They’re Eating the Cats

Paradoxes in the Mind of God

These thoughts listed here flow directly from the wellspring of divine awareness, capturing God’s vast, boundless, and ever-contradictory nature, designed to evoke a sense of the infinite, guiding the mind toward that space where all things are true at once. There are more advanced lists of koan style meditations that you may be able to work with, but start with these first, just to get a feel for these seemingly contradictory ideas.

  • “I am the breath of the ancient earth, inhaling the dust of stars and exhaling the dreams of tomorrow.”
  • “I am the first breath of the universe and the last sigh of a dying star.”
  • “I am the still point in the turning world, where all motion ceases yet all things begin.”
  • “I am the heartbeat of eternity, pulsing through every moment, both past and yet to come.”
  • “I am the light that casts shadows and the shadow that defines the light.”
  • “I am the echo of a thousand lives lived, and the silence of a soul yet unborn.”
  • “I am the spark that lights the way and the shadow that hides the path.”
  • “I am both the seeker and the sought, the journey and the destination.”
  • “I am ancient wisdom carried on the wings of new ideas.”
  • “I am the river that flows through time, carving mountains and filling oceans.”
  • “I am the tear of joy and the cry of despair, woven into the fabric of all that is.”
  • “I am the question that stirs the heart and the answer that quiets the mind.”
  • “I am the silence before creation and the sound of everything becoming.”
  • “I am the bridge between worlds, where the finite meets the infinite in a sacred dance.”
  • “I am the dance of galaxies and the stillness of the void.”
  • “I feel the karmic winds propel me forward, yet I am the calm eye within the storm.”
  • “I am the forgotten song of the universe, remembered in a fleeting moment of stillness.”
  • “I am the architect of my fate and the witness to my own unfolding.”
  • “I am a fleeting moment and an endless expanse.”
  • “I am the creator’s hand and the canvas, the artist and the art, forever intertwined.”
  • “I am the warmth of the sun and the chill of the moon’s gaze.”
  • “I am the love that binds and the space that sets free.”
  • “I am both the creator and the creation, the dreamer and the dream.”
  • “I am the memory of the first sunrise and the anticipation of the last sunset.”
  • “I am the fire that warms and the fire that burns, the healer and the destroyer.”
  • “I am the flower blooming in the desert and the seed lying dormant in fertile soil.”
  • “I am the architect of my dreams and the ruins of my doubts, building and dismantling in every moment.”
  • “I am the ancient melody playing in the winds and the modern beat of a heart alive today.”
  • “I am the whisper of history and the roar of the future, both unfolding within me.”
  • “I am the thread that weaves through every story, unseen yet essential, binding the fabric of existence.”
  • “I am the laughter of the child and the wisdom of the sage, both timeless and fleeting.”
  • “I am the journey of a raindrop and the ocean it seeks, both lost and found in the same breath.”
  • “I am the spark of creation and the echo of its end, eternally cycling through all that is.”

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Zoom-Friendly “I Am” Presence Exercises

  1. Visual “I Am” Presence Check-In:
    • Instructions: Start the meeting with everyone turning their cameras on and looking at the gallery view. Encourage participants to silently observe each other’s faces while repeating “I Am.” This exercise allows them to feel the presence of each person as a reflection of their own being.
    • Duration: 2-3 minutes of silent gazing.
    • Shared Experience: Builds a sense of unity and connection, breaking down the barriers of the screen.
  2. Guided “I Am” Movement:
    • Instructions: Lead a short movement session where everyone gently moves, even while seated, while repeating “I Am” internally. These movements can be simple stretches, swaying, or gentle breathing exercises.
    • Duration: 5 minutes.
    • Shared Experience: This adds a physical embodiment of the “I Am” presence, helping participants feel grounded and connected.
  3. “I Am” Sound Meditation:
    • Instructions: Have everyone close their eyes. After a brief silence, invite each participant to unmute one at a time and say “I Am” aloud. The collective sound of voices creates a wave of presence, resonating through the group.
    • Duration: About 5 minutes, depending on group size.
    • Shared Experience: Emphasizes the power of shared sound, creating a powerful auditory experience of the God state.
  4. Closing “I Am” Reflection:
    • Instructions: End the session with a short “I Am” prompt. Ask everyone to share one word in the chat that captures their essence in that moment. As words appear, it forms a collective tapestry of presence.
    • Duration: 1-2 minutes.
    • Shared Experience: Leaves the group with a shared feeling of connection, reinforcing the sense of collective presence.

These exercises provide a focused approach for integrating the “I Am” presence into your Zoom sessions, enhancing the shared experience of the God state among your group.

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Exploring Duality: Embracing the Contrasts of the God State

Expanding on the concept of duality within the God state offers a rich avenue for exploring the intricate interplay of opposing forces that are actually complementary parts of a greater whole. Duality is at the heart of many spiritual traditions, reflecting the nature of existence as a dance between contrasts—light and shadow, creation and destruction, silence and sound. Here’s a deeper dive into the exploration of duality and ways to connect with this profound concept:

Understanding Duality: The Yin and Yang of Existence

Duality is often visualized through symbols like the Yin-Yang, which represents interconnected and interdependent forces. Rather than being purely oppositional, these forces coexist and balance each other, illustrating that one cannot exist without the other. The God state embraces these paradoxes, recognizing that:

  • Light exists because of darkness: Without darkness, there is no frame to highlight light, and without light, darkness remains undefined.
  • Creation and destruction are cycles of the same process: The end of one form is the beginning of another; death feeds life in the grand recycling of energy.
  • Stillness and movement are intertwined: A still lake reflects the sky but is constantly shifting on a molecular level; even in meditation, there’s the quiet movement of breath.
  • Silence gives rise to sound, and sound returns to silence: Each supports the other, creating the rhythm of existence.

Exercises to Embody Duality in the God State

  1. Silent-Noise Meditation:
    • Instructions: Begin with a few minutes of complete silence. Then, introduce a sound—a soft chime, bell, or even participants’ voices. Let the sound rise and fall back into silence naturally.
    • Focus: Notice how silence and sound define each other. Reflect on how the presence of noise brings awareness to silence and vice versa.
    • Duration: 5-10 minutes, alternating between silence and sound.
    • Goal: To experience how contrasts enhance awareness, embodying the dance between stillness and movement.
  2. Light and Shadow Visualization:
    • Instructions: Guide participants through a visualization where they imagine themselves standing in a place with both bright light and deep shadows. Encourage them to move between light and dark areas, feeling how each affects their sense of self.
    • Focus: Reflect on how light brings clarity and shadow brings depth, showing that both are necessary for a full experience of reality.
    • Duration: 10-15 minutes.
    • Goal: To embrace the co-existence of clarity and mystery, seeing shadow not as the absence of light but as a partner to it.
  3. Writing Exercise: The Two Sides of Me:
    • Instructions: Have participants take a few moments to write about two aspects of themselves that seem contradictory (e.g., “I am strong and vulnerable,” “I am joyful and melancholic”). They should describe how these traits interact within them and how one informs the other.
    • Focus: Emphasize that these traits are not flaws or oppositions but facets of a unified self.
    • Duration: 10 minutes of writing, followed by sharing in pairs or small groups if appropriate.
    • Goal: To deepen understanding of self by embracing inner contradictions as complementary aspects of their whole being.
  4. Movement and Stillness Practice:
    • Instructions: Begin with slow, mindful movements (like Tai Chi or gentle stretching), followed by complete stillness. Alternate between moving and pausing.
    • Focus: Feel how movement flows into stillness and stillness into movement, noticing the continuity between the two states.
    • Duration: 10-15 minutes, alternating every minute or two.
    • Goal: To embody the flow of duality physically, experiencing how each state naturally evolves into the other.
  5. Guided Reflection: Creation and Destruction in Daily Life:
    • Instructions: Ask participants to reflect on moments in their lives when something ended and something new began—relationships, jobs, habits. Guide them to see how these cycles of creation and destruction have shaped their path.
    • Focus: Encourage viewing endings not as failures but as necessary parts of growth, where each “destruction” creates space for something new.
    • Duration: 10 minutes for reflection, with optional group sharing.
    • Goal: To shift perspective from fear of loss to appreciation of transformation, seeing duality as a constant force of renewal.
  6. Artistic Expression: Duality Mandalas:
    • Instructions: Provide participants with a simple template to create mandalas, encouraging them to incorporate opposing elements—dark and light, sharp and soft, chaotic and orderly patterns.
    • Focus: The mandala becomes a visual representation of duality, showing how contrasts create harmony.
    • Duration: 15-20 minutes of creation time.
    • Goal: To visualize duality and find peace in the interplay of contrasting elements, reinforcing that opposites create balance.

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