the day after I received the book and reading the first pages, I dreamt of AH. He had several files with different themes.
The theme that had more content was “transportation”.
Looked at the index to find nothing.
today I read this in page 103:
“Liminal spaces include transit locations (airports, bus stations, and funeral homes), workplaces after hours, cemeteries, empty theaters, elevators and hallways. Places that are neither here nor there. (…) Like many of the nocturnal meditations, liminal dreaming reveals a host of blind spots and unconscious biases. things that were previously hidden in the darkness of the unconscious mind are brought to light”.
Tonight I experienced this. As if I had been through several bus stops during the night, each station waking me up to certain aspects of my being.
Andrew’s riffs about “life” have been a great way to enlarge one’s perspective about everyday experiences. He’s been an online and in-person presence, constantly, for years, and has been totally accessible. Who else does that? He’s noWhere’s Waldo!
indeed.
NCC is such a good example of this openness, devotion, humbleness and being accessible.
perhaps because of the mysterium tremendus of the arrival of this book, I’m reading his book full on! It’s a rare thing. Usually I read several books at the same time (doing so at the moment, but stopped them all) and this one just “grabbed” me! It has happened very few times before in my life - can only remember four or five.
It’s full of nectar, precious distinctions and the structure is “wow”!
It’s a also an excellent resume, and contextualization of all that I’m being in contact here at NCC.
The “Open Questioning” section (page 30) has given me confidence in some of my practices. Sometimes giving a name to things and putting them on a context can be highly empowering.