Resting in the seat of awareness

Settle back into the center of consciousness that is simply aware, behind all experience.

Why it works

Singer points to a stable vantage — the "seat of awareness" — from which thoughts, emotions, and sensations are watched as passing objects. Deliberately resting attention there cultivates a meta-aware perspective that is less swept up by any particular content, giving a steadier base from which to respond rather than react.

How to do it

  1. Notice that you are aware of your thoughts, feelings, and senses.
  2. Gently shift from the contents of awareness to the awareness itself — the one noticing.
  3. Rest there, letting experiences come and go in front of you rather than pulling you in.
  4. Return to this seat repeatedly; it is a place to relax back into, not a state to achieve.

Evidence

Resting as the observer overlaps with meta-awareness and the witnessing stance studied in mindfulness research. The strong claim that this reveals a permanent unchanging self is experiential and not empirically established. (mechanistic)

Meta-awareness is supported; the metaphysical claim about an unchanging center of consciousness is a teaching, not a demonstrated finding.

Common mistake

Trying to find the seat of awareness as a special location or sensation, turning it into another object to grasp, rather than simply relaxing into being the one who is aware.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach can guide a brief "step back into awareness" move when you are caught in content, helping you find the observer seat as a returnable base.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).