REALITY  expresses   EXISTENCE,  which  in  turn,  brings  the  appearance  of  'Individual'.  All  concepts,  such  as,  subject-object,  spirit-matter,  eternal-temporal,  vidya-avidya, and   emotions,  such  as,   pleasure-pain  and  attraction-repulsion,  arise  in  the  'Individual'.  EXISTENCE   does  not  entertain concepts  or  emotions.  
   When  we  analyse  the  'individual',  we  shall  find  that  he  has  two  aspects:(i)'EXISTENCE'  and  (ii) 'anthakaranam' (mind, intellect  and  ego). They  are  otherwise  known  as  'Life'  and  'Living'  respectively.  Concepts  and  emotions  are  entertained  by  the  'Living',  and  not  by  'Life'.   The  mind/intellect  brings in the  concepts  of  subject-object,  vidya-avidya etc.,  and  the   ego  part  of  the  anthakaranam,  brings  in  a  sense  of  'individuality'  which  causes  pleasure,  pain,  fear,  anger,  attraction,  repulsion  and  such  other emotions. The  concepts  and  emotions, thus, come  from  (i) mind/intellect   and (ii)  ego.
   Without  "Life"  there  is  no  "living".  The  ignorant  considers  the  'living'  as  the  only  Reality;  the  book-learned  man  confuses  himself  with    'life'  and  'living';  the man  of  wisdom  constantly  remembers  that  'life'  is  the  only  'Reality'  and  'living'  is  only  an  'appearance'  superimposed  on  'life'. The  analogies  of  'ocean  and  waves',  'dancer  and  dance'  and  'actor  and  acting'  may  be  useful  to  understand  the  respective  positions  of  'life'  and  living'.  It  is  the  'living'  that  brings  in  the  emotional  dualities  of  pleasure-pain  etc.,  and   entertains  divisions  such  as  subject-object etc.
      'REALITY'  expresses  'Life' similar  to  'LIGHT'  expressing  'day-light',  'Water'  expressing  'Ocean',  'Person'  expressing  'dancer'  or  'actor'. The  'actor'even  while  enacting  different  roles  and  exhibiting  different  emotions,  is  contemplatively  aware  of  his  'true person' throughout the  acting,  and  is  least  affected  by  the  emotions  exhibited in   different  roles.    The  apparent  functioning  of  anthakaranam,  is  similar  to  the  'acting'  of  an  actor,  or  the  'dancing'  of  a  dancer. The  individual  should   contemplatively  be  aware  of "Life" as  the  only Reality, and  the  'living', as  an  'appearance' .
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