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The parable distinguishes between “quick thoughts” and “slow thoughts”—a distinction that echoes Taoist ideas of surface mind versus deep mind. Quick thoughts are reactive, habitual, jangling like loose coins. They pass through the mirror because they lack substance. Slow thoughts, however, are rooted in something older and quieter: spacious awareness, intuition, the unhurried unfolding of insight.
By Darkus HobartThe parable distinguishes between “quick thoughts” and “slow thoughts”—a distinction that echoes Taoist ideas of surface mind versus deep mind. Quick thoughts are reactive, habitual, jangling like loose coins. They pass through the mirror because they lack substance. Slow thoughts, however, are rooted in something older and quieter: spacious awareness, intuition, the unhurried unfolding of insight.