.”

Allowing refers to inner openness, not outer inactivity.

“I must allow perfectly.”

Allowing itself can be imperfectly allowed.

Even resistance can be included:

There is resistance.


12. The Simplicity of Mature Allowing

As practice matures, allowing becomes effortless.

No phrases may be needed.

Experience arises and is already permitted.

Awareness does not argue with reality.

Life becomes livable exactly where it is.


Closing Reflection

PURE MIND Abiding does not ask suffering to disappear.

It invites suffering into awareness without conflict.

Fear may arise — allowed.
Sadness may arise — allowed.
Uncertainty may arise — allowed.

And within this allowing, something quietly reveals itself:

Awareness is already capable of holding everything that appears.

Nothing more needs to be done.

Knowing is enough.


If you’d like, I can next create a companion piece that fits beautifully with this:

  • 🌿 PURE MIND Abiding: The Difference Between Allowing and Resignation

  • 🌿 PURE MIND Abiding: Working with Fear in the Body

  • 🌿 PURE MIND Abiding: The Three Movements — Recognize, Allow, Abide

  • 🌿 A 1-page printable PMA Allowing Practice Guide

Just tell me which direction you’d like to continue.

🌿 PURE MIND Abiding: The Difference Between Allowing and Resignation 🌿 PURE MIND Abiding: Working with Fear in the Body 🌿 PURE MIND Abiding: The Three Movements — Recognize, Allow, Abide 🌿 A 1-page printable PMA Allowing Practice Guide

Below is a complete PMA companion set — four integrated teachings written in a warm, clear, practice-centered voice. Each piece stands alone but also forms a coherent teaching sequence.


🌿 PURE MIND Abiding

The Difference Between Allowing and Resignation


Introduction

One of the most common misunderstandings in contemplative practice is confusing allowing with resignation. Both may look quiet from the outside, yet inwardly they are entirely different movements.

PURE MIND Abiding clarifies this distinction.


What Is Allowing?

Allowing means:

Experience is permitted to be known exactly as it is.

There is openness, curiosity, and presence.

Allowing says:

  • “This is here.”

  • “This can be felt.”

  • “Awareness can include this.”

Energy remains alive and responsive.


What Is Resignation?

Resignation feels like withdrawal.

It says:

  • “Nothing can change.”

  • “I must endure this.”

  • “There is no possibility.”

The body often feels collapsed or heavy.

Resignation closes experience; allowing opens it.


The Key Difference

Allowing Resignation
Open Closed
Present Withdrawn
Responsive Defeated
Aware Numb

Allowing contains vitality even in difficulty.


Why Allowing Heals

When resistance softens, the nervous system senses safety.

Emotions complete their natural movement.

Clarity returns without force.

Allowing is participation with life — not surrendering to suffering.


PMA Reminder

Allowing says: “This belongs in awareness.”
Resignation says: “Nothing matters.”



🌿 PURE MIND Abiding

Working with Fear in the Body


Fear Begins in the Body

Fear usually appears first as sensation:

  • tightening chest

  • shallow breathing

  • stomach contraction

  • muscle bracing

Before thought arises, the body is already responding.

PMA begins here.


Step 1 — Notice Sensation

Pause gently.

Feel where contraction exists.

No analysis.

Just sensation.


Step 2 — Recognize

Softly acknowledge:

“There is fear.”

Recognition alone often reduces escalation.


Step 3 — Allow

Let sensation exist without pushing away.

Breathing continues naturally.

Fear is felt, not fought.


Step 4 — Abide

Awareness remains present.

Nothing needs to change immediately.

Fear moves within awareness like weather in the sky.


What Happens Over Time

The body learns:

Fear can be experienced safely.

This reduces secondary anxiety — fear of fear itself.


Gentle Reminder

You are not calming fear.

You are allowing fear to be known.

Calming often follows naturally.



🌿 PURE MIND Abiding

The Three Movements — Recognize, Allow, Abide


PURE MIND Abiding can be understood through three simple movements.


1. Recognize

Notice what is present.

  • sensation

  • emotion

  • thought

  • mood

Simple acknowledgment:

“There is sadness.”
“There is tension.”

Recognition interrupts unconscious reaction.


2. Allow

Nothing is pushed away.

No fixing.

No judging.

Experience is permitted to exist.

Allowing creates space.


3. Abide

Rest as awareness itself.

No effort required.

Awareness already holds experience.

Abiding is not doing — it is remaining.


Natural Outcome

When recognition and allowing stabilize, experience often shifts on its own.

But change is not the goal.

Presence is the practice.


The Essence

Recognize honestly.
Allow gently.
Abide naturally.



🌿 1-Page Printable Practice Guide

PURE MIND Abiding — Allowing Practice


When Difficulty Appears

Pause.

Nothing needs to be fixed immediately.


Step 1 — Recognize

Notice what is here.

“There is …”

Name simply:

  • fear

  • sadness

  • tension

  • confusion


Step 2 — Allow

Let the experience exist.

No resistance required.

Feel the body.

Breathe naturally.


Step 3 — Abide

Rest as the awareness that knows experience.

Awareness is already present.

Stay for a few breaths.


Gentle Reminders

✔ Feel, don’t analyze
✔ Allow, don’t force calm
✔ Awareness already includes this moment


Short PMA Phrases

  • “There is …”

  • “Nothing more needs to be done.”

  • “Knowing is enough.”


Daily Micro-Practice

Anytime discomfort appears:

Recognize → Allow → Abide.

Even a few seconds is enough.


Closing Reflection

Experience arises.
Awareness knows.
Life continues.

Allowing is already happening.


If you’d like, the next beautiful step would be to create a complete PMA teaching sequence that organizes everything you’ve developed into:

  • 🌿 a 10-lesson PMA course outline

  • 🌿 a teacher manual structure

  • 🌿 or a cornerstone webpage version ready for WordPress.

Just tell me which direction you’d like to grow this work.

🌿 a cornerstone webpage version ready for WordPress.

Below is a WordPress-ready cornerstone page for your PMA teaching.
It is structured for clarity, SEO strength, and calm reading flow, using short sections, H1–H4 hierarchy, and gentle language suitable for a foundational page.

You can paste this directly into a WordPress Custom HTML block (Classic Editor or Block Editor).


<!– PURE MIND ABIDING CORNERSTONE PAGE –>

<div style=max-width:900px;margin:auto;font-family:Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;line-height:1.7;color:#333;>

<h1 style=color:#00B3DC;>PURE MIND Abiding (PMA)</h1>
<h2 style=color:#00B3DC;>A Gentle Practice of Recognize • Allow • Abide</h2>

<p>
PURE MIND Abiding is a simple mindfulness practice that changes our relationship to suffering.
Rather than trying to fix or remove difficult experience, we learn to allow experience to be known within awareness itself.
</p>

<p>
This practice is quiet, direct, and deeply human.
Nothing special needs to be achieved. Awareness is already present.
</p>

<hr>

<h2 style=color:#00B3DC;>What Is PURE MIND Abiding?</h2>

<p>
PURE MIND Abiding is the practice of resting as the awareness that already knows thoughts, emotions, and sensations.
</p>

<p>
Instead of asking, “How do I change this experience?” we gently discover:
</p>

<blockquote style=color:#00B060;font-style:italic;>
Knowing is already happening — and knowing is enough.
</blockquote>

<p>
Difficult emotions are not obstacles to awareness. They are experiences appearing within awareness.
</p>

<hr>

<h2 style=color:#00B3DC;>The Three Movements of PMA</h2>

<h3 style=color:#00B3DC;>1. Recognize</h3>
<p>
Notice what is present without analysis.
</p>

<ul>
<li>There is fear.</li>
<li>There is sadness.</li>
<li>There is tension.</li>
</ul>

<p>
Recognition interrupts automatic reaction and brings gentle clarity.
</p>

<h3 style=color:#00B3DC;>2. Allow</h3>
<p>
Allow experience to exist without resistance.
</p>

<p>
Allowing does not mean liking or approving suffering.
It means letting experience be known before trying to change it.
</p>

<h3 style=color:#00B3DC;>3. Abide</h3>
<p>
Rest as awareness itself.
</p>

<p>
Awareness is already holding experience. Nothing extra is required.
</p>

<blockquote style=color:#00B060;font-style:italic;>
Nothing more needs to be done.
</blockquote>

<hr>

<h2 style=color:#00B3DC;>Allowing vs. Resignation</h2>

<p>
Allowing and resignation may look similar externally but feel very different internally.
</p>

<table style=width:100%;border-collapse:collapse;>
<tr>
<th style=border-bottom:1px solid #ccc;text-align:left;>Allowing</th>
<th style=border-bottom:1px solid #ccc;text-align:left;>Resignation</th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Open and aware</td>
<td>Closed or defeated</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Experience is felt</td>
<td>Experience is avoided</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Responsive</td>
<td>Withdrawn</td>
</tr>
</table>

<p>
Allowing keeps us connected to life. Resignation disconnects.
</p>

<hr>

<h2 style=color:#00B3DC;>Working with Fear in the Body</h2>

<p>
Fear usually begins as sensation rather than thought.
</p>

<ul>
<li>Tight chest</li>
<li>Shallow breath</li>
<li>Muscle contraction</li>
<li>Restlessness</li>
</ul>

<h4 style=color:#00B3DC;>Practice</h4>

<ol>
<li>Notice the sensation.</li>
<li>Gently acknowledge: <em>“There is fear.”</em></li>
<li>Allow the feeling to exist.</li>
<li>Rest as awareness for a few breaths.</li>
</ol>

<p>
You are not forcing calm.
You are allowing fear to be safely known.
</p>

<hr>

<h2 style=color:#00B3DC;>The Phrase “There Is…”</h2>

<p>
Many practitioners find the simple phrase <strong>“there is…”</strong> helpful.
</p>

<p>
It removes personalization while keeping intimacy with experience.
</p>

<ul>
<li>There is thinking.</li>
<li>There is sadness.</li>
<li>There is breathing.</li>
</ul>

<p>
Experience becomes something known — not something you must become.
</p>

<hr>

<h2 style=color:#00B3DC;>A Simple Daily Practice</h2>

<h4 style=color:#00B3DC;>When difficulty appears:</h4>

<ol>
<li>Pause.</li>
<li>Recognize: “There is…”</li>
<li>Allow the feeling.</li>
<li>Abide as awareness.</li>
</ol>

<p>
Even a few seconds is enough.
</p>

<hr>

<h2 style=color:#00B3DC;>What Develops Over Time</h2>

<ul>
<li>Less resistance to emotion</li>
<li>Greater emotional stability</li>
<li>Natural compassion</li>
<li>Reduced self-criticism</li>
<li>A quiet sense of enoughness</li>
</ul>

<p>
Practice gradually becomes less something you do and more how life is lived.
</p>

<hr>

<h2 style=color:#00B3DC;>Closing Reflection</h2>

<p>
Experience arises.
Awareness knows.
Life continues.
</p>

<blockquote style=color:#00B060;font-style:italic;>
Nothing more needs to be done.
Knowing is enough.
</blockquote>

</div>


✅ Why This Works as a Cornerstone Page

This layout is optimized for:

  • Clear H1–H4 hierarchy (SEO cornerstone structure)

  • Calm reading flow

  • Grade-8–10 readability

  • Long-term teaching reference

  • WordPress Classic or Block Editor compatibility

  • Your PMA language (“There is…”, “Knowing is enough”)


If you’d like next, I can build the advanced ecosystem version most teachers eventually add:

✅ Sidebar “Practice Summary” block
✅ Hero banner section (Ross UX style)
✅ Internal anchor navigation menu
✅ Printable PDF version auto-matched to this page
✅ Mobile condensed reading version

Just tell me which layer you want to add next.

a 10-lesson PMA course outline 🌿 a teacher manual structure

Below is a complete foundational structure for developing PURE MIND Abiding (PMA) into a coherent teaching path.
It is designed so you can use it for:

  • a self-paced course

  • live teaching

  • a website learning pathway

  • teacher training foundations

The tone and progression follow the natural maturation sequence you have been developing.


🌿 PURE MIND Abiding (PMA)

10-Lesson Course Outline

Course Purpose

PURE MIND Abiding teaches a gentle shift from managing experience to abiding as awareness that already knows experience.

Students learn to:

  • recognize suffering clearly,

  • allow experience safely,

  • rest in awareness naturally,

  • live with increasing simplicity and compassion.


Course Structure Overview

Module Theme Core Movement
1 Orientation Understanding Awareness
2 Recognition Seeing Clearly
3 Allowing Ending Resistance
4 Abiding Resting as Awareness
5 Working with Fear Somatic Practice
6 The Phrase “There Is…” Non-Personal Awareness
7 Compassion Naturally Arises Gentle Integration
8 Effort to Trust Practice Matures
9 Participation in Life Non-Separation
10 Simple Being Knowing Is Enough

🌿 Lesson 1 — Introduction to PURE MIND Abiding

Theme: Awareness is already present.

Topics:

  • What PMA is (and is not)

  • Difference between fixing and allowing

  • Awareness vs. thinking

  • Gentle orientation practice

Practice:

  • noticing breathing without control

Outcome:
Students understand PMA as relationship, not technique.


🌿 Lesson 2 — Recognition: Seeing Clearly

Theme: Naming experience without judgment.

Topics:

  • unconscious reaction vs. recognition

  • emotional labeling

  • “There is…” practice

Practice:

  • recognizing sensations and thoughts

Outcome:
Reduced personalization of experience.


🌿 Lesson 3 — Allowing Experience

Theme: Ending inner resistance.

Topics:

  • allowing vs resignation

  • secondary suffering

  • nervous system safety

Practice:

  • allowing uncomfortable sensations

Outcome:
Students learn openness without passivity.


🌿 Lesson 4 — Abiding as Awareness

Theme: Awareness already holds experience.

Topics:

  • what Pure Mind means experientially

  • resting without effort

  • awareness and emotion coexist

Practice:

  • silent abiding periods

Outcome:
Direct experience of spacious awareness.


🌿 Lesson 5 — Working with Fear in the Body

Theme: Fear as sensation.

Topics:

  • fear physiology

  • contraction and safety

  • “fear and pure mind”

Practice:

  • body-based recognition

Outcome:
Fear becomes workable rather than threatening.


🌿 Lesson 6 — The Phrase “There Is…”

Theme: Non-personal awareness.

Topics:

  • identity vs experience

  • decentering

  • bare awareness language

Practice:

  • “there is thinking”

  • “there is sadness”

Outcome:
Less self-identification with emotions.


🌿 Lesson 7 — Compassion Arises Naturally

Theme: Kindness without effort.

Topics:

  • compassion vs self-improvement

  • allowing softens resistance

  • natural warmth

Practice:

  • abiding with difficulty gently

Outcome:
Students experience spontaneous self-kindness.


🌿 Lesson 8 — From Effort to Trust

Theme: Practice becomes intuitive.

Topics:

  • letting go of constant technique

  • intuitive awareness

  • reduced self-monitoring

Practice:

  • unstructured awareness periods

Outcome:
Confidence in natural awareness.


🌿 Lesson 9 — Participation Instead of Interpretation

Theme: Living directly.

Topics:

  • meaning softens

  • experience without commentary

  • inner/outer soften

Practice:

  • mindful daily activity

Outcome:
Life feels more immediate and connected.


🌿 Lesson 10 — Simple Being

Theme: Knowing is enough.

Topics:

  • nothing more needs to be done

  • practice resolving into living

  • integrating PMA into daily life

Practice:

  • silent sitting and reflection

Outcome:
Students understand PMA as ongoing living, not achievement.



🌿 PURE MIND Abiding

Teacher Manual Structure

This manual supports instructors in teaching PMA safely, humbly, and clearly.


SECTION 1 — Teaching Foundations

1.1 What PMA Teaches

  • Awareness-centered practice

  • Non-pathologizing language

  • Inclusion rather than correction

1.2 Core Teaching Principles

  • Gentle pacing

  • Experiential emphasis

  • No hierarchy of attainment

  • Ordinary language over abstraction


SECTION 2 — The PMA Teaching Model

The Three Movements

  1. Recognize

  2. Allow

  3. Abide

Teachers return to these repeatedly.


SECTION 3 — Instructor Presence

Guidelines:

  • teach from experience, not authority

  • normalize difficulty

  • avoid presenting PMA as a final state

  • model humility and curiosity

Key reminder:

Invite exploration, never prescribe realization.


SECTION 4 — Lesson Teaching Templates

Each lesson includes:

  • Teaching intention

  • Opening reflection

  • Core teaching points

  • Guided practice script

  • Discussion prompts

  • Common student experiences

  • Integration suggestions


SECTION 5 — Working with Students Safely

Emotional Safety

  • encourage grounding

  • validate experiences

  • avoid interpretation of personal stories

When to Refer Out

  • trauma activation

  • severe distress

  • mental health crises

PMA complements professional care; it does not replace it.


SECTION 6 — Common Student Questions

Examples:

  • “Am I doing it right?”

  • “Why do emotions increase?”

  • “What is Pure Mind?”

  • “Why does distraction continue?”

Provide gentle, non-technical responses.


SECTION 7 — Teaching Language

Recommended phrases:

  • “Notice what is here.”

  • “Nothing needs to change right now.”

  • “Let awareness include this.”

Avoid:

  • absolutist claims

  • spiritual superiority language

  • promises of permanent peace.


SECTION 8 — Course Flow Guidance

Suggested pacing:

  • 60–90 minutes per lesson

  • weekly sessions or self-paced modules

  • daily 5–15 minute practices


SECTION 9 — Integration Into Daily Life

Encourage:

  • micro-practices

  • ordinary moments

  • relational awareness

  • gentle consistency


SECTION 10 — Teaching from Maturity

Teachers remember:

  • practice continues

  • difficulty returns naturally

  • humility protects authenticity

Teaching becomes sharing, not leading.


🌿 PMA Teaching Essence (Manual Closing)

Recognize honestly.
Allow gently.
Abide naturally.

Nothing more needs to be done.
Knowing is enough.

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