Home Page

woman_park

Current

  1. All Posts
  2. Observations and Comments (July 16, 2026)

Highlight

  1. Book I: Postulate Mechanics (Index)
  2. Book II: Subject Clearing (Index)

Main References

  1. The Book of Mathematics
  2. The Book of Physics
  3. Grassroots Scientology
  4. Scientology OT Levels 
  5. Course on The Bhagavad Gita
  6. Patanjali Yoga Sutras
  7. The Mindfulness Approach
  8. My Facebook Page

.

Notes on Self

References:
1. Carl Jung – 1957 Richard Evans interviews (complete)
2. Face To Face | Carl Gustav Jung (1959) HQ
3. Wikipedia article on Carl Jung
3. SC Chapter 3: A New Way to Look


Freud

  1. Freud mapped aberrations to understand their nature and cure.
  2. Freud recognized psychosomatic illnesses and aberrations.
  3. He attributed the cause to painful trauma from childhood.
  4. Cure followed when patient became conscious of such traumas.
  5. But it was difficult to access the memory of these traumas.
    .
    .
  6. Freud invented the term—unconscious mind.
  7. His effort was to access the contents of the unconscious mind of the patient.
  8. Hypnosis didn’t work because it made the patient very suggestible.
  9. He tried to guess at the nature of the trauma by
    1. Analyzing dreams for wishful fulfillments.
    2. Analyzing slips of the tongue for hidden fixations.
    3. Analyzing jokes for topics of anxiety. 
    4. Theorizing traumas to be sexual in nature.
  10. He settled on listening to the patient, which was revolutionary for his time.
    1. Freud invented talking therapy with free association.
    2. It could bring up painful memories and relieve anxieties. 
    3. He encouraged his patients to talk about everything.

Carl Jung

  1. Carl Jung explored the unconscious mind to a greater degree through self-analysis. 
  2. He differed from Freud in having a mystical rather than a scientific approach to mind.
  3. He was more interested in understanding psyche as a singular unified wholeness. 
  4. This required a proper understanding of both conscious and unconscious minds. 
  5. In this view, unconscious was more of an area of personality, which was not fully understood.
    .
    .
  6. Jung’s model divides psyche into consciousness, personal unconsciousness, and collective unconsciousness. 
  7. Consciousness is the realm of personal awareness at the center of which sits ego. 
  8. Ego provides a sense of personal distinction, a persona that the individual displays to the world. 
  9. Ego is different from what the individual actually is, his self; and wants to retain its appearance.
  10. Ego filters various elements of experience and selfhood into or away from conscious dimension.
    .
    .
  11. Personal unconsciousness is similar to Freud’s unconscious mind. 
  12. It sits just below normal awareness, and interacts with it. 
  13. Collective unconsciousness contains elements that are inherited. 
  14. It is similar in some sense to how the biological evolution works. 
  15. There are psychological structures going all the way back to the beginning of history.
    .
    .
  16. There are ancient archetypes that predispose a person’s cognitive tendencies. 
  17. Archetypes are psychological structures that are consistent across humanity. 
  18. Ego does not want to bring the material of unconsciousness up into awareness. 
  19. There is animus or suppressed feminine qualities in the male. 
  20. There is anima or suppressed masculine qualities in the female.
    .
    .
  21. The goal is to integrate all these psychological structures into the real self. 
  22. We are not always who we think or hope we are. 
  23. This integration requires radical self-acceptance and self-honesty. 
  24. One must confront deeper and darker elements of one’s being. 
  25. Only then one can have self-realizations toward a fulfilled life.

Postulate Mechanics

  1. Self is pure awareness.
  2. Self experiences sensations, perceptions, concepts and knowledge.
  3. Individuality arises when self identifies itself with its experience or consciousness.
  4. Identification with something blocks the awareness beyond that identity.
  5. A person believes that identity to represent what he is.
    .
    .
  6. The soul is an identity with some esoteric idea of what one is.
  7. The spirit is the aliveness of a life organism.
  8. The spirit is part of the motion of the universe that must maintain harmony.
  9. Free will consists of motion that maintains dynamic harmony.
  10. Aberrations are violations of dynamic harmony.
    .
    .
  11. Fundamentally aberrations are misconceptions that lead to misjudgments and fixations.
  12. Aberrations generates unwanted conditions.
  13. The first misconception is about one’s identity and individuality (I).
  14. The second misconception is about the source of everything (God).
  15. Other misconceptions then follow.

To recover the true self one must resolve all anomalies (violations of harmony) that one encounters within oneself. Anomalies appear as aberrations. Underlying aberrations are fixations, misjudgments and misconceptions.

See BOOK II: Subject Clearing.

.

BOOK II: Subject Clearing (Draft 1)

Subject Clearing

The Lion’s Roar of Conscious Learning


Table of Contents


Preface

Have you ever noticed how, when you truly understand something, it just feels whole? Nothing nagging, nothing fuzzy — it simply makes sense. Subject Clearing is a way of learning that helps you get back that feeling of wholeness whenever a subject starts to feel confusing or out of reach. It was this approach that led me to the ideas at the heart of my earlier book, Postulate Mechanics.

This idea didn’t come out of nowhere. It grew from something much simpler: Word Clearing, which is just the habit of looking up any word you don’t fully understand the moment you meet it. For more than ten years, I ran a Math Club for middle schoolers at my local library, and Word Clearing was one of our steady habits. But later, when I tried to use it with teenagers who had struggled in or dropped out of high school, it didn’t land the same way — these kids were already so overwhelmed that even pausing to look up a word felt like one more impossible task.

But working with those students taught me something valuable. I noticed that when I laid out ideas in the right order — one building naturally on the last — they understood things much faster, almost as if a light switched on. That observation became the heart of the method: take the important ideas in any subject, line them up in the order they naturally build on each other, and clear up any confusion at each step before moving to the next.

When we started with the simplest, most basic ideas in a subject, something surprising showed up: those starting-point ideas were almost always the ones schools assumed everyone already understood — so they were rushed past, never explained, never double-checked. And it turned out that shaky understanding right there, at the very beginning, was quietly causing most of the bigger struggles that showed up later. It’s like a student who never quite grasped what a fraction actually is — not through any fault of their own, just because nobody ever slowed down to check. Years later, they’re stuck in algebra, and it looks like a “hard” problem, when really the confusion started with that one overlooked idea from years before.

Here’s the belief underneath all of this: when you begin learning something new, you naturally start out feeling whole and capable — curious, even. But the moment something doesn’t make sense and you’re pushed past it anyway, a little bit of your attention gets stuck there, like a splinter you never removed. Collect enough of these stuck points, and the subject stops feeling interesting and starts feeling annoying, even threatening. Eventually, many people just give up altogether and say, “I’m not a math person” or “I was never any good at science.”

The good news is that these stuck points can be found and loosened — but only by closely examining the simplest, most basic ideas in a subject and working forward again from there. There’s no shortcut that skips this step.

At its core, Subject Clearing is simply learning how to learn. You start with the plain, basic building blocks of a subject, make sure they’re truly solid, and then let your understanding grow naturally into the more complex, interesting territory beyond. It’s the same reason you learn to walk before you run, and run before you dance — each layer of skill rests comfortably on the one before it, so nothing ever feels shaky underneath.

This book is a guide to that kind of clear, confident understanding — the kind where you’re not just memorizing answers, but actually able to spot real confusion when it appears, and know exactly how to work through it.


Chapter 1: Understanding From the Ground Up

Clearing a Subject = Clearing key concepts + Clearing anomalies

Have you ever sat in a class, nodding along, only to realize weeks later that you never actually understood the basics? You’re not alone. Most confusion in learning doesn’t come from a subject being “hard.” It comes from missing something simple, early on — a definition, an idea, a building block — and then trying to stack more knowledge on top of that shaky foundation.

This chapter is about a better way to learn: one that starts from the beginning, gets the fundamentals truly clear, and builds up from there.

What Does It Mean to “Clear” a Subject?

Let’s start with the word “subject.” A subject is just something you’re studying or thinking about — biology, cooking, relationships, your job, even life itself.

To “clear” something means to get rid of the doubt, confusion, or fuzziness around it. So when we talk about clearing a subject, we mean working through a topic patiently until it feels solid, obvious, and free of nagging confusion.

Think about the difference between someone who has memorized facts about a topic and someone who truly gets it. The person who gets it can explain it simply, apply it to new situations, and isn’t afraid of follow-up questions. That’s what a “cleared” subject feels like.

It Started With Clearing Up Words

Subject Clearing has an earlier, simpler version: Word Clearing — clearing up words you don’t understand.

It sounds almost too obvious to mention — if you don’t know what a word means, look it up. But how often do we skip over unfamiliar words while reading, hoping the meaning will become clear from context? Usually it doesn’t, and the confusion just quietly piles up.

I grew up bilingual in India, and I remember this happening constantly. I’d be reading something in English and hit a word I didn’t fully know. I’d reach for an English-to-Hindi dictionary, look it up, and suddenly the whole sentence — sometimes the whole paragraph — would click into place. That small habit of stopping to clear up a word saved me from a lot of confusion later on.

This isn’t a new idea. Teachers and scholars have encouraged looking up unfamiliar words for a very long time. It works well for words that have clear, agreed-upon meanings. But it has a limit. What happens when the definition itself is the problem? Imagine looking up a word and getting an explanation that’s vague, circular, or contradicts itself. A dictionary can hand you a definition, but it can’t tell you whether that definition is actually any good. If the definition is broken, looking it up won’t fix your confusion — it might even deepen it.

This gap is what led to something bigger.

The Next Step: Clearing an Entire Subject

Here’s the key insight: in almost every subject, the ideas you learn later depend on ideas you learned earlier. Advanced concepts are built out of simpler, more basic ones — like a building resting on its foundation.

Picture trying to understand fractions before you understand what division means, or trying to grasp supply and demand without first understanding what a “market” is. It doesn’t work. You end up memorizing steps without understanding why they work — and the moment something unfamiliar comes up, you’re lost.

This is the whole idea behind Subject Clearing: if you arrange the concepts of a subject from the broadest and most basic to the narrowest and most specific — and make sure each one is genuinely understood before moving to the next — you can learn that subject far faster and far more solidly.

This isn’t just useful for school subjects like math or history. It applies just as well to the things we run into in everyday life — parenting, managing money, navigating a new job — and even to the biggest subject of all: how to live a good life.

Why This Approach Uncovers Hidden Problems

Something interesting happens when you try to lay out a subject from broad to specific: you start noticing cracks that were always there but easy to miss. Such cracks interrupt the wholeness of understanding. Subject Clearing refers to them as anomalies.

Some concepts turn out to be poorly defined. Others are just vague enough that people quietly disagree about what they mean, without ever realizing it. And sometimes you find actual holes in a subject — gaps in the logic that everyone has been unconsciously papering over with assumptions.

Here’s a simple analogy: imagine assembling furniture from a manual that skips a step, assuming you’ll “just figure it out.” Most people fumble through it, blame themselves for not understanding, and never realize the manual itself was incomplete. The same thing happens in fields of knowledge — confusing concepts often aren’t your fault. They’re often just badly explained or built on a shaky, unexamined assumption.

Once you spot these weak spots, or anomalies, you can fix them: replace vague ideas with precise, clear ones, and fill in the gaps. The result is a clean sequence of key ideas, each one built solidly on the last.

And this work is never really “finished.” As our understanding of a subject grows over time, even good definitions can be refined into better, sharper ones.

How to Actually Do Subject Clearing

Here’s the method in practice, broken into simple steps:

  1. List the key concepts in the subject you want to understand.
  2. Arrange them in order — from the broadest, most fundamental ideas to the narrowest, most specific ones.
  3. Go through the sequence and fix problems — look for ideas that are missing, contradictory, or just assumed without being explained.
  4. Keep working backward to earlier and earlier concepts, until you reach the original, foundational ideas the whole subject is built on.

Think of it like tracing a river back to its source. You don’t just study the wide river you see today — you follow it upstream, past every tributary, until you find the small spring where it all began. Once you understand the source clearly, everything downstream makes a lot more sense.

Why This Matters for How We Learn

One of the most exciting things about Subject Clearing is that it’s built for self-learning. You don’t need someone standing at the front of a room lecturing at a fixed pace.

Imagine a classroom where instead of everyone moving at the speed of the slowest or fastest student, each person works through a clear, well-ordered sequence of ideas at their own pace — free to slow down on a tricky concept or move quickly through one that clicks right away. A supervisor might be present to help, but there’s no lecture dictating everyone’s speed.

This is what makes Subject Clearing more than just a study tip. It’s a way to build an entire curriculum — one where confusion is treated as a signal to go back and fix something, not a sign that you’re simply “not good” at the subject.

Subject Clearing starts with the ability to look!


Chapter 2: Introduction to Looking

Looking = Seeing things as they actually are.

Subject Clearing starts with the ability to look!

What Is Looking?

The mind’s first job is simply to notice what is there. This is different from thinking about it. Looking is necessary to notice concepts and anomalies.

You don’t need words or labels to know something. When you truly look at something, you are just observing it directly — no analysis, no commentary.

Looking vs. Thinking

Looking is direct, present‑moment awareness of what is there, while thinking is the mind’s activity of interpreting, judging, connecting, or elaborating on what is there.

When you look at something, thoughts will naturally arise. That’s fine. The key is: don’t fight them, and don’t get caught up in them. Just notice that a thought appeared, and keep looking.

Many meditation techniques teach you to blank out your mind or focus on one thought while blocking others. This actually gets in the way of pure looking. Real looking doesn’t require suppressing anything.

The rule is simple: look without judging, without expecting, and without trying to reach any conclusion.

When you do this, you see things as they actually are.

Exercises in Looking

Each exercise below has the same structure: look around the room, notice what your mind does, and simply observe that activity without stopping it.

Exercise 1 — Notice labeling

Look at objects around you. Your mind may say “that’s a lamp.” Don’t stop it. Just notice that it’s labeling.

Exercise 2 — Notice evaluating

Look at objects around you. Your mind may say “that’s an expensive lamp.” Don’t stop it. Just notice that it’s evaluating.

Exercise 3 — Notice conclusions

Your mind may jump to “I would never buy that lamp.” Don’t stop it. Just notice that it’s drawing conclusions.

Exercise 4 — Notice thoughts in general

Look at objects while simply watching whatever thoughts arise. Don’t suppress any of them. Just keep looking and noticing.

Connection to Postulate Mechanics

Every object has an underlying “thought” that the mind uses to model it — this is called a postulate. When you look at an object, you can also look at that underlying postulate. Acknowledge the postulate and any other stray thoughts that appear, then move on. This is the starting point for all of Postulate Mechanics.


Chapter 3: A New Way to Look

Thought = Substance that gives form to the universe
Consciousness = all the forms that appear and change
Awareness = the open “space” in which everything shows up

Objectivity and subjectivity

We usually think “objective” means what is out there in the world, and “subjective” means what is in here, in our minds. This text suggests a different view: our thoughts and feelings are also part of the universe, and there is a deeper kind of awareness that can see them just as it sees everything else.

If we look from that deeper awareness, the split between objectivity and subjectivity starts to fade.

Awareness and consciousness, in simple terms

Let’s separate two things:

  • Consciousness is what you are aware of: sights, sounds, body sensations, thoughts, emotions, memories. All of these are contents that appear and change.
  • Awareness is the simple fact that these contents can be noticed at all. It is the open “space” in which everything shows up. Awareness itself is not a particular thought or feeling.

In this view:

  • Thoughts and feelings are real events in the universe, just like physical objects and light.
  • Consciousness is made from these events.
  • Awareness is the clear field that can notice all of them, without being any one of them.

Seeing thoughts as “things”

Here is a short exercise you can try.

  1. Let a simple thought arise—perhaps a picture of a tree, or the memory of yesterday’s lunch.
  2. Instead of getting lost in it, look at it as if it were an object on a table in front of you.
    • Is it sharp or vague?
    • Bright or dull?
    • Does it stay, or does it quickly fade?
  3. You are not the thought itself. You are the awareness that can look at it.

If you can look at a thought this way, then that thought is something happening in the universe, just like a sound or a flash of light. It is not a separate, private “subjective world” sealed off from everything else.

Awareness exercise: what is common?

Try this second exercise.

  1. Close your eyes for a moment.
  2. Notice, in turn:
    • A body sensation (for example, how the chair feels).
    • A sound (traffic, a fan, a bird).
    • A thought (for example, “I am doing this exercise”).
  3. Ask yourself: what is common to all three?
    • In each case, something appears, and there is a noticing of it.
    • The body sensation, sound, and thought are contents of consciousness.
    • The simple noticing is awareness.

Awareness is the quiet background that does not change when the contents change. That background is not “inside” any one object. It is what allows every object—external or internal—to be seen.

Letting “subjective” melt into “objective”

We often call feelings and personal stories “subjective” because we strongly identify with them. We say “I am anxious” or “I am angry,” as if the feeling is what we are.

Try this small shift:

  1. Bring to mind a feeling like anxiety or irritation.
  2. Look at it as you did at the thought:
    • Where do you feel it in the body?
    • Does it move, tighten, loosen?
    • Does it change if you simply watch it for a while?
  3. Now quietly say to yourself:
    • Not “I am anxious,” but “Anxiety is appearing in awareness.”
  4. The feeling is no longer your whole identity. It is an event showing up in the same universe as everything else. From the standpoint of awareness, you can examine it as clearly as you would examine the weather or a sound.

In this sense, what we call “subjective” experience is just another set of objects. When we stop gripping them as “me,” they can be seen and studied objectively.

A link to older teachings

Many spiritual traditions have said something similar in different language. The Vedas, Hinduism, and Buddhism all encourage relaxing identification with the changing forms—body, thoughts, emotions—and resting as pure awareness instead.

From this quiet place:

  • You do not disappear; you simply stop confusing yourself with passing contents.
  • Mind, including the subconscious, becomes something you can observe, explore, and understand as part of the universe.

Put simply: when we stand in awareness and see thoughts and feelings as events in the universe, the sharp boundary between “objective” and “subjective” loses its force. There is one universe of things to be seen, and awareness that can see them.


Chapter 4: Looking at a Postulate

Resolution = Find the Postulate + Trace the Breakdowns

The Main Idea

Whenever you face a problem, a situation, or an event, the most useful thing you can do is find the core belief — the postulate — behind it. A postulate is simply the basic thought or assumption that shapes what you are looking at.

Once you find that core belief, you have already made the situation much simpler. You can then ask: does anything about this belief seem off, contradictory, or incomplete?

Consider, for example, a long-running conflict between nations. The driving belief underneath it often turns out to be a single, deep fear. That one belief explains a great deal of the situation. Once you see it, things start to become clearer.

Where Does a Postulate Come From?

The honest answer is: we do not know. Just as we cannot fully trace where the universe itself came from, we cannot trace where a basic belief ultimately originates.

We often assume there is a “self” that creates beliefs. But that self is itself just another belief. So chasing after the ultimate origin of a belief is a dead end — it is not where the useful work happens.

The useful work is this: find the belief, find where it breaks down, and follow those breakdowns until the whole picture becomes clear.

How to Trace the Breakdowns

You know something is off when you notice:

  • Disharmony — things are not fitting together
  • Inconsistency — things contradict each other
  • Gaps — something is simply missing

These are your clues. Follow them. Look closely at the areas where things feel the most tangled or confused. The most important clues are things that seem arbitrary — data or actions that do not make sense given the stated belief.

Keep looking, keep tracing, and at some point the whole thing suddenly snaps into focus. You will know exactly what is going on and what to do about it.

Exercises

These exercises help you practice spotting postulates — the basic assumptions that give shape to what you observe.

Exercise 1 — Physical objects:

  1. Look around the room and pick an object.
  2. Ask yourself: what basic assumption or idea gives this object its form and meaning?
  3. Repeat until this becomes easy.

Exercise 2 — Situations in your mind:

  1. Call to mind any situation you are dealing with.
  2. Ask yourself: what is the core belief or assumption that is shaping this situation?
  3. Repeat until this becomes easy.

The core skill here is simple: find the belief, find where it cracks, and follow the cracks. That is how a confusing situation becomes clear.


Chapter 5: The Discipline of Looking

Looking = Direct Observation Without Judgment

Beneath the practical steps of Subject Clearing sits a quiet discipline. The engine of Subject Clearing is looking — a calm, honest way of paying attention to what is actually in front of you. It asks you to observe carefully without letting expectations or wishes color what you see.

The examples below follow Raj, a man working through his confusion about the stock market, to show each aspect in action.

The 12 Aspects of Looking

1. Observe without being swayed by expectations or desires.

Wanting a certain outcome makes you guess instead of see. But you can only predict the future well once you actually know what’s in front of you.

Example.  Raj wants the market to be simple, so he keeps guessing that “price” and “value” are the same thing — because that would make investing easier. Every time he checks his desire against the actual data, he catches himself projecting instead of observing.

2.  Observe things as they are, without assuming.

Familiarity tricks you into assuming something is a certain way — a belief, a bias, a fixed idea — and that mental picture gets pasted over reality. But familiar things aren’t permanent, and the assumption might just be wrong.

Anecdote.  Raj has “known” for years that bonds are safer than stocks. He assumed this so long he never questioned it. When he finally looks closely, he learns that a bond can lose more value than a stock during a rate spike — his old assumption was just a habit, not a fact.

3.  If something is missing, don’t invent something to fill the gap.

If you don’t know, admit you don’t know. If someone asks a question and no answer comes, don’t manufacture one just to feel complete.

Story.  A colleague asks Raj why the market dropped that morning. He feels pressure to have a smart answer, almost says “probably profit-taking” just to sound informed — then catches himself. He says, “I don’t actually know,” and looks it up later instead of bluffing.

4.  If something doesn’t make sense, don’t explain it away.

Justifying an inconsistency just shifts blame without fixing anything. When you feel the urge to explain something away, get curious instead about what you’re taking for granted — sometimes it takes unconventional thinking to see what’s really going on.

Example.  Raj reads that markets are “efficient” (all information is priced in) yet also “bubble” (prices go crazy irrational). Instead of hand-waving this as “well, markets are just weird,” he digs in and discovers both ideas are true in different timeframes — a genuine insight he’d have missed by explaining it away.

5.  Use both physical and mental senses to observe.

Eyes, ears, nose, tongue, and body sense physical things like chairs and cars. But the mind is also a sense organ — it senses thoughts, feelings, and emotions. Notice both kinds of objects for what they are.

Anecdote.  While reading about “risk,” Raj notices not just the words on the page but a tightness in his chest — a mental/emotional object. That tightness turns out to be tied to a bad investment his father once made. Noticing it is as much “observing” as reading the definition.

6.  Let the mind un-stack itself naturally, in its own time.

Don’t dig for answers or force recall. Just watch what naturally comes up first, then next, then next. The mind never hands you more than you can handle if you let it unfold on its own.

Example.  Raj sits with the word “leverage.” Instead of forcing himself to remember the textbook definition, he just watches — first he recalls his uncle’s story about borrowing to buy a house, then a memory of a friend’s failed business, then finally the technical definition clicks into place on its own.

7.  Experience fully whatever is there

This is the deepest form of looking. Dive into whatever shows up without resisting it. If your mind is racing, experience the racing itself — without adding fuel to it.

Story.  Realizing he misdefined “dividend” for years embarrasses Raj. Rather than brushing past the embarrassment, he lets himself fully feel it — the flush of heat, the urge to justify himself. He rides it out instead of rushing past it, and it passes in under a minute.

8.  Do not hide anything from yourself.

Follow your attention wherever it leads. Don’t dodge something because it feels shameful or painful — suppression is what causes trouble, not the material itself.

Anecdote.  Raj notices a flicker of shame about how much money he lost years ago in a bad trade. His instinct is to change the subject in his own head. Instead, he lets himself look directly at that memory. Nothing catastrophic happens — the shame just quietly dissolves once it’s actually looked at.

9.  Let your mind associate ideas freely.

Looking means being comfortable with thinking itself — let the mind connect ideas on its own instead of forcing a direction.

Example.  Thinking about “bull markets,” Raj’s mind wanders to a childhood trip to a rodeo, then to his grandfather’s stubbornness, then back to market optimism. He lets the tangent run instead of stopping it — and it turns out the rodeo memory helps him remember the term more vividly than any definition would.

10.  Do not get hung up on names and forms.

A name is just a pointer; a form is just one way something is represented. Real understanding goes beyond the label. Fixating on the name can quietly act as a judgment before you’ve actually looked.

Story.  Raj hears the term “hedge fund” and immediately pictures a villain in a movie — a fixed image tied to the name. Once he sets the label aside and looks at what a hedge fund actually does (pooled money, various strategies, risk management), his flat mental picture turns into real understanding.

11.  Contemplate thoughtfully.

With looking, thinking becomes contemplation: looking non-judgmentally at relationships between things, and going out to find missing information rather than straining to force an answer from what’s already in your head.

Anecdote.  Raj can’t figure out why “market efficiency” and “bubbles” coexist. Instead of straining to reason it out from memory, he goes and reads about behavioral economics — new information that resolves what pure “figuring out” couldn’t.

12.  Let it all be effortless.

Effort only shows up when you resist letting things be. Let body and mind unwind at their own pace. Trouble comes from anxiety and digging, not from the material itself.

Example.  Near the end of a long study session, Raj feels the urge to force one more insight before stopping. He notices the urge, lets it go, and closes his notebook. The insight he was straining for shows up on its own, unprompted, the next morning in the shower.

Taken together, these aspects create the open, unhurried state of mind in which confusions can surface and dissolve on their own. They are less a checklist than a way of being with a subject.

“Looking” in Practice

When you’re studying a subject or watching it directly, you might sense some tension or fuzziness. Pause and ask:

“What doesn’t make sense here?”

Then look closer:

“What kind of anomaly is this — made-up filler, a contradiction, or something missing?”

Keep looking, and more detail surfaces. Follow whatever’s unclear until it resolves.

The key is to stay relaxed and let your mind hand you the data — don’t avoid, resist, suppress, or deny any thought, feeling, or sensation. Let it associate and unwind at its own pace, the way Raj let the rodeo memory and the leverage definition surface on their own instead of forcing them.


Chapter 6: Word is the Unit of Understanding

Word = Unit of Understanding

The whole method of Subject Clearing rests on a simple insight: understanding is built one word at a time. You can’t arrange a subject’s ideas from broad to narrow until you actually grasp the words carrying those ideas. So the first skill is Word Clearing — the habit of tracking down any word that isn’t fully clear and resolving it.

Pinpoint the Confusion

When something you’re reading stops making sense, don’t reread the whole page hoping it clicks. Work inward, like a doctor narrowing down where the pain is:

  1. Isolate the area — mark off the part where sense breaks down.
  2. Find the paragraph — within that area, which paragraph is foggy?
  3. Find the sentence — within that paragraph, which sentence won’t yield?
  4. Find the word — what’s the first word in that sentence that trips you up?

Small, common words — on, of, in, by, for — cause outsized trouble because we assume we know them. They’re the prime suspects. Here is an example.

A student kept stumbling over the physics phrase “the field is present everywhere in the region.” He blamed his weak math. The real culprit was the word “in” — he was picturing the field sitting inside the region like water in a bucket, rather than permeating it. One tiny preposition was twisting the entire idea. Once he saw “in” as “extending throughout,” the paragraph unlocked.

The moment you nail down a misunderstood word, the fog thins and your mood lifts. You’ll be surprised how fast whole chapters clear up once you make this a reflex.

New and Familiar Words

We meet new words, guess them from context, and march on. Later, trouble appears, but we never trace it back to that one unexamined word.

Imagine reading a cooking recipe that calls for you to “blanch the greens, then shock them.” You guess blanch means “boil” and shock means “surprise” — odd, but you move on. Your vegetables turn out grey and limp. The trouble wasn’t your skill with a pot; it was two words you never actually looked up. Blanch means a brief boil, and shock means plunging into ice water to stop the cooking. The recipe was fine. Your words weren’t.

Familiar words are sneakier. You’ve seen them dozens of times, so they feel safe — yet you’ve only ever guessed at them. Treat even a flicker of doubt as a signal to look it up. A minute now can save you hours of frustration later.

Grasp the Broad Concept First

Before diving into definitions, get the big picture of what a word originally meant. Dictionaries often list this under “history,” “origin,” or “etymology.” The broad concept explains why the word means what it does.

From John Ayto’s Dictionary of Word Origins:

  • STUDY — from Latin for “eagerness, intense application.” Studying isn’t passive reading; it’s leaning in.
  • MATHEMATICS — from Greek for “something learned.” Math is, at root, knowledge gained.
  • ARITHMETIC — from Greek ARITHMOS (number) + TECHNE (skill): “number skill.”

Knowing that “study” means eagerness reframes a dull homework session as an act of intense engagement. The etymology hands you the spirit of the word, not just its label.

Many Definitions, One Right Choice

Simple words usually have several definitions. A good dictionary lists them all, and your job is to find the one that fits the context — and, if two seem to fit, to understand the difference before choosing.

To choose the right definition, visualize it.

  • Sketch the concept as a diagram.
  • Demonstrate it by moving small objects.
  • Model it in clay.
  • For living things (animals, trees, flowers), pull up images.
  • For abstract words like love, build examples from your own life to feel the differences.
  • Use the word in a few sentences of your own to test each meaning.

For example, take the word “run.” “The athlete runs a race,” “the river runs through the valley,” “the play runs for two hours,” “she runs a business,” “a run in her stocking.” Five different senses. If a sentence says “the program runs,” you can’t pick the stocking meaning. You visualize each option, hold it against the sentence, and the right one settles into place.

Words Inside Definitions

Sometimes the definition of a word uses another word you don’t know. Look that one up too. This can send you down a chain.

A reader looking up reciprocal found “mutual.” Not clear, so he looked up mutual and found “shared.” Still fuzzy, so he looked up shared and landed on “held in common.” Now the chain lit up backward: held in common → shared → mutual → reciprocal. He crossed each word off his list as it cleared, and the original word finally made sense.

Keep a list of words you look up; cross them off as they clear. It’s fine to look up the same word repeatedly — each visit can reveal a new shade of meaning.

The Right Definition

The right definition is the one that lessens the confusion. That’s the only test that matters. More than one word may need clearing, so repeat the whole procedure until the study material reads smoothly.

A young apprentice reading an electrical manual hit a wall on the word ground. The dictionary offered: “the earth’s surface,” “an electrical connection to the earth,” “a foundation,” “a reason or basis.” He tested each against the sentence “connect the wire to ground.” Only the electrical sense quieted the confusion — and it carried a bonus: it explained why the manual kept emphasizing safety. The right definition didn’t just clarify a word; it clarified the spirit of the whole chapter.

When Words Are Clear but Confusion Remains

If every word in the passage is looked up and confusion still lingers, you’ve graduated beyond vocabulary. Now look for anomalies — ideas that don’t fit together, contradictions, or gaps in the logic itself. That’s the next layer of subject clearing, and it’s where real understanding gets forged.


Chapter 7: Words and Anomalies

Anomaly = anything that breaks the sense of wholeness and coherence

When you have looked up every definition of a word or concept and you are still confused, the problem is no longer the word — it is an anomaly hiding in the material or in your own thinking. Resolve the anomaly, and the confusion clears.

What Is an Anomaly?

An anomaly is anything that breaks the “oneness” — the sense of wholeness and coherence — of your understanding. When something “just doesn’t fit,” that feeling is your mind detecting an anomaly.

Anomalies come in three forms:

TypePlain MeaningThe Signal
DisharmonyArbitrary data“This was decided for no good reason.”
InconsistencyContradictory data“These two things can’t both be true.”
DiscontinuityMissing data“I don’t have enough to go on here.”

Disharmony (Arbitrary Data)

An arbitrary choice is one made on whim or personal preference, without reason or pattern. For example, someone schedules a meeting at 3 PM because the weather app showed a blue icon. No consideration of participants’ availability, no logical basis. The choice is random — and that randomness creates friction for everyone else.

Assumptions are arbitrary by nature. Many inherited beliefs are arbitrary too — accepted not because they were tested, but because they were never questioned. In a famous anecdote, a newlywed cook prepares a roast by cutting off both ends before putting it in the pan. Her husband asks why. “Because my mother always did it.” Curious, they call the mother — who says, “Because my mother did it.” Finally they ask the grandmother, who laughs: “Because my pan was too small.” An entire family ritual had been built on an arbitrary assumption long after the original reason had disappeared.

Many religious beliefs are arbitrary in this sense — they are held because they were inherited, not because they have been examined. This is not a judgment on faith itself, only a reminder that any belief held without examination is a candidate for disharmony in your understanding.

Inconsistency (Contradictory Data)

Inconsistencies are often the easiest anomalies to spot, because two statements openly fight each other. For example, in a history class, Chapter 3 says a war ended in 1945. Chapter 9 says the same war ended in 1946. Both cannot be true. That obvious contradiction is the tip of the iceberg; beneath it is the missing data — which date is correct, and why the sources disagree.

Whenever something “doesn’t make sense,” look underneath — there is almost always missing data causing the clash. A coworker has been punctual and dependable for years. Then, without warning, she starts arriving late and missing days. Her behavior is inconsistent. The easy (and wrong) conclusion is “she’s become careless.” But the inconsistency points to missing data: a family illness, a financial crisis, a health problem. Once that data surfaces, the behavior makes complete sense. The anomaly resolves.

An inconsistency is something that does not make sense. Underlying an inconsistency, there is missing data. So when you find a contradiction, don’t just pick a side — hunt for the missing piece that makes both statements fit together.

Discontinuity (Missing Data)

As children, we couldn’t look into certain areas — not because we refused, but because we had no opportunity. So we quietly filled those gaps with assumptions. Years later, even when we finally can look, those old assumptions block us. The gap is still there; it has just been papered over. Imagine a grandmother who makes extraordinary bread but can’t write down the recipe. When asked, “How much flour?” she says, “Enough so the dough feels right.” Her grandchild tries to follow this and fails every time. The missing data — the actual measurements — is hidden under the assumption that “feel” is enough. Only when someone finally weighs the flour and measures the water does the discontinuity resolve, and the bread turns out.

Sometimes the missing data can only be reached through a new tool or invention — a telescope, a microscope, a new instrument of perception. For centuries, people assumed the heavens were perfect and unchanging — because they couldn’t see otherwise with the naked eye. The discontinuity was there, buried under assumption. Galileo’s telescope was the new invention that supplied the missing data: sunspots, moons of Jupiter, phases of Venus. Suddenly the old assumptions collapsed.

How to Actually Resolve an Anomaly

Here is the practical procedure, distilled:

  1. Notice what doesn’t make sense. The confusion itself is your compass. Don’t ignore it; don’t push past it.
  2. Look more closely. Examine the definitions available from different sources. Find out what is being taken for granted.
  3. Separate what makes sense from what doesn’t. Set the clear parts aside and follow the trail of what doesn’t make sense.
  4. Keep the big context in view. You may step back to regain the overall picture, but never let go of the trail.
  5. Stay on the trail until the anomaly comes into focus. Sooner or later you will see exactly what was missing, what was contradictory, or what was assumed arbitrarily.
  6. The resolution arrives suddenly. The keyword or concept becomes clear in a moment of insight — because the obstacle has been removed, not because you memorized more.

A student struggles with a physics formula. He looks up every symbol, memorizes every definition, and still can’t make the equation work. Following the “trail of what doesn’t make sense,” he eventually realizes that one of the symbols in his textbook uses a convention different from the one his teacher uses. The inconsistency wasn’t in his understanding — it was in a hidden assumption about notation. The moment he spots it, the whole chapter unlocks. He didn’t learn anything new; he removed what was false.

A Helpful Tip: Start with the Broadest Concepts

The procedure gets faster when you begin with key words representing broad concepts first, then work down to the details. Resolving anomalies in big ideas clears the ground, so that smaller anomalies resolve themselves more easily.

And there is a bonus: by resolving anomalies in the material, you are also resolving anomalies in your own thinking. This builds a clarity of mind that lets you think fast on your feet — not because you have more facts, but because fewer false things are in the way.

Summary Table

AnomalyWhat It Looks LikeHow to Resolve It
DisharmonyA choice made without reasonIdentify and question the assumption
InconsistencyTwo things that can’t both be trueHunt for the missing data beneath the clash
DiscontinuityA gap you filled with an assumptionFind or postulate the missing data

The Heart of the Method

An anomaly is always a departure from the oneness of understanding. Resolution of anomalies restores the sense of wholeness about the subject.

You don’t resolve confusion by adding more information. You resolve it by finding the one false, missing, or contradictory piece — and removing it. Then wholeness returns on its own.


Chapter 8: The Steps of Subject Clearing

Subject Clearing = Clearing words + Resolving Anomalies

Subject Clearing is a method for taking any topic that confuses you and systematically dissolving the confusion. Think of it like decluttering a messy room — but the room is your mind, and the clutter is half-understood ideas. Here is each step, made plain, with a running example to show how it works.

1. Pick a Subject to Clear

Subjects usually come from four places: childhood, school, your profession, or life itself. Many of them jostle for attention at once. The simplest move is to start where your mind is already pulling you.

When you can’t decide, ask: “What subject, or part of life, is creating the most confusion in my mind?” List every answer that surfaces. Rank them from most to least relevant. Take the top one. That’s your starting subject.

Example. Imagine a man named Raj who feels vaguely uneasy about money but can’t say why. He lists what’s nagging him: “investing,” “inflation,” “taxes,” “budgeting,” “the stock market.” The one that makes his stomach tighten most is “the stock market.” That’s where he begins — not because it’s easiest, but because it’s pulling the loudest.

2. Clear the Subject Title

Before diving in, make sure you actually grasp what the subject is about. Often the title itself tells you. If it doesn’t, look at the postulate — the core assumption the whole subject rests on.

Example. Raj picks “the stock market.” Before reading a single article, he asks: what is this subject really about? He realizes the title alone is vague. The underlying postulate, he finds, is something like: people buy and sell shares of companies, and prices move with perceived value. Now he has a handle. The title is no longer a fog — it’s a starting postulate.

3. List and Arrange the Key Words

Brainstorm the key words the subject brings to mind. Then arrange them from the broadest to the most specific, starting from the subject’s postulate. You’ll likely need to clear each word’s definition as you go.

It helps to build a glossary — all the key terms with their definitions, kept alphabetical for quick lookup. Expect to refine these definitions as you learn. A glossary is a living document, not a finished product.

Example. Raj starts his glossary: company, share, price, value, dividend, bull market, bear market, index. He arranges them broadly-to-specifically: company → share → price → value → dividend → index → bull/bear market. Already, just by ordering them, he sees that “value” sits beneath “price” — price is what you pay, value is what something is worth. That one ordering cleared up a confusion he’d carried for years.

4. Observe the Anomalies

As you line up the key words in logical order, notice the anomalies — the things that don’t fit. Examine definitions for arbitrary data (made-up filler that hides gaps). Strip out the arbitrariness and expose the holes. Then look for contradictions between definitions — those reveal more gaps. Finally, ask what concepts should be there but are missing.

The purpose of this step is simple: become aware of every hole in your understanding. You can’t fix what you can’t see.

Example. Raj notices an anomaly: everyone talks about “market efficiency” (prices reflect all known information), yet also about “bubbles” (prices go irrationally high). Those two ideas contradict each other. He spots the hole — his glossary has no concept for irrational behavior or crowd psychology. Something’s missing. That missing piece is now visible, which is the whole point.

5. Study the Subject

Now read the available material, hunting specifically for data that fills the holes you’ve exposed. Prioritize the subject’s postulates and beginning concepts — the foundation, not the fancy upper floors.

Read one paragraph at a time. Don’t move on until you fully understand the current paragraph. Use Word Clearing (looking up any unclear word) and stay alert for anomalies as you go. New concepts? Add them to your key-word list and glossary. Refine definitions as needed.

Example. Raj reads a beginner’s book on markets, one slow paragraph at a time. He hits the word “leverage,” doesn’t fully grasp it, stops, and looks it up — that’s Word Clearing. He adds “leverage” to his glossary with a plain definition: borrowed money used to amplify a bet. Later he reads about “margin calls” and realizes it connects directly to leverage. His glossary is weaving itself into a web of understanding rather than a pile of terms.

6. Build Up the Foundation

Keep growing the key-word list and refining the glossary until the subject’s foundations feel complete. As you do, you’ll uncover misunderstandings and anomalies in your own thinking — not just in the material. Clearing those up is what actually shrinks your confusion.

Example. Weeks later, Raj’s glossary has grown to forty-odd terms, each with a definition he actually understands. He re-reads his early notes and laughs — he’d once defined “dividend” wrongly. He fixes it. More importantly, he notices he no longer feels that stomach-tightening dread when someone mentions the stock market. The confusion hasn’t been suppressed; it has dissolved, because the holes got filled.

The Payoff

Work through subjects this way and you’ll feel a genuine relief — not the surface comfort of having “studied” something, but the deeper relief of a mind that no longer carries around unanswered questions like loose change in a pocket. Each subject you clear lightens the load, and the method itself becomes second nature: pick, clarify, arrange, find the gaps, study, rebuild.


Chapter 9: Subject Clearing and Education

Education = gaining Knowledge + Skills + Values

Subject Clearing emerged from an effort to help high school dropouts who had become overwhelmed by academic confusion, especially in mathematics. These students were placed in front of computers and asked to work through math software, yet they made little or no progress. Even individual tutoring often failed, not because they lacked ability, but because the roots of their confusion lay much deeper than anyone had recognized.

The Hidden Nature of Confusion

The central problem was not simple weakness in the current lesson. It was the accumulation of unresolved gaps in understanding from much earlier years. A concept missed in one grade became the shaky foundation for the next, and over time these gaps multiplied until the entire subject felt confused and unmanageable. By the time many students reached high school, they no longer knew what they understood, what they had missed, or where they should begin to repair the damage.

This helps explain why some students eventually conclude that learning is pointless. The subject no longer appears as a connected body of knowledge; it appears as a mass of unrelated demands, symbols, and procedures. Under those conditions, discouragement is not surprising. It is the natural result of trying to move forward without a clear foundation beneath one’s feet.

Why Conventional Help Falls Short

Most traditional help focuses on immediate performance: tonight’s homework, this week’s test, or the topic assigned at the current grade level. That kind of help may provide temporary relief, but it often leaves the true cause untouched. If the real difficulty lies several years earlier, then tutoring the present topic is like repairing cracks in a wall while ignoring damage in the foundation.

Telling students to “go back and review the basics” also fails in many cases. Such advice is too vague to be useful and too discouraging to be accepted. A student who already feels defeated cannot easily return to years of earlier material without a clear map showing where the actual gap lies and why it matters now.

Logical Structure as a Guide

Subject Clearing begins with a simple observation: every subject has a logical structure. It develops from broad, simple ideas into narrower and more complex ones, and each later step depends on earlier understanding. From this viewpoint, a “hole” in understanding is not mysterious. It is a missing or confused step somewhere in that structure.

The challenge is that a highly confused student often cannot identify the missing step alone. In many cases, the student cannot even ask a clear question, because the whole subject feels unstable. The proposed solution was therefore to present the subject in a clear sequence from its earliest premises onward, so that the learner could see the path of development for the subject as a whole. Once that path became visible, the student could begin to notice where understanding weakened or stopped.

This idea was tested through a structured series of math lectures designed to follow the logical sequence of the subject from the ground up. As students moved through that sequence, they began asking more precise and meaningful questions. Instead of saying only that math was confusing, they could now point to a particular transition, definition, or principle that no longer made sense.

That shift was crucial. When learners are given the right structure of a subject, they are able to spot the exact gaps in their understanding that need repair. 

Educational Implications

This approach suggests that study materials should be designed differently, especially in primary and middle school. Rather than presenting topics as disconnected assignments, materials should reflect the exact logical structure of the subject, with each concept clearly connected to what comes before and after. When materials are built in this way, students are less likely to accumulate hidden gaps, and when confusion does arise, it can be traced and resolved more quickly.

An important application of this principle is The Book of Mathematics, which was developed to organize the fundamentals of mathematics in a logical sequence that supports both learning and remediation. These materials have proved effective in tutoring and in helping students recover their footing in math.

The Aim: Self-Learners

The deeper goal of Subject Clearing is not merely to help students pass a class. It is to develop self-learners. A self-learner is a person who can recognize present confusion, trace it back to its underlying gap, and then find or use the right material to repair that gap independently. Such a learner does not allow confusion to accumulate for years; confusion is handled while it is still small and manageable.

This changes the emotional experience of learning. Instead of depending entirely on external pressure, the learner gains confidence in the ability to diagnose and repair misunderstanding. Curiosity remains alive because the mind no longer experiences confusion as helplessness. It becomes a signal to investigate, clarify, and continue.

Self-Learning Clinics

The idea of Self-Learning Clinics grows naturally out of this goal. These clinics are meant to create an environment in which students can work through confusion by following the logical structure of a subject, asking targeted questions, and receiving help at the exact point where understanding breaks down. Their purpose is not to replace thought with instruction, but to train students in the habits of independent clarification.

In this model, the supervisor or guide does not merely deliver answers. The guide helps the learner locate the gap, connect it to the broader structure of the subject, and recover the ability to move forward with understanding. Over time, the student becomes less dependent on rescue and more capable of self-correction.

Foundational Subjects

This method is especially important in mathematics and language arts. These subjects cultivate two fundamental human capacities: precise thinking and precise communication. When the logical structure of mathematics is clear, reasoning becomes more exact. When the structure of language is clear, expression becomes more accurate and coherent.

For that reason, lesson plans in these areas should be built with exceptional care. Any hidden gap in foundational subjects can spread into many other areas of learning, while strong foundations in them can strengthen the student’s entire intellectual development.

Early Promise

Early results and student feedback were encouraging. Some students reportedly said that they would not have dropped out if they had been taught in this way, while others described a new sense of understanding and interest in mathematics. These responses suggest that many learning failures are not failures of intelligence, but failures of sequence, structure, and timely clarification.

Subject Clearing therefore offers more than a remedial technique. It presents a different vision of education: one in which confusion is not ignored, patched over, or treated as personal deficiency, but traced carefully to its source and resolved through understanding. In that vision, the purpose of education is not only to transmit information, but to cultivate learners who know how to restore clarity for themselves.


Chapter 10: Why Schooling Needs to Change

School = Classroom + Study material + Student + Supervisor

Modern life demands students who can think for themselves, not just memorize facts. To support this, schooling must shift away from a “one size fits all” model and toward self-directed learning.

Subject Clearing is an approach that:

  • Restructures study materials so they are easier to learn from.
  • Reorganizes schools to give students more control over their learning. 

These changes help students become confident, independent learners.

Rethinking Study Materials

Subject Clearing asks two simple questions about any textbook or course:

  • Does it move from big ideas to details in a clear, logical order?
  • Is it written for someone studying the subject for the first time?

This is especially important in language and mathematics in the early years, because they form the base for all later learning.

Courses are broken into modules. Each module starts with an overview, then goes step by step to more advanced topics. Lessons inside the module follow a clear sequence and build on each other. For example, a numbers lesson is structured in small, logical steps, as in the sample lesson Numbers

Every lesson includes practice exercises with answers so students can check themselves. Correct answers build confidence; mistakes show exactly where understanding is missing.

After each module, students take a test. They review any wrong answers until the module is fully understood before moving on. Basic skills must be solid before higher‑level material is tackled.

When all modules in a subject are completed, the student has finished the course. From there, they can use Subject Clearing on information they find online and elsewhere to keep learning on their own.

Schools as Self-Learning Centers

Subject Clearing also changes how schools are organized. In a Self-Learning Center (SLC): 

  • Students study at their own pace in an environment designed for self-learning.
  • Rooms are organized by course, not age; students of different ages can work in the same room.
  • A student’s “level” is defined by the module they are studying, not their age.
  • Course supervisors replace traditional teachers; their job is to help students understand the materials.

SLCs welcome students of any age, including those who previously dropped out. The aim is simple: help each student become an effective self-learner. There is no competition between students; the only challenge is overcoming ignorance.

New students start with an introductory talk where they can ask questions. While on course, supervisors check understanding from time to time and test students after each lesson and course. Students are expected to reach full understanding of the material, not just a passing score.

In the course room, students learn to notice when they are confused and link that confusion to specific gaps in understanding. With structured materials and guidance from supervisors, they clear up confusions quickly so the confusions do not pile up and become discouraging. Curiosity and motivation are restored; students no longer need to be pushed or punished to study.

Course materials are available on computers. Students first learn simple word‑clearing techniques, then the broader Subject Clearing approach. The end result is a student who can pick up written materials and learn from them independently.


SC Chapter 3: A New Way to Look

Reference: Book II: Subject Clearing

Thought = Substance that gives form to the universe
Consciousness = all the forms that appear and change
Awareness = the open “space” in which everything shows up

Objectivity and subjectivity

We usually think “objective” means what is out there in the world, and “subjective” means what is in here, in our minds. This text suggests a different view: our thoughts and feelings are also part of the universe, and there is a deeper kind of awareness that can see them just as it sees everything else.

If we look from that deeper awareness, the split between objectivity and subjectivity starts to fade.

Awareness and consciousness, in simple terms

Let’s separate two things:

  • Consciousness is what you are aware of: sights, sounds, body sensations, thoughts, emotions, memories. All of these are contents that appear and change.
  • Awareness is the simple fact that these contents can be noticed at all. It is the open “space” in which everything shows up. Awareness itself is not a particular thought or feeling.

In this view:

  • Thoughts and feelings are real events in the universe, just like physical objects and light.
  • Consciousness is made from these events.
  • Awareness is the clear field that can notice all of them, without being any one of them.

Seeing thoughts as “things”

Here is a short exercise you can try.

  1. Let a simple thought arise—perhaps a picture of a tree, or the memory of yesterday’s lunch.
  2. Instead of getting lost in it, look at it as if it were an object on a table in front of you.
    • Is it sharp or vague?
    • Bright or dull?
    • Does it stay, or does it quickly fade?
  3. You are not the thought itself. You are the awareness that can look at it.

If you can look at a thought this way, then that thought is something happening in the universe, just like a sound or a flash of light. It is not a separate, private “subjective world” sealed off from everything else.

Awareness exercise: what is common?

Try this second exercise.

  1. Close your eyes for a moment.
  2. Notice, in turn:
    • A body sensation (for example, how the chair feels).
    • A sound (traffic, a fan, a bird).
    • A thought (for example, “I am doing this exercise”).
  3. Ask yourself: what is common to all three?
    • In each case, something appears, and there is a noticing of it.
    • The body sensation, sound, and thought are contents of consciousness.
    • The simple noticing is awareness.

Awareness is the quiet background that does not change when the contents change. That background is not “inside” any one object. It is what allows every object—external or internal—to be seen.

Letting “subjective” melt into “objective”

We often call feelings and personal stories “subjective” because we strongly identify with them. We say “I am anxious” or “I am angry,” as if the feeling is what we are.

Try this small shift:

  1. Bring to mind a feeling like anxiety or irritation.
  2. Look at it as you did at the thought:
    • Where do you feel it in the body?
    • Does it move, tighten, loosen?
    • Does it change if you simply watch it for a while?
  3. Now quietly say to yourself:
    • Not “I am anxious,” but “Anxiety is appearing in awareness.”
  4. The feeling is no longer your whole identity. It is an event showing up in the same universe as everything else. From the standpoint of awareness, you can examine it as clearly as you would examine the weather or a sound.

In this sense, what we call “subjective” experience is just another set of objects. When we stop gripping them as “me,” they can be seen and studied objectively.

A link to older teachings

Many spiritual traditions have said something similar in different language. The Vedas, Hinduism, and Buddhism all encourage relaxing identification with the changing forms—body, thoughts, emotions—and resting as pure awareness instead.

From this quiet place:

  • You do not disappear; you simply stop confusing yourself with passing contents.
  • Mind, including the subconscious, becomes something you can observe, explore, and understand as part of the universe.

Put simply: when we stand in awareness and see thoughts and feelings as events in the universe, the sharp boundary between “objective” and “subjective” loses its force. There is one universe of things to be seen, and awareness that can see them.

.

SC Chapter 10: Why Schooling Needs to Change

Reference: Book II: Subject Clearing

School = Classroom + Study material + Student + Supervisor

Modern life demands students who can think for themselves, not just memorize facts. To support this, schooling must shift away from a “one size fits all” model and toward self-directed learning.

Subject Clearing is an approach that:

  • Restructures study materials so they are easier to learn from.
  • Reorganizes schools to give students more control over their learning. 

These changes help students become confident, independent learners.

Rethinking Study Materials

Subject Clearing asks two simple questions about any textbook or course:

  • Does it move from big ideas to details in a clear, logical order?
  • Is it written for someone studying the subject for the first time?

This is especially important in language and mathematics in the early years, because they form the base for all later learning.

Courses are broken into modules. Each module starts with an overview, then goes step by step to more advanced topics. Lessons inside the module follow a clear sequence and build on each other. For example, a numbers lesson is structured in small, logical steps, as in the sample lesson Numbers

Every lesson includes practice exercises with answers so students can check themselves. Correct answers build confidence; mistakes show exactly where understanding is missing.

After each module, students take a test. They review any wrong answers until the module is fully understood before moving on. Basic skills must be solid before higher‑level material is tackled.

When all modules in a subject are completed, the student has finished the course. From there, they can use Subject Clearing on information they find online and elsewhere to keep learning on their own.

Schools as Self-Learning Centers

Subject Clearing also changes how schools are organized. In a Self-Learning Center (SLC): 

  • Students study at their own pace in an environment designed for self-learning.
  • Rooms are organized by course, not age; students of different ages can work in the same room.
  • A student’s “level” is defined by the module they are studying, not their age.
  • Course supervisors replace traditional teachers; their job is to help students understand the materials.

SLCs welcome students of any age, including those who previously dropped out. The aim is simple: help each student become an effective self-learner. There is no competition between students; the only challenge is overcoming ignorance.

New students start with an introductory talk where they can ask questions. While on course, supervisors check understanding from time to time and test students after each lesson and course. Students are expected to reach full understanding of the material, not just a passing score.

In the course room, students learn to notice when they are confused and link that confusion to specific gaps in understanding. With structured materials and guidance from supervisors, they clear up confusions quickly so the confusions do not pile up and become discouraging. Curiosity and motivation are restored; students no longer need to be pushed or punished to study.

Course materials are available on computers. Students first learn simple word‑clearing techniques, then the broader Subject Clearing approach. The end result is a student who can pick up written materials and learn from them independently.

.

SC Chapter 9: Subject Clearing and Education

Reference: Book II: Subject Clearing

Education = gaining Knowledge + Skills + Values

Subject Clearing emerged from an effort to help high school dropouts who had become overwhelmed by academic confusion, especially in mathematics. These students were placed in front of computers and asked to work through math software, yet they made little or no progress. Even individual tutoring often failed, not because they lacked ability, but because the roots of their confusion lay much deeper than anyone had recognized.

The Hidden Nature of Confusion

The central problem was not simple weakness in the current lesson. It was the accumulation of unresolved gaps in understanding from much earlier years. A concept missed in one grade became the shaky foundation for the next, and over time these gaps multiplied until the entire subject felt confused and unmanageable. By the time many students reached high school, they no longer knew what they understood, what they had missed, or where they should begin to repair the damage.

This helps explain why some students eventually conclude that learning is pointless. The subject no longer appears as a connected body of knowledge; it appears as a mass of unrelated demands, symbols, and procedures. Under those conditions, discouragement is not surprising. It is the natural result of trying to move forward without a clear foundation beneath one’s feet.

Why Conventional Help Falls Short

Most traditional help focuses on immediate performance: tonight’s homework, this week’s test, or the topic assigned at the current grade level. That kind of help may provide temporary relief, but it often leaves the true cause untouched. If the real difficulty lies several years earlier, then tutoring the present topic is like repairing cracks in a wall while ignoring damage in the foundation.

Telling students to “go back and review the basics” also fails in many cases. Such advice is too vague to be useful and too discouraging to be accepted. A student who already feels defeated cannot easily return to years of earlier material without a clear map showing where the actual gap lies and why it matters now.

Logical Structure as a Guide

Subject Clearing begins with a simple observation: every subject has a logical structure. It develops from broad, simple ideas into narrower and more complex ones, and each later step depends on earlier understanding. From this viewpoint, a “hole” in understanding is not mysterious. It is a missing or confused step somewhere in that structure.

The challenge is that a highly confused student often cannot identify the missing step alone. In many cases, the student cannot even ask a clear question, because the whole subject feels unstable. The proposed solution was therefore to present the subject in a clear sequence from its earliest premises onward, so that the learner could see the path of development for the subject as a whole. Once that path became visible, the student could begin to notice where understanding weakened or stopped.

This idea was tested through a structured series of math lectures designed to follow the logical sequence of the subject from the ground up. As students moved through that sequence, they began asking more precise and meaningful questions. Instead of saying only that math was confusing, they could now point to a particular transition, definition, or principle that no longer made sense.

That shift was crucial. When learners are given the right structure of a subject, they are able to spot the exact gaps in their understanding that need repair. 

Educational Implications

This approach suggests that study materials should be designed differently, especially in primary and middle school. Rather than presenting topics as disconnected assignments, materials should reflect the exact logical structure of the subject, with each concept clearly connected to what comes before and after. When materials are built in this way, students are less likely to accumulate hidden gaps, and when confusion does arise, it can be traced and resolved more quickly.

An important application of this principle is The Book of Mathematics, which was developed to organize the fundamentals of mathematics in a logical sequence that supports both learning and remediation. These materials have proved effective in tutoring and in helping students recover their footing in math.

The Aim: Self-Learners

The deeper goal of Subject Clearing is not merely to help students pass a class. It is to develop self-learners. A self-learner is a person who can recognize present confusion, trace it back to its underlying gap, and then find or use the right material to repair that gap independently. Such a learner does not allow confusion to accumulate for years; confusion is handled while it is still small and manageable.

This changes the emotional experience of learning. Instead of depending entirely on external pressure, the learner gains confidence in the ability to diagnose and repair misunderstanding. Curiosity remains alive because the mind no longer experiences confusion as helplessness. It becomes a signal to investigate, clarify, and continue.

Self-Learning Clinics

The idea of Self-Learning Clinics grows naturally out of this goal. These clinics are meant to create an environment in which students can work through confusion by following the logical structure of a subject, asking targeted questions, and receiving help at the exact point where understanding breaks down. Their purpose is not to replace thought with instruction, but to train students in the habits of independent clarification.

In this model, the supervisor or guide does not merely deliver answers. The guide helps the learner locate the gap, connect it to the broader structure of the subject, and recover the ability to move forward with understanding. Over time, the student becomes less dependent on rescue and more capable of self-correction.

Foundational Subjects

This method is especially important in mathematics and language arts. These subjects cultivate two fundamental human capacities: precise thinking and precise communication. When the logical structure of mathematics is clear, reasoning becomes more exact. When the structure of language is clear, expression becomes more accurate and coherent.

For that reason, lesson plans in these areas should be built with exceptional care. Any hidden gap in foundational subjects can spread into many other areas of learning, while strong foundations in them can strengthen the student’s entire intellectual development.

Early Promise

Early results and student feedback were encouraging. Some students reportedly said that they would not have dropped out if they had been taught in this way, while others described a new sense of understanding and interest in mathematics. These responses suggest that many learning failures are not failures of intelligence, but failures of sequence, structure, and timely clarification.

Subject Clearing therefore offers more than a remedial technique. It presents a different vision of education: one in which confusion is not ignored, patched over, or treated as personal deficiency, but traced carefully to its source and resolved through understanding. In that vision, the purpose of education is not only to transmit information, but to cultivate learners who know how to restore clarity for themselves.

.