Nondual Awareness: Science & Meditation Techniques

What is nonduality?

You may have heard of this concept that's expressed in all of the world's major meditation traditions, from Advaita Vedanta and Sufism to Buddhism and Kabbalah, that claims you're "one with everything."

It sounds nice, but what does that actually mean?

Nondualism is pointing to the direct first-person experience, upon careful inspection, which reveals that the mind has no separate observer from its contents. The result is a feeling of unity and connection to the world.

When living from a place of nondual recognition, you don’t see the computer in front of you. Rather, you feel as if you are the computer.

It’s as if the world is occurring inside of “you.” That is to say, inside of nondual awareness. The duality of separation between self and other disappears.

You recognize nonduality when your sense of being a witness, or subject, looking out at the world disappears. If you don't think this is possible, try the reverse: locate your sense of “I” right now. If you think you find it, then look closer and see whether there’s anything of substance.

And you might realize that the “I” is elusive, an unfindable mental construct.

 
This drawing by Ernst Mach helped English philosopher Douglas Harding perceive the world in a nondual way. Harding developed the popular “Headless Way” meditation, a technique for realizing nonduality. Notice that from your first-person perspective, this is how your world appears. There’s no separate self unless you image there to be one.

This drawing by Ernst Mach helped English philosopher Douglas Harding perceive the world in a nondual way. Harding developed the popular “Headless Way” meditation, a technique for realizing nonduality. Notice that from your first-person perspective, this is how your world appears. There’s no separate self unless you image there to be one.

 

Most people spend their whole lives thinking they’re a tiny mini-me located somewhere in the head. But, upon further inspection, it becomes clear that the feeling of being a subject looking at objects is an illusion.

It’s likely that a baby experiences the world in a nondual way before they’re given a name and create models of selfhood.

Now, you might wonder why we’d want to “regress” into a toddler’s view of the world. The key is that an adult who recognizes nonduality will still be able to operate fully, but they’re no longer burdened by the mental baggage of “I, me, mine” stories running in their head.

It turns out that most of our mental suffering comes from this dualistic mentality. We feel like a mini-me in the head that always has to uphold its dignity, figure out its identity, and solve some problem that it concocts.

Nonduality isn't making metaphysical claims about how the Universe works. Rather, it’s useful in so far as you, and everyone else, can directly experience it for yourself as an enhanced mode of being, like a flow state. By recognizing the nondual state you’re upgrading your mental software.

[Note: For nondual guided meditations and in-depth instruction, try FitMind.]

Nonduality and Science

Nonduality is compatible with modern science. The materialist worldview states that your experience of the world is being generated by a brain. Therefore, it stands to reason, you've never actually seen the real world. What you think is “real” had to enter your eyes, ears, and other senses and then get projected in your brain somewhere.

Following that logic, everything you experience in your brain is a part of you. The world as you experience it is inside of you. Even your feeling of having a head is, according to science, appearing inside your head. Where that head is exactly, is a matter of philosophical debate without an answer.

 
Where are you located? Upon careful observation, it becomes clear that there’s no “you” that exists separate from the field of nondual awareness.

Where are you located? Upon careful observation, it becomes clear that there’s no “you” that exists separate from the field of nondual awareness.

 

One of the leading theories of consciousness, called Multimodal User Interface (MUI) Theory, was developed by cognitive psychologist Donald Hoffman. MUI suggests that you're not experiencing reality at all, just projecting a user interface that helps you navigate the world.

As an analogy, take the icons on your computer screen. A trashcan on your desktop computer isn’t a real trashcan, but it’s useful for discarding unwanted files so that you don't have to deal with the tangle of underlying code and wires in your computer. Similarly, your projection of the world is a mental simulation to help you navigate a vastly complex amount of “real world” data.

Thinking about the metaphysics and philosophy of nonduality, while interesting, isn’t all that useful. All of this is just to say that nonduality doesn’t contradict modern science. In fact, theories like Hoffman’s are starting to support the concept as a closer picture of reality.

What’s important here is that if you notice your experience of the world very carefully it's all occurring in the same place: your field of nondual awareness.

What is Nondual Meditation?

 
Nonduality is available at any moment if you learn to direct your awareness in a particular way. Meditation is one way of predictably revealing nonduality.

Nonduality is available at any moment if you learn to direct your awareness in a particular way. Meditation is one way of predictably revealing nonduality.

 

When you do glimpse nondual awareness, it's very enjoyable. But how do you do so?

There are meditation techniques designed specifically to uncover nondual awareness. If you’ve been practicing the methods taught on the FitMind meditation app, you may have already experienced this.

It’s important to note that nondual meditation doesn’t strive for a particular state. Rather, it’s trying to point out and uncover the true nature of mind as it already is. Unlike many “effortful” techniques, the nondual meditations are often trying to relax the very part of your mind that’s striving.

Neuroscientist and philosopher Sam Harris gives a clear analogy. Picture someone tapping on a window through which you’re staring and trying to get you to see the pane of glass itself rather than just the objects that appear through the glass.

When you notice that there’s no constructed observer and, instead, you appear to be everything in your awareness, that's nonduality. You can directly glimpse this if you pay careful attention and drop your conditioned ideas and conceptions about how the world works.

For example, you know that you have a head but the Headless Way exercise (below) gets you to reexamine your direct experience. It’s a pointer toward nonduality, which can eliminate much of your mental suffering.

Nondual Meditation Techniques

The primary traditions that focus on uncovering nonduality with direct “pointing out” methods are Advaita Vedanta and Tibetan Buddhism (namely, the systems of Mahamudra and Dzogchen).

Here are a few of the popular nondual meditation techniques, primarily derived from these traditions:

  • Just Being - A practice in which you rest the mind without intentions, effective for revealing the nondual nature of mind when it’s not striving to solve problems.

  • Self-Inquiry - A method of meditation in which you inquire deeply into the nature of “I.” For straightforward instruction in this method, check out Ramana Maharshi’s explanation in this online pdf.

  • Headless Way - Richard Lang, a disciple of Douglas Harding and the primary teacher of the Headless Way meditation technique, came on The FitMind Podcast to discuss it in more detail.

  • Glimpse - Glimpses are a broad name (possibly coined by Loch Kelly) for short practices that can give us a “glimpse” of nonduality.

  • Awareness of Awareness - Another type of meditation meant to reveal nonduality by directing attention toward the context, rather than the contents, of experience.

Some of these have many names or are broad terms for a category of nondual practice. For example, there are many forms of self-inquiry.

Below are two nondual guided meditation from famous teachers Loch Kelly and Diana Winston, who led these meditations on The FitMind Podcast.

After years of striving in her “deliberate mindfulness” practice, Diana discovered nondual meditation practices. She calls the state they lead to “natural awareness,” but it has traditionally been called advaita, anatta, shunyata, rigpa, or tathagatagarbha. The fact that this has so many names across cultures implies a universal human experience.

 
 

Similar to Diana, Loch Kelly practiced traditional mindfulness meditation for years before discovering stabilizing nondual meditation techniques like Tibetan Mahamudra and Dzogchen. He calls these “glimpse practices” that can help you shift you into nondual awareness with repeated use.

Here’s Loch demonstrating a couple of his glimpses, or pointers.

 
 

Once you’ve tasted nondual awareness, the practice becomes to keep glimpsing it until this becomes a new, default way of living.

And if you haven't yet, there's no need to worry. It can take some time and repeated practice of the techniques. The key is not to strive for any result, but rather just to do the practices with open curiosity and let things unfold naturally.

Summary of Nondual Awareness

We’ve covered the key facts about a timeless and simple (yet hard to grasp in words) subject. Ultimately, philosophizing about nondual awareness won’t help; it’s an experience you have to have for yourself.

Thankfully, there are meditation techniques, like Mahamudra and Dzogchen, devised over thousands of years of mental experimentation, which can predictably induce nondual experiences.

For nondual guided meditations and in-depth instruction, try FitMind. Below is a video summarizing much of what’s written above and also giving further guided nondual instruction, similar to what you’d find on the FitMind meditation app.

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