ekim,
Oh yes, I can see the difference and it illustrates the difficulty in suspending the habit of trying to treat the 'inner' as a material object for investigation and forming a subjective model of the result.
But the problem is that oftentimes those who have an “inner” (ie, subjective) experience also claim it to have an objective cause, and therefore a truth for other people too. And then they proceed accordingly.
It is also based upon the assertion that the only 'reality' is a physical one because that is the only one the mind can form a model of and provide evidence for.
No it isn’t. There may be any number of other realities – indeed, for what it’s worth I think there probably
are other realities. Rather materialism allows us to construct
a model of reality that’s distinguishable from just guessing about stuff, and it has nothing to say to conjectures about the non-material. Trouble is though, nor does anything else.
I doubt whether anybody is interested in my take on the Jesus method because most seem more concerned in either sustaining a belief or destroying or belittling a belief. However I would suggest that it is based upon the word used in the New Testament 'metanoia', which in my view is badly translated as 'repent'. In this context there is the physical objective world, beyond that the metaphysical subjective thinking, model making 'world' and beyond that meta (beyond) noia (mind). So to take your points 'investigation of something, thinking hard, feeling snuggly, altered mental state, objects of contemplation' are terms that do not belong to metanoia. It has more to do with conscious stillness in the midst of the subjective and objective distractions.
So I would say 'Repent for the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand' is an invitation to find that space now and sustain the connection, not when you are dead.
Here endeth the first lesson.
All very lovely no doubt, but here’s the problem with it: there are many people of many faiths who claim different facts for their beliefs that are also we're told obtained by contemplation etc. You can feel as much “conscious stillness" as you like, but as soon as you make claims of objectively true causal phenomena – “Kingdom of heaven”, “connection” etc – you’re in trouble. If you stick to, “I feel all tingly when I think about this stuff”, that’s fine; the minute you jump to, “therefore this stuff is causing me to feel all tingly” then you overreach.
Here endeth the second lesson.