Writings I: The Sacred Other is the first set of 500 diary entries by Henry Templeman that describes his personal observations and experiences of daily life, including transformative revelations about issues concerning people everywhere. Templeman does not identify to any belief, faith, ideology, philosophy, or teaching. He identifies to nothing. It is from this unfiltered and unbiased point of view that he describes what is love, death, freedom, happiness, relationship, intelligence, meditation, what ends all forms of psychological conflict, struggle, and sorrow, in a way that is complete and instantaneous, and what it means to come upon a field of existence outside the limitations of time and thought, which he says is unlimited, timeless, and sacred.
Templeman does not offer the reader any method or technique to come upon what he describes as timeless, because all methods and techniques take time, and thereby deny the mind from coming upon that which is timeless. Instead he shows by example, what it means to have that which is timeless occupy the mind, and live it from moment to moment.
Discover how thought is limited, and when the mind empties itself of the movement of thought, it comes upon what is unlimited and therefore infinite.
Find out how memory is bound to the past, and therefore time, which means memory can never be used to come upon what is boundless and timeless.
Learn how you are the cause of every sorrow and conflict that exists in you, and what it means to end that conflict, which includes anger, loneliness, jealousy, frustration, boredom, depression, grief, and every other form of inner turmoil.
Included in the first 100 diary entries are life-changing insights about: Thought, relationship, love, happiness, memory, knowledge, stillness, sensitivity, meditation, mental identification, psychological separation, desire, struggle, freedom, sex, energy, ignorance, intelligence, attachment, learning, knowledge, misery, turmoil, heaven, bliss, beauty, clarity, contemplation, analysis, the past, psychological time, mental possessiveness, insanity, the confinement within, joy, contentment, repetitive behavior, attentiveness, simplicity, emptiness, nothingness, the end of thought, and eternity. In the next 400 entries are more extraordinary insights.
Learn how thought is limited and tethered to memory, and therefore imprisoned in time, and how when the movement of thought ends, the gates to what is unlimited, untethered and timeless instantly unlock. Find out what it means to come upon that which is unlimited and timeless, and live it. Find out!