And now the problem with aspects of "immanence", and with "mindfulness" ...
I always say, with regard to combining mental health care with Zen Practice ...
I also feel that a change has happened in Buddhism as it moved from South Asia to the Mahayana, and now to the West. Rather than avoiding all desires and many ordinary emotions, there is now a greater emphasis on balance and moderation in desires and emotions, distinguishing healthy and positive emotions from those which are destructive, excessive, imprisoning and otherwise harmful. Love and sexuality are excellent examples of such emotions.
Likewise, Buddhism may have much to offer those suffering psychological suffering. For example, someone in depression may learn that dark thoughts and "over thinking" are not the only way the mind needs to be, and to not "buy into" such thoughts. They may learn to press the "mental reset button" and also to replace the harmful story they are telling themself with alternative stories (as discussed this week on another thread LINK). Someone with childhood or other trauma may learn to see through all that, to let it be and let it go more easily.
On the subject of Mindfulness and capitalism, I very much agree with most of Loy and Zizek's criticism of how "mindfulness" and Buddhism have frequently been used to enable to worst excesses of modern corporate life, consumerism and the like. I happen to be a fan of capitalism and modern western society to the extent that it has brought many modern people (not all, unfortunately, in society's inequalities) levels of health, food and housing, entertainment, education and other opportunities unprecedented in history. It is only the excesses in our hungry never satiated consumerism, abuses of workers, competitiveness that is never satisfied, endless growth and environmental destruction that are the real problem. Does "corporate McMindfulness" facilitate our modern "what's in it for me?" consumerism and corporate abuse of workers?
What do you think about these chapters?
Gassho, Jundo
SatToday
I always say, with regard to combining mental health care with Zen Practice ...
[In]in the very stillness of letting life be "as is it" and embracing all of life ... and in dropping the hard borders and divisions between our "self" and the world ... this [Shikantaza] practice does thereby leave almost all people better ... and often does work an effective cure (or is one helpful part of the cure) ... from depression, stress, addiction, compulsive disorders, eating disorders, anger issues, self loathing ... you name it. How? Just by letting us be more at ease with life and peaceful in heart.
[However] Zazen is -NOT- a cure for many things ... it will not fix a bad tooth (just allow you to be present with the toothache ... you had better see a dentist, not a Zen teacher) ... There are many psychological problems or psycho/medical problems such as alcoholism that may require other therapies, although Zen can be part of a 12-Step program or such (a few Zen teachers in America with a drinking problem had to seek outside help). My feeling is that some things are probably best handled by medical, psychological or psychiatric treatment, not Zen teachers.
[However] Zazen is -NOT- a cure for many things ... it will not fix a bad tooth (just allow you to be present with the toothache ... you had better see a dentist, not a Zen teacher) ... There are many psychological problems or psycho/medical problems such as alcoholism that may require other therapies, although Zen can be part of a 12-Step program or such (a few Zen teachers in America with a drinking problem had to seek outside help). My feeling is that some things are probably best handled by medical, psychological or psychiatric treatment, not Zen teachers.
Likewise, Buddhism may have much to offer those suffering psychological suffering. For example, someone in depression may learn that dark thoughts and "over thinking" are not the only way the mind needs to be, and to not "buy into" such thoughts. They may learn to press the "mental reset button" and also to replace the harmful story they are telling themself with alternative stories (as discussed this week on another thread LINK). Someone with childhood or other trauma may learn to see through all that, to let it be and let it go more easily.
On the subject of Mindfulness and capitalism, I very much agree with most of Loy and Zizek's criticism of how "mindfulness" and Buddhism have frequently been used to enable to worst excesses of modern corporate life, consumerism and the like. I happen to be a fan of capitalism and modern western society to the extent that it has brought many modern people (not all, unfortunately, in society's inequalities) levels of health, food and housing, entertainment, education and other opportunities unprecedented in history. It is only the excesses in our hungry never satiated consumerism, abuses of workers, competitiveness that is never satisfied, endless growth and environmental destruction that are the real problem. Does "corporate McMindfulness" facilitate our modern "what's in it for me?" consumerism and corporate abuse of workers?
What do you think about these chapters?
Gassho, Jundo
SatToday
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