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Present Wakefulness...

Chokyi Nyima Rinpoche from his book: Present Fresh Wakefulness:

Basically and fundamentally, our mind is utterly empty, sheer bliss,
totally naked. We do not need to make it like this; we do not need to
cultivate it by meditating, to create this state by meditating.

Give up thinking of anything at all, about the past, the future or the
present. Remain thought-free, like an infant.

Innate suchness is unobscured the moment you are not caught up in
present thinking.

That which prevents us from being face to face with the real Buddha,
the natural state of mind, is our own thinking. It seems to block the
natural state.

Rigpa, the Natural State, is not cultivated in meditation. The
awakened state is not an object of the intellect. Rigpa is beyond
intellect, and concepts.

This is the real Buddhadharma, not to do a thing. Not to think of
anything Like Saraha said, "Having totally abandoned thinker and what
is thought of, remain as a thought-free child."

Thinking is delusion.

When caught up in thinking we are deluded. To be free of thinking is
to be free.

That freedom consists in how to be free from our thinking.

As long as the web of thinking has not dissolved, there will
repeatedly be rebirth in and the experiences of the six realms.

The method: But if you want to be totally free of conceptual thinking
there is only one way: through training in thought-free wakefulness.
(rigpa).

Strip awareness to its naked state.

If you want to attain liberation and omniscient enlightenment, you
need to be free of conceptual thinking.

Being free of thought is liberation.

This is not some state that is far away from us: thought-free
wakefulness actually exists together with every thought, inseparable
from it... but the thinking obscures or hides this innate actuality.
Thought free wakefulness (the natural state) is immediately present
the very moment the thinking dissolves, the moment it vanishes, fades
away, falls apart.

Simply suspend your thinking within the non-clinging state of
wakefulness: that is the correct view.