Hey All Non-selfs,
There is a lot in these sections. Many things might strike folks.
Can some powerful and mindbending teachings of Buddhism remain relevant in modern times? Yes, says David Loy.
Please pick out any sections of particular interest to you. I will just mention a few lines that I found interesting. He said (p. 49):
David Loy is a teacher in a Lineage which emphasizes Koan Introspection Zazen, and the Mu Koan. It is a bit different from the Shikantaza approach, but the focus on getting past the sense of hard separate self is the same.
Anything about these passages, or anything else so far, that you wish to comment on or question?
Gassho, J
SatToday
There is a lot in these sections. Many things might strike folks.
Can some powerful and mindbending teachings of Buddhism remain relevant in modern times? Yes, says David Loy.
Please pick out any sections of particular interest to you. I will just mention a few lines that I found interesting. He said (p. 49):
[A]wakening does not involve transcending the world, nor accepting it as it normally seems, but experiencing it in a nongrasping and therefore non-dual way, which reveals that it is very different from the usual understanding.
(p. 53-54) If one's usual sense of being separate from mountains and rivers is a delusion, then one's nonduality with them is not something that needs to be attained, just realized. And if the internal self is a construct, so is the external world, for if there is no inside (my mind), the the outside is no longer outside (of an inside). Instead, each and every phenomenon that occurs, including you and me, expresses an immeasurably vast network of interacting processes, one of the multifarious and impermanent ways in which all the causes and conditions of the cosmos come togethor. There is no other reality outside these processes, nor do we need anything else.
(p. 59) The implication is that this [our world] is ultimate reality. If it transcends the way we usually experience the world, it is still this world. In Buddhist terms, the place we normally experience as a realm of suffering is not other than what we seek - nirvana itself, the Pure Land - when we see this place, right here, as it really is.
Gassho, J
SatToday
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