Meditation people roll call!

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Well, if you stop to consider that judgment is the source of all dissatisfaction

see, this is the sort of quasi-religious, unprovable "fact" that turns me off the whole thing. i guess i don't like how that aspect of it has more or less turned so many people off of something which could be beneficial to people individually and as a whole.

Granny Dainger, Friday, 20 July 2007 20:59 (sixteen years ago) link

It's not quasi-religious, it's fact. If you make the decision you like some things and not other things, you create dissatisfaction. And when the new wears off the things you like, you create more dissatisfaction.

dean ge, Friday, 20 July 2007 21:00 (sixteen years ago) link

that's called being human! i wouldn't want to be a robot who smiled perpetually and was just as content walking on a pile of broken glass as they were hugging their loved ones. trees are nice to look at, but i wouldn't want to be one.

Granny Dainger, Friday, 20 July 2007 21:03 (sixteen years ago) link

You figured out the secret goal of buddhism: to be a smiling robot. And it only took, what, 2 days posting on a message board?

dean ge, Friday, 20 July 2007 21:12 (sixteen years ago) link

guys guys guys can't you tell we are clearly in the presence of an enlightened one

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 20 July 2007 21:20 (sixteen years ago) link

personally I would totally dig being a tree

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 20 July 2007 21:20 (sixteen years ago) link

btw, sorry everyone for temporarily turning this into a buddhism/dzogchen discussion. I know it's about all meditation styles and so I shut up now. :-)

dean ge, Friday, 20 July 2007 21:24 (sixteen years ago) link

that's called being human! i wouldn't want to be a robot who smiled perpetually and was just as content walking on a pile of broken glass as they were hugging their loved ones. trees are nice to look at, but i wouldn't want to be one.

-- Granny Dainger, Friday, July 20, 2007 9:03 PM

I'd like to respond, but I honestly don't know what to say to this.

(not trying to imply your response is faulty or that you are dumb, just truly don't know where to begin)

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Friday, 20 July 2007 21:27 (sixteen years ago) link

Granny sees value in suffering, considers it essential to being "human" etc. This isn't really a new or unusual position.

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 20 July 2007 21:29 (sixteen years ago) link

(although in my experience usually the people making that argument are deeply religious)

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 20 July 2007 21:30 (sixteen years ago) link

most people I've met tend to be happy when they discover a new appreciation for something they thought they hated

dean ge, Friday, 20 July 2007 21:31 (sixteen years ago) link

guys guys guys can't you tell we are clearly in the presence of an enlightened one

no no, it's you man. tell me more about how the brain works, the economy of brazil, and who should die a painful death.

Granny Dainger, Friday, 20 July 2007 21:45 (sixteen years ago) link

also please to not try to say what you think i believe. that's the my #1 pet peeve of ilx.

Granny Dainger, Friday, 20 July 2007 21:48 (sixteen years ago) link

okay then please to explain to me what "being human" means k thx

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 20 July 2007 21:50 (sixteen years ago) link

(or rather, please elaborate on what you meant by "that's called being human" in response to dean ge's post about the root of dissatisfaction)

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 20 July 2007 21:51 (sixteen years ago) link

I mean I can sum up the "goal" of Buddhism (and most schools of meditation) pretty easily - to relieve suffering. There's nothing particularly "quasi-religious" about that goal, nor in emphasizing that all suffering comes from attachment (attachment to the body, to pleasure, to habits, whatever)

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 20 July 2007 21:56 (sixteen years ago) link

that's called being human! i wouldn't want to be a robot who smiled perpetually and was just as content walking on a pile of broken glass as they were hugging their loved ones. trees are nice to look at, but i wouldn't want to be one.

-- Granny Dainger, Friday, July 20, 2007 9:03 PM

Up to this point I've been trying to clarify misconceptions about what zazen, my meditation form of choice, is intended to accomplish. I've done my best to do that and it now seems clear that we have more fundamental philosophical differences. That's fine. I'm not here to evangelize for Zen Buddhism and one doesn't change one's fundamental beliefs about the nature of human suffering due to arguments on an internet message board.

Thank you again for allowing me the opportunity to clarify how I believe zazen works, and for the stimulating exchange. This is where I bow out, if you will, of the conversation.

Gassho.

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Friday, 20 July 2007 22:34 (sixteen years ago) link

To a certain extent, I'm with Granny on this subject. Dean says, "If you make the decision you like some things and not other things, you create dissatisfaction." Liking something or not isn't normally considered to be a "decision" - it's an emotional reaction. The only decision involved is whether you're just going to let this emotional reaction go or not, following the Eastern premise of not reacting or that doing nothing is preferable.

Again, I'm looking for a way to live where I can, actually, enjoy the fact I like something. Or that I want to do something. I believe that I am here, precisely, TO do things. I know that there are ramifications involved in doing so, but the idea that these ramifications will always end up involving some degree of dissatisfaction or displeasure or pain is, I believe, extremely pessimistic.

Tim Ellison, Friday, 20 July 2007 22:44 (sixteen years ago) link

I think you should look somewhere else besides eastern traditions, Tim.

Maybe sufism.

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 20 July 2007 22:54 (sixteen years ago) link

altho honestly I don't believe there is any way to really enjoy anything without fundamentally accepting that it isn't gonna last forever and that you will, therefore, eventually miss it (and thus suffer, be disatisfied, etc.)

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 20 July 2007 22:56 (sixteen years ago) link

I mean, time is unceasing and only flows in one direction, everything changes or dies, and therefore if you become attached to something, you will suffer whenever it does eventually change/die.

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 20 July 2007 22:57 (sixteen years ago) link

totally agree w/tim's 2nd paragraph there. more well said than i've been able to manage.
shakey, i didn't necessarily mean that without suffering one isn't human (though it the idea of someone never suffering is creepy in a brave new world sort of way), but more that being detached from emotional ups and downs (and plateaus!) seems like it would result in a less than complete human being experience, or at the very least make the sacrifice the full pleasure of the eyes in order to eliminate the full pain of the lows. I don't think it's a fair trade. Obv I am not nor have I ever been free of desire/judgment/whatever you want to call it, so maybe that trade isn't even a necessary one!

xpost
altho honestly I don't believe there is any way to really enjoy anything without fundamentally accepting that it isn't gonna last forever and that you will, therefore, eventually miss it (and thus suffer, be disatisfied, etc.)
see this is exactly the tradeoff i mean. missing something isn't all that bad! there is still a sweetness in bittersweet.

Granny Dainger, Friday, 20 July 2007 23:10 (sixteen years ago) link

I don't believe there is any way to really enjoy anything without fundamentally accepting that it isn't gonna last forever and that you will, therefore, eventually miss it

If you're talking about emotional relationships with people, that's one thing. But if I listen to a record because I like it and then someone comes and steals it, will I "suffer" as a result? Does my "dissatisfaction" with the theft cause me to think that I shouldn't have "formed an attachment" with the record?

Tim Ellison, Friday, 20 July 2007 23:10 (sixteen years ago) link

Talking about the Vision is like dancing about architecture.

:-D

Just kidding. I only wanted to use a fave cliche that annoys people.

But, seriously, talking about the Vision is fine and good. The reason it is generally translated as the "Vision", rather than the "View", however, is because "view" tends to imply a philosophical understanding (ie. "view" or "viewpoint") while Vision implies sight and experience a little more.

Most experts on meditation can argue logically and philosophically up and down about reality and the mind without becoming unsound in their arguments, but that doesn't give anyone else the actual experience of meditation or the result of extended practice. It might cause a cynic to reconsider or have him off to the library to see if he can prove you wrong, but unless a person has the inclination and determination to practice honestly, the fruit of the path can never be experienced or understood (or enjoyed!).

dean ge, Friday, 20 July 2007 23:36 (sixteen years ago) link

Liking something or not isn't normally considered to be a "decision" - it's an emotional reaction. The only decision involved is whether you're just going to let this emotional reaction go or not, following the Eastern premise of not reacting or that doing nothing is preferable.

This is dualistic thinking and if you're going to cling to dualism, you will not get very far. For example, a buddhist technique is to remove judgement from your experience and just let the experience be what it is. If you burn your hand on the stove, rather than jumping up and saying, "Ow, I burned my fucking hand on that goddamn stove!" and kicking it and then saying, "Ow, I hurt my fucking toe when I kicked that piece of shit!" just say (or scream), "HOT!" Thinking like this is part of the process of deconditioning conditioned thinking, which is considered dualistic ignorance. Beyond the stove analogy, all emotional responses are learned, conditioned dualism. So, you're right that you don't generally decide what you like or dislike, but you can essentially "learn" to by unlearning your "karmic pattern" (learned expectations). It starts with baby steps, that's for sure.

dean ge, Friday, 20 July 2007 23:59 (sixteen years ago) link

if you're going to cling to dualism, you will not get very far.

Get very far with what, exactly? With this deconditioning that you're apparently claiming to be the spiritually evolutionary path.

Tim Ellison, Saturday, 21 July 2007 00:33 (sixteen years ago) link

With what you said you're trying to do up above.

dean ge, Saturday, 21 July 2007 00:39 (sixteen years ago) link

I am, actually, sympathetic to the idea of deconditioning conditioned thinking to the extent that your conditioned thinking is causing you pain. But as I've been arguing, if you feel that your conditioned thinking, as a part of your present identity, is serving a role in the decisions you make as far as what you want to do with your life, I believe that the rhetoric that you should let it go anyway because of the Buddhist principle that it's better to not indulge in dualistic thinking or that it's better to do nothing is restrictive.

Unless, of course, your true purpose in this life is to learn, specifically, those particular spiritual lessons.

Tim Ellison, Saturday, 21 July 2007 00:41 (sixteen years ago) link

My stated goal above was "to live where I can, actually, enjoy the fact I like something." Your assertion that I will not get far in the goal of actually enjoying something unless I decondition my emotional responses to things is inherently contradictory.

Tim Ellison, Saturday, 21 July 2007 00:48 (sixteen years ago) link

There are a lot of terms we're using that have multiple implications. Lower vehicle's "better to do nothing" implies asceticism. On the other hand, "nothing to do," which I have been discussing, does not mean it's better to do nothing. It means to recognize what you are doing while you are doing it and that is pretty much all there is to it. The problem is that a person generally does not. "Nothing to do" also does not mean, hey wowzers I'm enlightened already, think I'll go watch cartoons. It means that, technically, the nondual presence is ALWAYS there because that is reality, there actually isn't anything to "do". You do not accumulate "more energy" to achieve something or whatever. The realization is there to be discovered, called an "open secret."

I'm not a big fan of Ken Wilber for a few reasons, but this quote from wikipooja is good:

"Ken Wilber comments that nondual traditions:

"...are more interested in pointing out the Nondual state of Suchness, which is not a discreet state of awareness but the ground or empty condition of all states... They have an enormous number of these 'pointing out instructions', where they simply point out what is already happening in your awareness, anyway. Every experience you have is already nondual, whether you realize it or not. So it is not necessary for you to change your state of consciousness in order to discover this nonduality. Any state of consciousness you have will do just fine, because nonduality is fully present in each state... recognition is the point. Recognition of what always already is the case. Change of state is useless, a distraction... subject and object are actually one and you simply need to recognize this... you already have everything in consciousness that is required. You are looking right at the answer... but you don't recognize it. Someone comes along and points it out, and you slap your head and say, Yes I was looking right at it..."

dean ge, Saturday, 21 July 2007 00:53 (sixteen years ago) link

Yeah, I'm with all of that until he gets to:

Change of state is useless, a distraction

This is the nihilism Shakey was referring to earlier. There's a difference between recognizing the spiritual principles being outlined there and to assert that the actions through which one lives one's life are "useless."

Tim Ellison, Saturday, 21 July 2007 00:58 (sixteen years ago) link

It's not nihilism. Changing state is good if you're trying to de-stress after a hard day's work. It's good for your general peace of mind if you do it every day. But, what is more nihilistic: the idea that you need to meditate in order to feel good or the idea that you can feel good while you're doing whatever it is that you're doing?

dean ge, Saturday, 21 July 2007 01:02 (sixteen years ago) link

I'm not saying that either of those things are nihilistic. I'm saying that calling life "useless" reflects the inherent nihilism of a lot of Eastern dogma.

Tim Ellison, Saturday, 21 July 2007 01:07 (sixteen years ago) link

Does "All is Good" and "Great Perfection" sound nihilistic to you?

dean ge, Saturday, 21 July 2007 01:08 (sixteen years ago) link

I didn't see where he called life useless, btw. I saw where he said change of state was useless.

dean ge, Saturday, 21 July 2007 01:09 (sixteen years ago) link

1. Reality exists.
2. Every moment we make decisions to ignore and escape from reality (that which is physically in front of us) and run into a little world in our heads. Rather than "he raised his voice at me," in our little imaginary world "he hates me and I keep doing this thing wrong, why oh why etc"
3. Zazen (that is, sitting on your ass and simply Sitting On Your Goddamn Ass, allowing thoughts to arise and disappear without following their Byzantine pathways) is a way of training the mind to focus on the present moment rather than scurrying away into safe and familiar imaginary corners. It's called "practice" because it's practice for applying that kind of focus and non-judgment to every moment in our daily lives.

i like this, it reminds me of what i've read of cognitive behavioral therapy, where you can learn to change your impulse to feel all that self-doubt, second guessing, paranoia, etc. -- which is escapism in a way, because you're retreating into the familiar rather than just letting the moment stand and moving forward. our minds are full of these rabbit holes we constantly crawl into as a way of just "dealing" with the everyday, but too much of that isn't healthy and can lead to some fucked-up falling down level shit.

get bent, Saturday, 21 July 2007 01:10 (sixteen years ago) link

What 'get bent' just referred to and what Granny was referring to there is the 'change of state' Ken Wilber called "useless."

dean ge, Saturday, 21 July 2007 01:11 (sixteen years ago) link

OK, I misread it.

Tim Ellison, Saturday, 21 July 2007 01:15 (sixteen years ago) link

"wherever you go, there you are," basically?

get bent, Saturday, 21 July 2007 01:19 (sixteen years ago) link

Anyway, I'm going to go get drunk now, which shows how ascetic my lifestyle is... ;-) There's a cool practice, btw, where you drink and remain mindful. Oddly, you don't get drunk. This is common in Vajra schools, so much so that alcoholics have a hard time with it. Chögyam Trungpa was an amazing example of this. He chose to live his life as a drunk, both to teach about clinging and dependency and to teach about mastery of the mind. He would be drunk off his ass, literally falling down drunk, but his mind would be sharp as a pointy thing. He was literally drunk all the time. Think about that if you ever hear him speak or read one of his books. His students used to carry him onto the stage, sit him in a chair and then he would give a profound lecture and answer questions, etc. There is a good video on YouTube where Krishnamurti is basically calling him a fraud and he just sits there calmly reflecting. Krishnamurti gets more and more adamant in asserting his opinions and Trungpa just lets him yakk on and on. Then, he offers a different way of thinking about the topic and Krishnamurti will cut him off and disregard his point. This is a televised interaction and Trungpa just sits there and says, "Hmmm" and frequently offers indication that he understands where the guy is coming from, but he clearly has no burning desire to correct him. It's quite wonderful.

dean ge, Saturday, 21 July 2007 01:23 (sixteen years ago) link

To be fair, though, that's what a lot drunks do when you try to expound on anything.

river wolf, Saturday, 21 July 2007 01:24 (sixteen years ago) link

getbent, yeah that would apply, but as I briefly mentioned above, there are some differences between Zen and Dzogchen. I think they're both great! Anyone more interested in the topic should check out the wonderful forum over on e-sangha.com.

riverwolf, good point ;-)

dean ge, Saturday, 21 July 2007 01:26 (sixteen years ago) link

Actually it's on Google video now and since it's all about meditation, some may be interested (Krishnamurti starts off bitching about transcendental meditation and then can't stop himself):
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=5871006181947402801&q=Ch%C3%B6gyam+Trungpa&total=32&start=0&num=10&so=0&type=search&plindex=0

dean ge, Saturday, 21 July 2007 01:34 (sixteen years ago) link

There are so many situations in life where a person's emotional reactions to things are functional. Even if they are negative, they help get you out of situations when you need to get out of them. They help resolve things. Eastern philosophy, it seems to me, looks at these reactions as an indulgence and a weakness.

Tim Ellison, Saturday, 21 July 2007 03:19 (sixteen years ago) link

And that video, actually, is a good example of where this function is not being allowed to take place. It's supposed to be impressive that the drunk guy is sitting there and not reacting while the other guy is rambling on? It was noble to have not shown the dreaded "burning desire" to act?

That eleven minutes could have been spent more constructively. I felt that I could have been doing something more constructive than watching that video during the eleven minutes in which it elapsed.

Tim Ellison, Saturday, 21 July 2007 04:31 (sixteen years ago) link

Before I became involved with Dzogchen, I spent about a decade sort of bumbling around the spiritual market (whatever you want to call it) and I came across quite a few Western pick-and-chooser types who regularly lumped everything from the East as "Eastern," as if it was basically all the same stuff. One woman in particular liked to talk about how "wrong" the "Eastern" method was because it "avoided reality" and it was unrealistic. She claimed the goal of Eastern spirituality was an impossibility: to exist in nonexistence or to shun the material world for the spiritual. "But, they are inseparable," she said, "The material plane is part of life. Whether or not you believe we were put here for a reason, we are here and our experience is here. The sum total of our experience can be described as a result of a physical organism," and words like this.

Well, "Eastern philosophy" is not all the same and I don't know why people got the idea that it was so anti-life. I do know that hinayana buddhists' aim for cessation, nirvana, which they think they have a pretty good idea of what it is from the sutras. Mahayana buddhists aim for not only personal liberation, but the liberation of every last sentient being. Vajrayana buddhists add tantra. Pure tantrists do not study the sutras and attempt to achieve cessation through direct experience. This is often similar to Zazen schools which may have a full library of the sutras and other buddhist texts... but the door is locked. Highest Yoga Tantra (Atiyoga, Mahamudra, Dzogchen) puts all the other schools of buddhist teaching into perspective and, though perfectly sensible, can be seriously disturbing to those who are practicing in the lower vehicles aiming for some cessation they can only fantasize about based on the description in the suttas about what it is NOT. The explanation of the higher vehicles might not seem to agree from that perspective or might simply be disappointing based on ignorance.

My point here is that there are 9 different vehicles of buddhism with many schools of instruction. They are different approaches created for different types of people. If there are different types of people who take to different schools of thought and understand the goal in different ways and use different approaches to attaining the goal, how can it be said "Eastern" methods do anything without being extremely vague and generalizing? This does not even take into account all the other practices found in the east, like Taoism, Jainism, Vedanta, etc. "Eastern" philosophy?

That point aside, I don't agree with your estimation that "eastern" philosophy looks at emotional reactions as indulgence and a weakness, necessarily. They seem to be mostly about being happy, which is certainly an emotion. There are also practices involving dark or negative emotions which are intentionally indulged in for the purposes of healing and learning. There is a fairly recent book about this practice published by Chogyam Trungpa's student (so it's Vajrayana) through Shambalah Books called "Healing Through The Dark Emotions."

Other than this, I'm not sure what else to say about it. Emotional reactions are functional, for sure. They can also be debilitating and ruinous. Without lumping all eastern schools together, I will say that the ones I am familiar with are only about learning to control emotions rather than letting emotions control you, not eliminating them completely and not pretending they don't exist and not "wadding it up into a ball in the pit of your gut and pushing it down, down, down deep into a concentrated ball" so that one day you will explode. Emotions are a sign that you're alive. In fact, in buddhism, the human being is seen as a precious opporunity because we have the 5 poisons inherent to our experience, all of which are emotions which cause suffering.

dean ge, Saturday, 21 July 2007 04:57 (sixteen years ago) link

so many typos...

dean ge, Saturday, 21 July 2007 04:59 (sixteen years ago) link

It was noble to have not shown the dreaded "burning desire" to act?

No, it was impressive that he didn't have such a desire. This isn't speculation. I'm certain he did not. When the negative emotions are overcome, they are overcome completely. Things that may have at one time infuriated you now will only evoke your sympathy and compassion. It was impressive to watch Trungpa assess this man and try to discover what it was that he needed to hear without arrogantly trying to win a debate.

dean ge, Saturday, 21 July 2007 05:05 (sixteen years ago) link

I'd like to chime in here and point out that dean is speaking from one particular Buddhist perspective, and that I differ on a couple issues.

As Dean rightly points out, though, we can't lump together "Eastern philosophy" and make broad generalizations about it. It's like lumping the Analytics & the Continentals together as "Western." It doesn't really tell us anything and denies crucial differences. Even within Soto Zen Buddhism there is much variation, to say nothing of the differences between Zen Buddhists in general, the Buddhist population at large, and the rest of Eastern thought.

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Saturday, 21 July 2007 05:10 (sixteen years ago) link

And I want to explain in no uncertain terms (maybe for the first time, really) that "great vehicle" and "highest yoga tantra" as Dzogchen is called DOES NOT mean it's "better" than the "lower vehicles." The historical Buddha taught the path of renunciation. Ain't a thing wrong with that. It may be slower theoretically, but if someone practices the shit out of that path vs. a guy who studies Dzogchen but doesn't realize its beyond his capacity and never bothers to practice, the Dzogchen path is about useless here because it may only reinforce ignorance and introduce arrogance.

dean ge, Saturday, 21 July 2007 05:21 (sixteen years ago) link


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