Let Go Through our conscious experience, all of us have recognized that there are such physical actualities as “fullness” and “emptiness”; or, in abstract terms, form and void. Considering that everything which we experience has—to our mind—limits, is it so difficult for us to acknowledge the implication that something, “somewhere,” has the possibility of existing without any limitation whatsoever? Can we concede that there is something which is not imprisoned even by man’s arbitrary definitions of such realms as “space” and “time”? Can we conceive that there may be a void which is not defined by form; or a fullness that is found in emptiness? Can we understand that there must be—by implication—at least one thing in existence which does not make rational sense? Once we loose the hobbles of our normally calculative thinking and we embrace the possibility that a reality exists that is entirely devoid of boundaries, we will perceive that this reality (of necessity) must be present in every place, at all times—in its full totality. In other words, there can be no place or time where it has not been, is not now, or will not be. Since it has neither need to expand nor contract (considering that it has no requirement to “fit into” anything), it does not diminish or enlarge at any point where it is present—it is complete reality wherever it happens to be. Therefore, it does not reduce itself to fragments; there are no “parts” of a boundless reality: there is only reality, entirely manifest in all things. Being fully present at each and every point and place, there is no place too large nor any point too small for 81