I am the experience. I am the whole universe. There is no division between what I am and what is here. I am, and the experiences are appearing to me. This is our direct experience. Experience is what appears, and the experiencer is that to which it appears. The relationship between experience and the experiencer is of oneness. They are not separate. They are two aspects of a singular existence. This understanding is not a state of mind but a realization of unity. When the division between experience and the experiencer dissolves, what remains is oneness.

Oneness cannot be achieved through effort. It is always present, independent of anything else. Letting go of effort allows oneness to be recognized. We cannot unify experience and the experiencer. We can only realize that they are already unified. By discarding ignorance, we see that oneness has always been there.

The oneness of experience and the experiencer is evident in direct experience. It is impossible to isolate experience as an independent entity or to separate the experiencer as a distinct observer. There is only experiencing which is oneness itself. Oneness does not come and go. Appearances may change, but experiencing is constant. Appearances are empty, and the observer of appearances is equally empty. This emptiness is oneness. Experience and the experiencer are inseparable. Thus, they are one.

To see oneness, one must be grounded in the experiencer. Oneness cannot be perceived without self-realization. While objects my seem separated by distance, I am not the object. I am the experiencer, and the experience is not separate from me. Experiencer and experience arise simultaneously. There is no time. There is only experiencing. Both experience and the experiencer are infinite. No boundary exists to separate them. In oneness, nothing truely changes. Change is an illusion created by memory. Oneness includes the illusion of change as part of the experience. Therefore, even the concept of change dissolves. Oneness transcends conceptual dualities such as static versus dynamic or time versus timelessness. It embodies all these and yet it is beyond them. Using the language of duality makes it sound paradoxical, but silence suffices to express oneness.

The perceived division between experiencer and experience arises from mental activity. Awareness reveals the truth that there is no division. By including the dividing activity of the mind as part of the experience, only experiencing remains. This state is not devoid of mental activity. It just loses its grip. Division is only a thought, and oneness cannot be divided. Asking where experience happens reveals that there is no distinct location for it. Experience encompasses the entire world and is found wherever the experiencer is. There is no separation between experience and the experiencer. The realization of this truth is effortless.

Logic also points to the unity of experience and the experiencer. If they were two separate realities, they would be independent and incapable of interacting. The observed complete contact between the experiencer and experience confirms their unity. Experience occurs on the experiencer, and this interdependence reveals their oneness. Since experience is impermanent and dependent, it is ultimately false. What remains is the experiencer. As experience and experiencer cannot be established independently, the resolve into one category - oneness.

This is the end of knowledge. Further exploration of the illusion is optional. The essence of knowledge here is not accumulation but realization.