If you’re honest with yourself, you’ll secretly wonder why meditation has to be so hard, slow, and boring. You’ll assume, “well, that’s just the way it has to be”.
As it turns out, most meditation paths starts with a limitation, embrace the limitation, and end up in the only place they can logically end up: in the limitation. The pathway is never even considered a limitation—“it’s just the way it is”.
How does that play out?
For example, many meditation paths start with the breath, which is a finite thing, hoping that, eventually, it will somehow bring them to the Infinite.
This doesn’t happen. Or it happens only when the meditator momentarily abandons the the breath out of boredom and accidentally slips into the Infinite. And then they excitedly conclude that the breath is a valid method, but it’s a very, very hard road.
This is a false conclusion compounded on top of a false premise—a double jeopardy.
The limitation of the pathway—the breath in this example—limits the experience. But it can just as easily be said about other meditation pathways, such as body sensations, subtle energies, or objects in the environment.
So most meditation practices are finite-based and pretend to have the Infinite as the goal.
Which is a lie.
They never reach their idealized mark because they focus on the finite, getting stuck in the realm of the finite.
Not this.
This starts with the subtlest thing you can think of. But even that is discarded after it induces the super-conscious state, which has zero limitation.
So this, by contrast, is Infinite-based meditation. It’s an entirely different practice because the goal and the approach are different.