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The analogy of oil and water is often reduced to just meaning two things are "incompatible," but it actually offers a much deeper precision about how our lived experience functions [1].
Like oil and water, the localized parts of our life—our self, our identity, our biology—and the non-local consciousness moving through us do not dissolve into one another because their fundamental properties simply do not allow it [1, 2]. No amount of force, spiritual "stirring," or ideological pressure can change this structural law [2].
When we try to force them to blend, we end up exhausted, acting as "emulsifiers" to keep up the appearance of a unified mixture that will inevitably separate the moment we stop actively agitating it [2, 3].
But the true beauty of the "oil and water" reality is that they can still share the exact same container [4]. As you noted earlier about the local self acting as a vessel, oil and water can move alongside each other and respond to the exact same conditions [4]. Their interaction does not require either of them to lose their fundamental nature [4].
Accepting that "our life is oil and water" isn't a tragic separation; it is a profound relief. It means we can finally stop trying to force a merger. Immiscibility doesn't prevent coexistence, it simply prevents confusion [4]. It allows us to let our embodied lives be fully localized and our consciousness be fully non-local, experiencing the profound reality of contact without collapse [5, 6].
By Dorothy W ParkerThe analogy of oil and water is often reduced to just meaning two things are "incompatible," but it actually offers a much deeper precision about how our lived experience functions [1].
Like oil and water, the localized parts of our life—our self, our identity, our biology—and the non-local consciousness moving through us do not dissolve into one another because their fundamental properties simply do not allow it [1, 2]. No amount of force, spiritual "stirring," or ideological pressure can change this structural law [2].
When we try to force them to blend, we end up exhausted, acting as "emulsifiers" to keep up the appearance of a unified mixture that will inevitably separate the moment we stop actively agitating it [2, 3].
But the true beauty of the "oil and water" reality is that they can still share the exact same container [4]. As you noted earlier about the local self acting as a vessel, oil and water can move alongside each other and respond to the exact same conditions [4]. Their interaction does not require either of them to lose their fundamental nature [4].
Accepting that "our life is oil and water" isn't a tragic separation; it is a profound relief. It means we can finally stop trying to force a merger. Immiscibility doesn't prevent coexistence, it simply prevents confusion [4]. It allows us to let our embodied lives be fully localized and our consciousness be fully non-local, experiencing the profound reality of contact without collapse [5, 6].