TLDR: The practice of sensing the being in another person—the consciousness or essence beneath their persona and conditioning—is a gateway to dissolving the illusion of separation. When this sensing occurs, empathy naturally transforms into genuine love, and the fundamental division between self and other collapses. This is not an emotional achievement but a shift in perception toward what actually is.
What Does "Sensing the Being" Mean?
Most human interaction occurs at the level of form: we perceive each other's bodies, hear words, observe behaviors, and react to what we interpret. This is the realm of the personal self, the ego-constructed identity that carries history, wounds, preferences, and narratives. "Sensing the being," by contrast, means perceiving the aliveness and consciousness that inhabits another person—the silent presence that exists beneath and prior to thought, emotion, and social conditioning.
This being is not a concept or belief system. It is the underlying awareness that witnesses all experience. When you sense it in another person, you are not imagining something; you are recognizing what is fundamentally there but usually overlooked because attention is captured by the content of consciousness—the mental and emotional patterns—rather than consciousness itself.
Why Does Sensing Being Dissolve Separation?
The sense of separation between self and other is rooted in perception. When your attention is exclusively on the personal self—your own thoughts, needs, judgments, and survival concerns—you experience everyone else as fundamentally different from you, as "not-self." This is the foundation of ego-based consciousness.
However, the being that animates you and the being that animates another person are not ultimately separate. They are expressions of the same fundamental consciousness. When you sense this being in another person, you recognize something in them that is not alien or foreign—it is recognizable because it is the same aliveness that you are. There is a resonance, a recognition.
This recognition does not depend on whether you and the other person are similar in personality, belief, or background. A homeless person on the street, someone you disagree with, someone from a completely different culture—when you sense the being in them, the categories and divisions that usually mediate perception dissolve. What remains is a direct, unmediated awareness of presence recognizing itself in another form.
How Does Empathy Transform Into Love?
Empathy is often understood as the ability to imagine or feel what another person experiences. This is a mental and emotional capacity—valuable in itself, but it can still operate from within the framework of separation. You imagine their suffering, their joy, their perspective, and you generate a compassionate response.
Love, as pointed to here, is something different. It is not an emotion generated in response to another's state; it is the dissolution of the boundary between self and other. When you sense the being in another person, there is no longer a "you" here feeling compassion for a "them" there. There is simply presence recognizing itself, aliveness meeting aliveness. In that meeting, separation has already dissolved.
This is why the distinction matters: empathy can still be conditional, can still be withheld, can still be filtered through judgment and preference. Love, in this sense, is unconditional because it is not dependent on the other person's personality, appearance, or behavior. It is the natural expression of recognizing the being in them—and recognizing that being as not separate from your own.
What Prevents Most People From Sensing Being?
The primary obstacle is mental identification. When consciousness is entirely captured by thought—ruminating about the past, anticipating the future, categorizing and judging—attention is not available to perceive what is actually present. The mind creates a mental image or concept of the other person, and you relate to that image rather than to the being themselves.
Additionally, when you are in survival mode, when the ego feels threatened, when there is deep unconsciousness or pain body activation, the capacity to sense being in another is severely diminished. The entire nervous system is contracted toward self-protection, and the other person becomes an object to be managed, controlled, feared, or exploited rather than a presence to be sensed and recognized.
Habit also plays a role. Most people have never practiced sensing being in others. They have developed the cognitive and emotional skills needed for social functioning, but the capacity to perceive consciousness itself has atrophied through disuse. It is not lost—it is simply undeveloped.
How Can You Practice Sensing Being in Another Person?
The first requirement is presence—a certain quality of aliveness and stillness in your own consciousness. This does not require you to become a meditation master or achieve any special state. It simply means being reasonably free from compulsive thinking, at least for a moment. When the mental chatter quiets, there is a natural opening where direct perception becomes possible.
When with another person, instead of immediately engaging with their words or your reactions to their appearance, take a moment to sense the aliveness in them. You might notice this as a quality of aliveness behind their eyes, a presence that animates their form. You are not trying to feel something emotional or generate a response. You are simply noticing what is there.
This can be practiced with anyone: a family member, a stranger, someone you ordinarily dislike or judge. In each case, beneath the personal story, beneath the conditioning and the behavior, there is being—the same being that you are. When you sense this, something shifts in your relationship to that person, not because you have generated a new emotion but because perception itself has changed.
It is worth noting that this practice is not sentimental or passive. Sensing the being in another person does not mean ignoring their harmful behavior or refusing appropriate boundaries. It simply means your response comes from a place of clarity and wholeness rather than from ego reactivity. You may need to protect yourself or set limits, but you do so without the contraction, the judgment, the sense of being at war with their essential nature.
Why Does This Matter in Daily Life?
When separation feels absolute, conflict is inevitable. War, abuse, discrimination, and all forms of violence become possible because the other is experienced as fundamentally other—as an enemy, a threat, an obstacle, or an object. When being recognizes itself in another, these forms of unconsciousness become impossible. Not impossible morally or through effort, but simply impossible because the very perception that would allow them has dissolved.
At a practical level, relationships transform when sensing the being becomes a common occurrence. Defensiveness decreases. The need to win arguments or prove oneself right diminishes. There is more ease, more patience, more genuine interest in the other person because they are no longer primarily a threat or a means to an end. Paradoxically, this often leads to better communication and problem-solving, not through force but through the space that opens when separation dissolves.
In the wider world, if more people practiced sensing the being in others—in those they disagree with, in those from different groups, in those suffering on the margins—the consciousness that underlies most human suffering would begin to shift. Not through ideology or moral exhortation, but through direct perception.
Where to Go From Here
The practice of sensing being is not a belief to adopt or a technique to master. It is an invitation to notice something that is already the case: there is consciousness in you, and there is consciousness in the other person. These are not two separate things. When you stop taking the thought-created sense of separation as the final truth, and instead look directly at what is present, the being in another becomes apparent.
Begin with small moments. In a conversation, notice the aliveness behind someone's eyes. When passing a stranger, sense the presence animating their body. With loved ones, especially in moments of conflict, pause and remember the being beneath the personality. These moments of recognition are not rare mystical experiences reserved for the spiritually advanced. They are the natural perception that emerges when the mind quiets and presence meets presence.
As this capacity deepens through repeated noticing, your entire relationship to existence begins to shift. The sense of fundamental isolation that characterizes the egoic state gives way to an underlying sense of connection and belonging. Not as a belief, but as a direct experience of being itself.




