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I felt it important to add a little more to the discussion of what it really means to be what we might called "zoned in" to pure presence (the void, an enlightened state) as opposed to "lost in" the moment (not fully present) because in the description it is easy to confuse the two.

When we are "zoned in" then we - as the Seer - are fully present and tuned into everything that is going on around us. Whereas when we're "lost in" we're kind of like on automatic pilot. We're responding to conditioned behaviours just like riding a bike, driving the car or watching TV or a complete myriad of other 'routines' that make up the matrix in which we live (and most people are lost in).

I've found its very easy to switch out of being "zoned in" to being "lost in" and it requires continual presence, persistence and an absolute commitment to living authentically in order to stay continually in the "zoned in" state.

What can really help us when we're switching between the two states is to ask the question internally "what would you have me do now?" and respond without hesitation to what we feel moved to do. Why does this work and why is it so important?

When we're in the place of the void, there is no small "I" making decisions about what to do next based on our desires, wants or perceived needs. We have given ourselves selflessly over to following the true flow of the Universe.

The trouble is that the 'answer' to the question "what would you have me do now?" is frequently so at odds with what the conditioning of the matrix would have us do that we tend to abandon the question very early on. Not to mention that quite often we'll be kept waiting for the answer because perhaps the right conditions are not yet in place for "Right Action" (that of the Universe) to unfold as it should.

When we ask the question "what would you have me do now?", in fact we're asking our soul what to do which is aligned to the natural flow. In the beginning we might not like what we're guided to do - often because the soul guides us exactly into those areas where our buttons get pressed so that we can dissolve the buttons and learn to be awesomely okay with performing Right Action in those places where we might previously have got tight inside - telling an acquaintance a truth that they might not like for example; or spending more money than we think we have available; or simply not going to work that day because the job no longer serves.

In view of our conversation earlier, those that are really switched on might ask but who is asking the question "what would you have me do now?" In other words, have we not just created the internal questioner once more - an internal identity causing separation from the experience of absoluteness (the void).

My answer would be yes, that which forms the original question would be an inner identity thereby generating separation in that moment the question is asked. However, this is a very interesting and well positioned question indeed - because when we practice it enough, we find the question itself dissolves into a state of surrendered openness. We've no need to ask the question anymore because our continual state is to be aligned with the correct flow as we perceive it. There is simply surrender to what is the right thing to do.

In order to be continually in this place of surrendered openness, requires us to be continually tuned in - our phrase "zoned in". In the beginning we'll likely keep slipping from the "zoned in" state into the "lost in" state but if we remember that question "what would you have me do now?" then it becomes quite easy (if we practice enough!) to switch back into the "zoned in" state whereupon the question "what would you have me do now?" and the questioner both disappear into pure presence.

Then we are being the void (the Seer) and coming from the void (the soul) the whole time. This is true harmony in life and when we touch it, we'll quickly realise there's no other place worth being.

Best wishes

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