How's about a not very good analogy to this situation:
The Sausage Factory Think of a sausage machine bringing together all sorts of ingredients and extruding this continuous strand sausage. You are the minder of that sausage machine. Your job is to keep it fed with material, and to make a simple adjustment to keep it working right. You have other tasks elsewhere in the factory too.
As the minder you can detect when something you think is nasty (dark meat maybe) comes through in the sausage. You're very concerned about the sausage because it's an important part of your diet, and of other's too.
The problem is you are a young and very impressionable sausage machine operator. After one or two nasties have come through you start focusing really hard on the the string where it leaves the machine to catch what you think are the bad bits. Trouble is no matter how hard you focus you can't seem to catch them - they somehow slip by because you can't quite figure what to do.
It'd make a lot of sense to consult with the factory owner, but somehow you get such tunnel vision that you can't take your eyes off the machine. Not wanting to eat what you think is bad sausage you meanwhile bust a gut trying to remember where all the nasty bits are in the string of sausage.
Every now and then the factory owner allows a short break and you manage to go back and cut out the odd bad bit. But you can't seem to get close to them all and eventually you end up frantic with worry that you'll end up eating bad sausages, that others will too, and that you'll be in big trouble with the boss.
Eventually it all gets out of hand. You end up stressed out and in melt down, you haven't a hope of catching up with all the bad bits and meanwhile you're so focused on the one bit of the string where it exits the machine that you forget to adjust the machine or to feed it with fresh material. You're doing none of your other jobs elsewhere in the factory, and have forgotten all about the rest of the string.
The other workers have all quit and long started other things, but you don't notice.
Production gets very slow, quality is variable and occasionally it almost stops. Eventually the factory owner comes in and looks to see what the problem is. You're scared silly and hide, but eventually he finds you.
Upon being asked what the problem is you deny its existence, try to blame others, the crappy machine, the bad ingredients, everything except yourself. Gently and persistently he shows you that this can't be the case, that the problem is the way you are seeing the job.
You're amazed that he's not blaming you for doing harm, he's more worried that you're not upset and troubled. And that you're missing out on the fun work the others are doing.
But then he blows you away by bursting into a great laugh, throwing his arms around you and saying - but the sausage filling was fine. The dark stuff is no problem. The machine checks this automatically, I designed it so that it will remove any really bad bits itself before they get into the sausage. Your job is only to keep it fed with material, and to adjust it as needed to maintain the flow.
What's more it's late at night and everybody else is long gone and off having fun doing important things while you're stuck obsessing about what is not a real problem. Your obsession with this issue has been closing down your awareness and stopping you seeing how important all the other parts of your job are too.
The sausage is important, and it's important to learn to operate the machine but not so important as all the other things you need to do in the factory. And certainly not so important that the owner would fire you. he sees things in a much larger way - he knows much better than you do what your potential is and wants eventually to develop you into a manager in the factory.
So eventually you learn that you can trust the boss, that he your interest at heart, and that if you are going to do what's best for yourself and everybody else you need to lightly but mindfully keep and eye on the machine while not losing awareness of all the other parts of your life.
The sausage is your C1 life stretching back into eternity.
The dark bits of filling are those events in life that we grasp at, or perceive as problems or important - that get hung up about and can't release. With time we see nothing except these.
Our broader job in the factory is our total existence - not just C1 but at all levels of which we need to become aware and where we have work to do too.
The short breaks where we get to remove some of the dark bits are short periods of awareness of this, and of the reality of our C1 life, soon lost when we get sucked back into our obsession with the bad bits.
The bad quality runs of sausage caused by our not letting the machine run properly with just the right touch on adjustments is life getting out of shape as a result of our inability to go with the flow - or to know intuitively when to intervene, and when not.
The skill, mindfulness, care and broad awareness required to do all the jobs properly are analogous to how we are required to learn to handle this life and our broader existence.
The great sausage of life and our operation of the machine being important to our development but not mattering in any absolute way is analogous to the way that it's only the learning that matters in life, not the events themselves. That we literally can do no permanent wrong.
The caring factory owner is of course God or higher mind.
And in the end when we get good at operating the sausage machine what matters to him is our ability to move on to a higher job.

Anyway. Hope it's not too long!! No doubt it's full of holes and inaccuracies which you'll see immediately....