the sensing of a sensation

In one of our conversations post movement (on 2 February 2024) I ask Katye:

Are we expressing sensation? Can you talk more about sensation and movement? You say “sensation then movement”. What is this thing called “sensation”?

I then wonder out loud if sensation is different from sensing.

Once Katye and I have worked through the transcripts more carefully I’ll get to that conversation. But as I’m reflecting now what I suspect (or perhaps propose) is that there is no separation between sensation, sensing, experience, awareness and consciousness. That is, when perceiving (or feeling) a sensation (say pressure or tension on the outside of the left calcaneus) that is the experience one is aware of and that is in the open flow of consciousness. This is not to say that all sensations enter consciousness (far from it), but rather that the feeling or perception of a sensation (or the sensing of a sensation!) is indistinct from experience, awareness and consciousness.

I’ll write more about the enfolding of perception, feeling, sensation, experience, awareness, consciousness, perception and action another time. It seems important to be able to disambiguate them as well as recognise when they are being used interchangeably. I should say also that I don’t think the above is quite right …


Comments

2 responses to “the sensing of a sensation”

  1. Sue Davies avatar
    Sue Davies

    This draws me towards what the role of imagination is doing during perception, sensing, sensation.
    An experience of a moment in movement opens me out to where I felt this before or where I have felt that move in the body of another, human or not, and these add a sliver of a story to the felt. There is an expansion away from the first “ seed” of the sensed moment?

    1. Thanks Sue — yes indeed these moments are not uncommon (the shift between imagining and remembering) although, curiously, they seemed to be become less common the deeper K and I went into the practice. I don’t know for sure if that’s the case, and certainly don’t know why!

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