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PeterParticipant
I prefer the metaphorical ‘slap’ of a kaon and paradox too the physical one 🙂
I read to many personal accounts where the physical ‘slaps’ intention was lost, a case where a method was confused with the destination.The ‘slap’ is meant, I think, to jolt the mind out of its own created traps. Mind creating the problem of duality then trying to use Mind to ‘fix’ it. as Watts put it “You can’t lift yourself up by your own bootstraps. It won’t work! It won’t happen! “
PeterParticipantThe book is hard to find so the link is apricated.
I find when it comes to books on Zen a good practice is to not to hold the words to tightly. Zen tends to use language to ‘slap’ the student so that they might avoid falling into that temptation of mistaking the map for the territory. Though it may not always appear so, Zen never asks that the student to understand or believe.
Man is originally endowed and invested with Hara. But when, as a rational being, he loses what is embodied in Hara it become his task to regain it.
To rediscover the unity concealed in the contradictions through which he perceives life intellectually is the nerve of his existence. As a rational being he feels himself suspended between the opposite poles of heaven and earth, spirit and nature. This means first the dichotomy of unconscious nature and of the mind which urges him to ever increasing consciousness; and second the dichotomy of his time-space reality on this earth and the Divine beyond time and space. Man’s whole existence is influenced by the tormenting tension of these opposites and so he is forever in search of a life-form in which this tension will be resolved. – Karlfried Graf Durckheim
PeterParticipantI found Karlfried Graf Durckheim book – ‘Hara: The Vital Center of Man’ helpful
If you google ‘Path of Initiation – the wisdom of Karlfried’ there is a Youtube video worth listening to.
PeterParticipantI’m not a fan of Koan’s myself and not sure how effective they are anymore what with all the books and such explaining them. Which totally misses the intention. Having answers to the unanswerable is a very western objective measuring mind kind of thinking thing to do.
Having no desire to be liked or understood, still a times thin skinned…. feels like a kind of Koan 🙂
PeterParticipantThanks Helcat
I’ve never been comfortable with the words enlightenment or for that matter the word meditation. Like most westerners the tendency to apply measurements and judgments to the words get in the way.
I’ve been looking into Krishnamurti life who uses a kind of Socratic method to look past our constructs. He’s not a easy read but I think he would agree with your thoughts on the ‘stages in meditation’
I’ve been playing around with a slow realization that ‘Stillness’, Calm, ‘Silence’, Eternity… are not measurement’s, are not things to be measured. I find it freeing. Neurologically I suspect these are right brain experiences.
My mediation a kind of Ying Yang flow between the left and right spheres of the brain. Carry water chop wood (left side) AND Carry water chop wood (right side) The Doings are the same but the experience different.
PeterParticipantThanks Anita you have a wonderful way with words and its helpful to see what I attempt to work through reflected back so succinctly.
Though I was taken aback by Tommy’s tone for a moment (a old wound of not being seen or understood showed up) I wasn’t offended.
As we were referencing a Zen Koan, after taking the moment, I had to laugh as ‘BS’ is actually a appropriate reply. A Zen master would have no doubt ‘slapped‘ both of us. If I understand correctly the Koan’s are paradoxical and intentionally frustrating the idea being to break (slap) the hold of the grasping measuring mind or something… the imagined Zen Master just slapped me again. 🙂
Tommy’s mention of monkey mind caused me to pause. My process of ‘sitting in a Koan’ (Paradox, dualism) with free flow of thoughts (slowed down by typing them out) actually calms the monkey as it tends to end in silence. But that’s my process and I see why it might find it ‘to much’.
PeterParticipantLOL Tommy.
Perhaps why language fads to silence as it should.
Seeking stillness while on a planet spinning through space a fools game. yet when Stillness isn’t a measurement
The mountain still a mountain “seen” for the first time, not a only or just
PeterParticipantHi Tommy
I’ve been pondering what you wrote – “Before enlightenment, chop wood, carry water. After enlightenment, chop wood, carry water.”
Being a Zen Koan I suspect were not to answer it but sit in it. The first thing I notice is the same frustration, what’s the point. A strong indication that I’m sitting in the temporal measuring mind and that the desire for ‘enlightenment’ was/is a quest to avoid pain cover up fear and anxiety.
Is it possible to sit in the Koan without desire without a goal or even answers?
“Attending completely, listening with all your heart, with all your brain, with all your senses? If you are so completely attending there is nothing more. That is meditation.” – KrishnamurtiMeditation isn’t practice, isn’t concentration, isn’t focus, isn’t silence, isn’t stillness, isn’t passive, isn’t a goal… all such thoughts and measuring restrict attending?
“There is something beyond words, beyond all thought which time has not touched, which is the origin of all things. This is the origin of all things and therefore the most sacred, most holy, timeless.” – Krishnamurti
Sitting in the Koan, all things are an arising from and a return to… movement arising from and returning to stillness, language and measurement/judgment arising from and returning to silence, time arising and returning to the eternal now… Stillness, silence, eternity not a something to attain, but attend to…
Movement creates Life, Stillness Love… to be still yet still moving that is everything.
In the temporal measuring sphere of the left side of the brain we do not have words for something that is both stillness and movement, time and eternal (eternal that is not a measurement of time). As we drift to the right side of the brain, eyes ‘see’ the stillness in movement, movement in stillness… ears ‘hear’ the silence in language/thought/measurement… Self senses the eternal in the temporal, temporal in the enteral…
We return… chop wood, carry water… same temporal needs, but not the same doings… Bitter sweet, the heart opens?
“These are just words, but if you live without fear, if you have understood knowledge, you have gone beyond sorrow, therefore you have this quality of love and compassion with its intelligence, and having laid the foundation then meditation is something marvelous, something that thought can never understand. Then only there is that which is timeless, most holy.” – Krishnamurti
Can we live without fear when it has defined our experience? Without such fear what role does belief, desire, right practice, knowledge, guru’s…. have? Do our beliefs, goals and desires reenforcing fear?
In the eternal fear has nowhere to take root… The question arises Do we dare to ‘see’ Life as it Is? Is it possible to answer Yes without belief? Compassion bitter sweet…
Chop wood, carry water, engage in life… I don’t know Tommy I have my moments of staring into space unable to sleep.
I try to notice when I’m in my temporal, measuring judging, dualistic self and then remind myself of the return from which all arose, even if for only a moment. (LOL till I ‘measure’ the moment as a measurement of time, sending me right back into it. no wonder the Buddha laughs)
Allan Watts viewed the temporal sphere of experience as a playground (game) for the self/ego and eternal Home. Perhaps the trick is the realization that the two arn’t separate states of being.
PeterParticipant🙂 A ‘timing’ for everything…
Blessed are the ‘Wonder-full’
PeterParticipantI have always found ‘The Heart Sutra’ difficult. I think that is intentional as it pushes the mind towards silence, towards a ‘knowing’ experience.. So I feel that its related to the reflections on the ‘blank canvas’
The Heart Sutra
The Bodhisattva of Compassion,
When he meditated deeply,
Saw the emptiness of all five skandhas (senses)
And sundered the bonds that caused him suffering.Here then,
Form is no other than emptiness,
Emptiness no other than form.
Form is only emptiness,
Emptiness only form.Feeling, thought, and choice,
Consciousness itself,
Are the same as this.
All things are by nature void
They are not born or destroyed
Nor are they stained or pure
Nor do they wax or waneSo, in emptiness, no form,
No feeling, thought, or choice,
Nor is there consciousness.
No eye, ear, nose, tongue, body, mind;
No color, sound, smell, taste, touch,
Or what the mind takes hold of,
Nor even act of sensing.No ignorance or end of it,
Nor all that comes of ignorance;
No withering, no death,
No end of them.
Nor is there pain, or cause of pain,
Or cease in pain, or noble path
To lead from pain;
Not even wisdom to attain!
Attainment too is emptiness.So know that the Bodhisattva
Holding to nothing whatever,
But dwelling in Prajna wisdom,
Is freed of delusive hindrance,
Rid of the fear bred by it,
And reaches clearest Nirvana.
All Buddhas of past and present,
Buddhas of future time,
Using this Prajna wisdom,
Come to full and perfect vision.Hear then the great dharani,
The radiant peerless mantra,
The Prajnaparamita
Whose words allay all pain;
Hear and believe its truth!Gate, Gate, Paragate, Parasamgate, Bodhi Svaha!
Gate, Gate, Paragate, Parasamgate, Bodhi Svaha!
Gate, Gate, Paragate, Parasamgate, Bodhi Svaha!”Into the gone, into the gone, into the gone beyond.
Into the gone completely beyond (beyond movement, time, language, measurement, duality..) the other shore, awaken.PeterParticipant“Practice the transfer now by breathing in Eternity and Stillness and breathing out Time and Movement” that was nicely put Anita
inter-be what a wonderful way of ‘clearly’ seeing. Thanks for sharing Roberta
I wonder if clearing seeing, the realization of the temporal and eternal is related to a move towards the “right” side of the brain where the experience of time, that the past, present and future happen all at once and a experience of the eternal now, and where language (measurement, duality) fade? We tend to set up our ‘throne’ on the left side where the I likes to reside and measure everything.
PeterParticipantI still find the “Blank White Canvas” funny. The museum paid $10,000 for it… Still I haven’t forgotten it.
There was another peace ‘White canvas with wet toilet paper” The artist had thrown wet toilet paper onto a white canvas. I wonder now what the artist was feeling when they drew that out from the canvas.
May 10, 2024 at 10:42 am in reply to: Surrender, Accessing Shakti by clearing samskaras, eliminating false selves #432549PeterParticipantHi Seaturtle
Just a comment on the notion of ‘false Self’. Jung would talk about personas, the masks we ware the roles we have. These personas arn’t false but ways creating healthy engagement.. The way we interact with our family is different (and should be) then the way we interact with friends, coworkers, strangers…. Personas are not about being fake or false but the establishment of healthy boundaries for the interaction. They do sometimes feel like being ‘fake’ especially when our boundaries are unclear and maybe not so healthy.
The ‘false’ self is also sometimes thought of as our small self. The task of the first half of life to to establishing this sense of self with healthy boundaries.
In the second half of life is the task to detach from the this notion of identity. the True Self detaches from the roles or personas we have. They still play a role in our interactions however we ‘see’ them for what they are. The perspective changes. We are not our experiences, we have experiences, we are not our memories we have memories, we are not our feelings we have feelings, we are not our thoughts, we have thoughts….The notion of the True Self isn’t ‘out thier’ but within. Put another way the personas arise from and return to the True Self . Retuning you might notice the need to judge, measure, compare, label fades away…. like the label ‘selfish’
In my experience the practice of returning to the Self aways comes with quieting and experience of compassion for myself and others. The arising of compassion isn’t something you make happen but happens. When I notice I’m feeling anxious, judgey and less compassionate its usually because I’m to attached to the roles/personas I have.
It takes a healthy ego and senses of self (needed n the first half of life) to let go of ego (itself) so to discover the SELF 🙂
PeterParticipantI like to start my day with a reading from Richard Wagamese – someone who having gone though much in his life came out the other side with wisdom.
I read the following and felt it related to the question of the Divine and spiritual. What for me, lies behind a word like spiritual, path and divine is the word mystery and the art of sitting in mystery with wonder
“We need mystery. Creator in her wisdom knew this. Mystery fills us with awe and wonder. They are the foundations of humility, and humility is the foundation of all learning. So we do not seek to unravel this. We honor it by letting it be that way forever. – grandmother explaining The Great Mystery of the universe to her grandson.”
― Richard Wagamese, Indian HorseI feel mystery is more important then the notions of meaning and purpose and suspect it is from mystery and the ability to be uncomfortable in uncertainty, that purpose and meaning arise from and returns to
PeterParticipantHi Brian
Helcat makes some good points. I try not to hold to tightly to words. I was surprised that your experience of it was assoicated with supernatural beings as that hasn’t been my experience. I would also drop the word if its assoicated with supernatural beings.
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