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… we can detach ourselves, separate the being from its temporary becoming, observe it, control it, sanction or prevent its manifestation: we can, in this way, by an inner detachment, a mental or spiritual separateness, partially or even fundamentally liberate ourselves from the control of mind nature or vital nature over the being and assume the position of the witness, knower and ruler. Thus we have a double knowledge of the subjective movement: there is an intimate knowledge, by identity, of its stuff and its force of action, more intimate than we could have by any entirely separative and objective knowledge such as we get of things outside us, things that are to us altogether not-self; there is at the same time a knowledge by detached observation, detached but with a power of direct contact, which frees us from engrossment by the Nature energy and enables us to relate the movement to the rest of our own existence and world existence. If we are without this detachment, we lose our self of being and mastering knowledge in the nature self of becoming and movement and action and, though we know intimately the movement, we do not know it dominatingly and fully. This would not be the case if we carried into our identification with the movement our identity with the rest of our subjective existence,—if, that is to say, we could plunge wholly into the wave of becoming and at the same time be in the very absorption of the state or act the mental witness, observer, controller; but this we cannot easily do, because we live in a divided consciousness in which the vital part of us—our life nature of force and desire and passion and action—tends to control or swallow up the mind, and the mind has to avoid this subjection and control the vital, but can only succeed in the effort by keeping itself separate; for if it identifies itself, it is lost and hurried away in the life movement. Nevertheless a kind of balanced double identity by division is possible, though it is not easy to keep the balance; there is a self of thought which observes and permits the passion for the sake of the experience—or is obliged by some life-stress to permit it,—and there is a self of life which allows itself to be carried along in the movement of Nature.
<ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/21/knowledge-by-identity-and-separative-knowledge#p3</ref>
 
=Attachment=
 
The seeker of the integral state of knowledge must be free from attachment to action and equally free from attachment to inaction. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/23/the-release-from-subjection-to-the-body#p8</ref>
 
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To gain the divine consciousness, one must know how to lose all attachments. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/04/26-march-1951#p2</ref>
 
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There can be no true integral surrender to the Divine if any human relations and their habits and attachments are still maintained. All relations must be turned upward and directed to the Divine alone and transformed into means for the union and surrender.
<ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/14/duty-towards-the-divine-and-others#p7</ref>
 
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Attachment to the likings and repugnances keeps the soul bound in this web of good and evil, joys and sorrows.
<ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/24/the-liberation-of-the-nature#p8</ref>
 
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Attachments would be a stupendous inconvenience; for it would bind the reborn being to a useless repetition or a compulsory continuation of his surface past and stand heavily in the way of his bringing out new possibilities from the depths of the spirit
<ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/22/rebirth-and-other-worlds-karma-the-soul-and-immortality#p28</ref>
 
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Immortality cannot come if there is attachment to the body,—for it is only by living in the immortal part of oneself which is unidentified with the body and bringing down its consciousness and force into the cells that it can come.
<ref>http://incarnateword.in/agenda/10/february-1-1969#p1</ref>
=What Is Detachment?=