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Michael Ashcroft@m_ashcroft• over 3 years ago

This is a good question, since I use the term 'check that you could notice' a lot when I teach. One (that has become a bit of a meme) is "if there were an aircraft going overhead, check that you could notice it". Importantly, 'check you could notice it' ≠ 'visualise it' https://t.co/dFpzUbcdHk

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1/19/2022
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Michael Ashcroft@m_ashcroft• over 3 years ago
Replying to @m_ashcroft

There are two very separate mental moves happening here, though they can overlap. The one I am *not* pointing at is visualisation. I am not inviting people to draw some representation of an aircraft, or even the space that it's in, on the canvas of their imagination.

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1/19/2022
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Michael Ashcroft@m_ashcroft• over 3 years ago
Replying to @m_ashcroft

What I am pointing at is more akin to remembering or knowing, a summoning into existence of a direct experience. As you're reading this, wiggle your toes. You were probably not aware of your toes before I suggested that, but notice how you could 'just' wiggle your toes.

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1/19/2022
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Michael Ashcroft@m_ashcroft• over 3 years ago
Replying to @m_ashcroft

You didn't need to imagine your toes. You didn't need to send your focus down to your toes in order to wiggle them. What happened was: - the idea that you had toes re-entered your awareness - this made it possible for you to wiggle them - you wiggled them and it was effortless

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1/19/2022
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Michael Ashcroft@m_ashcroft• over 3 years ago
Replying to @m_ashcroft

This latter one is what I mean when I say 'check that you could notice'. It's a direct knowing that the space vertically above you exists and is expansive. You don't need to imagine the space above you to have a clear felt sense of KNOWING that it's there.

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1/19/2022
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Michael Ashcroft@m_ashcroft• over 3 years ago
Replying to @m_ashcroft

NONE of Alexander Technique takes space in the world of drawing pictures in your mind via imagination. But wait, what about all those nice little exercises like 'imagining' a thread coming out of your head and pulling you up? Or arrows pointing out of your knees? I avoid these.

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1/19/2022
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Michael Ashcroft@m_ashcroft• over 3 years ago
Replying to @m_ashcroft

These can be useful because of the overlap that sometimes exists between the two experiences I mentioned above. Sometimes, flashing an imagine of an aircraft above you is sufficient to activate the other, direct KNOWING kind of awareness. I refer to this 'subvisualisation'

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1/19/2022
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Michael Ashcroft@m_ashcroft• over 3 years ago
Replying to @m_ashcroft

If this works then fine, use it, but be careful: there is a risk of getting stuck in imagination space in our heads, rather than directly experiencing space itself. This is why my prompt is carefully phrased: "if there were an aircraft going overhead, check you could notice it"

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1/19/2022
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Michael Ashcroft@m_ashcroft• over 3 years ago
Replying to @m_ashcroft

The point is to call that space into being, into your experience of the world right now, to KNOW in a deep, embodied way that it exists This is also one of the more difficult things to convey - I don't see it talked about much in other mindfulness traditions, but it's crucial.

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1/19/2022