I had written a screed on this chapter, but I thought I should take notice of my teacher and listen to his talk and I'm very glad I did, thank you Jundo.
Two main areas for me in this chapter - this new ( to me) more humane and compassionate perspective on repentance and how it's inextricably linked to taking Refuge. Quoting Banjin Doten -
. This whole section gives another dimension to refuge as well as zazen itself, in particular that repentance is not a negative thing, quite the opposite.
The other area that has really caused me to reflect is how it's easy to repent of stuff we know, or think we know to be obviously bad, but that doing good can also be harmful or obstructive. This is a much harder subject for me, because no matter what I do, good deeds daily etc, I always seem to be dragging guilt around with me. In the street - could I give that person more, why did I give to person A and not person B, when I think I can't afford to give to everyone is that really true? And in big life changing decisions I can write a narrative on any given day that portrays me as a horrible person. But on another given day as having made the right decisions. But what I know in my heart/mind is that even that guilt is a big me-centred ego thing, a complex narrative in which by turns I remonstrate, feel suitably chastened, then start to justify. Yet another paradox looms - how it's possible to enjoy and even perpetuate our own suffering. So the idea of being in a renewed or reborn state each time I sit is something I constantly need to remember to bring to the cushion with me.
The whole section on delusive thought opened something further up for me, I really liked the expression 'We sit on the ground of letting go'. I liked how I could play with different meanings of sitting on the ground and what a ground of letting go might look like. Just some fun exploration.
When I first started on this path I thought 'letting go' was easy. Obvious. Now I know how deeply entrenched, how subtle my conditioning is and how much I need the precepts in my life every single day, even as I break them!
In your video Jundo you say 'The moon does not make a mistake'. How I wish I could be more like the moon
Gassho
Frankie
Satwithyoualltoday ( not on IT) LAH to a lizard, who lives to tell his/her tail-less tale.
Two main areas for me in this chapter - this new ( to me) more humane and compassionate perspective on repentance and how it's inextricably linked to taking Refuge. Quoting Banjin Doten -
Repentance is another name for the Three Treasures. To repent is to take refuge in the Three Treasures
The other area that has really caused me to reflect is how it's easy to repent of stuff we know, or think we know to be obviously bad, but that doing good can also be harmful or obstructive. This is a much harder subject for me, because no matter what I do, good deeds daily etc, I always seem to be dragging guilt around with me. In the street - could I give that person more, why did I give to person A and not person B, when I think I can't afford to give to everyone is that really true? And in big life changing decisions I can write a narrative on any given day that portrays me as a horrible person. But on another given day as having made the right decisions. But what I know in my heart/mind is that even that guilt is a big me-centred ego thing, a complex narrative in which by turns I remonstrate, feel suitably chastened, then start to justify. Yet another paradox looms - how it's possible to enjoy and even perpetuate our own suffering. So the idea of being in a renewed or reborn state each time I sit is something I constantly need to remember to bring to the cushion with me.
The whole section on delusive thought opened something further up for me, I really liked the expression 'We sit on the ground of letting go'. I liked how I could play with different meanings of sitting on the ground and what a ground of letting go might look like. Just some fun exploration.
When I first started on this path I thought 'letting go' was easy. Obvious. Now I know how deeply entrenched, how subtle my conditioning is and how much I need the precepts in my life every single day, even as I break them!
In your video Jundo you say 'The moon does not make a mistake'. How I wish I could be more like the moon
Gassho
Frankie
Satwithyoualltoday ( not on IT) LAH to a lizard, who lives to tell his/her tail-less tale.
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