New Consciousness Review Spring 2016 | Page 70

METAREALITY Attention has the ability to contract and expand. I can narrow and hold my focus on an object and stop the propensity of attention to keep moving. Or, I can allow my attention to follow the flow of movement from one moment to the next, illuminating and bringing new content into awareness. Attention can expand to hold many different levels of experience simultaneously. We are multidimensional perceivers with a multilayered point of view, one where attention is active in discerning each layer and able to target experience within each layer. This capacity is central to meditation practice and is instrumental in allowing shifts in consciousness. Attention can join with any inner or outer sense modality, and magnify its function. Most of us have had the experience of listening to music while we stare off into space or float off into thoughts and pictures evoked by the music. In this instance, attention moves between hearing, seeing and our inner sight. Each time it moves and lands on one of these modes of perception, it magnifies that modality, giving it greater acuity and focus. Often, we move from seeing, hearing, feeling, touching, smelling, thinking, sensing or imagining with such ease that, without being consciously focused on any one particular sense modality, we only experience a continuous stream of consciousness. Yet when we bring our full attention to any one state, that particular one jumps out and becomes foreground and the other senses fall to the background with less intensity. Attention can make things appear or disappear. The statement “What you give your attention to, is” embodies this particular magic. By focusing my 70 | NEW CONSCIOUSNESS REVIEW Without giving our attention to past or future thought projections, we find ourselves resting in the present moment. attention, I can make things appear or disappear in the moment. I can be in thought one moment, then shift my focus and give my attention to the person sitting next to me. They can say something that pulls me back into thought, and they disappear, replaced by an inner narrative, until I hear them asking for my attention again. This happens all the time as our attention moves and refocuses moment to moment. We all have the experience of being so focused in what we are doing that the activity replaces the self-consciousness we normally carry into each moment. The actor disappears into the action. We become one with the activity. We don’t realize we have disappeared until we notice that our sense of being the perceiver has returned. Attention can create time or timelessness. This bit of profound magic is shows us that attention is instrumental in the creation of linear time. Without giving our attention to past or future thought projections, we find ourselves resting in the present moment. From this vantage point, time is a mental construct. As we learn to become more conscious with our use of attention, we gain greater control over our state of being, particularly when it comes to falling in and out of time. The more we move into higher states and away from everyday consciousness, the sense of step-