LIVING by VOW: The Meal Chants - PP 87 to 98 (thru Verse Upon Hearing Meal Signal)
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Hello Michael,
It's great you are becoming more aware of your relationship with food. For me, if I could sum up all of practice in two words it would be "pay attention".
I would try and go light on the "shame" though. [emoji846]
Gassho,
Shugen
Sattoday
Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkMeido Shugen
明道 修眼Comment
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Jishin and Shugen,
Thanks. That was the kind of support I was hoping for: encouragement with a side of smiles. Yummy!
Gassho,
Michael
Sat todayComment
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Hello Michael,
It's great you are becoming more aware of your relationship with food. For me, if I could sum up all of practice in two words it would be "pay attention".
I would try and go light on the "shame" though. [emoji846]
Gassho,
Shugen
Sattoday
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Having said that, I do like how this chapter connects food and eating to the Dharma itself and through that, connects everything in our lives to Dharma - I always enjoy it when teachings are illustrated by the everyday stuff that we all do - it helps me toward living the Dharma rather than just pulling it out of my pocket a couple of times a week.
Gassho,
Frankie
Satwithyoualltoday/LAH.命 Mei - life
島 Tou - islandComment
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I've been reading this chapter little by little and letting it soak in. I just finished it tonight and Wow!! That is perhaps some of the clearest writings I've read on Buddhism and how it all ties together. At first glance i wondered why eating and meals received such a prominent place in comparison to other necessary bodily functions but it really becomes clear the more one considers it how truly interdependent we all are with everything. . I know I will be coming back to this chapter again in the future.
Related note - I've been reading about the modern food culture and how disconnected we have become from the origins of the food we eat. In many ways what we eat bears almost no resemblance to the original. I was appreciating this all the more earlier today when I was out in my garden harvesting vegetables for supper.
A few months ago we had a discussion here at Treeleaf about a show on Netflix about a Buddhist Chef (http://www.treeleaf.org/forums/showt...hlight=Netflix) it was profound to watch such a humble approach to food
Gassho
Warren
Sat today/LAH泰林 - Tai Rin - Peaceful WoodsComment
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My father grew up in the Great Depression when food was sometimes scarce and later served in the air force where you ate what they gave you, period. Because of that history, he always cleaned his plate, and I don't ever recall him complaining about the food like us kids did. He was a rather devout Christian, but he ate food like Okumora describes how Buddhists should eat it, as sustenance without thoughts of good or bad because he was just glad to have it.
I try to be mindful of my food when eating it. This has been a focus of my practice in the past, and I need to get back to it now after reading this chapter. I'll start by sitting zazen today before I eat.
One strange note on this chapter I need to share. Its extensive description of how food is dharma and dharma is food is probably the best explanation of the eucharist I have ever been exposed to. I have't been a practicing Christian in a long time, partly because that religion's explanation of things like Holy Communion never made much sense to me. Transubstantiation, really? But I get it now, just way too late.
AL (Jigen) in:
Faith/Trust
Courage/Love
Awareness/Action!
I sat todayComment
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HeyJigen/Al;
I think we must have gone to the same church.
gassho,Shokai
sat/LAH合掌,生開
gassho, Shokai
仁道 生開 / Jindo Shokai
"Open to life in a benevolent way"
https://sarushinzendo.wordpress.com/Comment
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I've just managed to catch up with having bought the book a few weeks back, plus having family here on holiday. Much to reread at a slower pace.
I'd have to agree with Warren that there is so much here that's giving me a better understanding of Buddhism and especially Mahayana.
One thing that I'll still struggle to get my head around and covered in this section, is Relative and Absolute. The one hand five fingers helped and if I look at Indra's Net or the Whole Universe as Absolute and everything within that as Relative, I start to think I understand the concept but find it difficult to apply to daily life.
Is there any sources to get a low tech explanation or description of these concepts, that anyone could recommend.
Gassho
Toby
STMIZ
Sent from my MID2809 using Tapatalk
Seishin
精 Sei - Meticulous
神 Shin - HeartComment
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One thing that I'll still struggle to get my head around and covered in this section, is Relative and Absolute. The one hand five fingers helped and if I look at Indra's Net or the Whole Universe as Absolute and everything within that as Relative, I start to think I understand the concept but find it difficult to apply to daily life.
I am curious what you mean by "apply to daily life". This doesn't strike me as a something to be applied. It just is. We simply need to be aware and observe. At least that's how i took it.
Gassho
Warren
Sat today泰林 - Tai Rin - Peaceful WoodsComment
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Hi Toby,
The interplay between Relative and Absolute is a key concept in our practice. As has been stated, it's relatively easy to understand intellectually but a bit more difficult to internalize. An argument could be made that every teaching touches on it. Let me look around and I'll see if I can come up with some reading recommendations for you.
Gassho,
Shugen
Sattoday/LAHMeido Shugen
明道 修眼Comment
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Hi Toby,
personally, I see the Universe/Multiverse in its completeness as the only "Absolute", I can think of.
All, we can grasp is only a part of this Absolute Universe, only seen from one/more certain, 'self' deluded views.
All Relative. Part of the Absolute.
So in a way, it is our 'self', that stands between the Absolute, and us, recognising it.
We can just grasp some Relative things and thoughts (setting us in relation to it).
Sitting Zazen lets us 'feel' that there is this Absolute, that will never be totally understood by our deluded minds.
In daily life, I recognise this fact, which makes it easier to understand, that other people have other thoughts and beliefs.
This is fine. Nothing to accept or refuse. My Relative view is as wrong or right, as the Relative view from everybody else when seen in relation to the Absolute
Sitting Zazen to put all this Relative in relation to the Absolute seems to be the right thing to me.
It encourages me to accept others and to understand sitting as a natural thing to do.
Well, just some relative thoughts.
Gassho,
Kotei sat/lah today.Last edited by Kotei; 08-22-2017, 04:34 PM.義道 冴庭 / Gidō Kotei.Comment
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Warren - I was responding to your question before the others posted and then the PC glitched ! Apply is probably the wrong word, more as Kotei stated, to recognize. I guess that's my issue at the moment but maybe I'm slowly grasping the concept.
Shugen - Absolutely (or maybe Relatively) yes I understand that it is central to this practice, so hence the post. I'd be grateful if you find anything on the subject. As I say I think I'm beginning to get the overall bigger picture.
Kotei -Thank you for that. Guess if I reverse engineer what you are saying and look at the individuality I recognize in all things and people and then accept that they are just many facets of one big Universal/Multiversal whole, then perhaps I get it after all.
Anyway sounds like I need to do more reading/studying on the matter.
STMIZ
Seishin
精 Sei - Meticulous
神 Shin - HeartComment
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The last five days I have been visiting my in-laws, and it has deepened my understanding of the co-existence of relative and absolute. Given all their history and my (relative!!) newness in my husband's family, I was astonished by their perceptions of one another and themselves--compared to how I saw and experienced each person. Realizing that neither their nor my perceptions were objectively true but instead reflected only a few facets of each person's objective existence was a big step for me. None of us is right, and yet we all are.
But I have to admit that I haven't yet been able to hold this in mind when it comes to food. I understand it intellectually, and I found it profoundly moving to consider that my life depends on sacrificing and consuming other life, without which I cannot exist--and that this perfectly illustrates the cohesion of "independence and connectedness" (p. 94) at the heart of Buddhism. "All food is dharma."
However, set a dinner plate in front of me, and all intentions to be aware of this fly right out of my head. I am completely lost in the experience of textures and flavors, temperatures and fragrances.
If I am eating and noticing what I'm eating, then I am completely absorbed in the noticing. I often halt a conversation, just so I can fully experience the food. So grand ideas of how food connects me to all reality? So far, I can't even remember to think about that!
I guess the chants are especially helpful for people like me who get a little too lost in their own senses.
Gassho,
Melanie
SatTodayComment
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A few years ago, I lost over 100 pounds in a year by only eating mindfully. I won't bore anyone with the details of my "tactics," as I called them. But I will mention that, as Meishin hinted, we often relate to our idea of food more intimately than the actual food. The idea of a doughnut is wonderful, but by the third bite the taste buds are so burned out on sugar, it's not really enjoyable anymore (not to mention the unenjoyable bodily feeling after a whole doughnut or two). But we continue to eat, hoping to bring to fruition that initial wonderful idea.
I believe when a person gets high the first time, it's the highest they'll ever be, and all their using after that is just trying to recapture that feeling. I think the same can be said about that first bite of food.Comment
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Thank you for sharing. As I've been trying to lose weight, I'd actually be interested in what your "tactics" were, although the part about only the first bites of a doughnut really tasting good gives some direction.
Gassho,
Onkai
SatToday/LAH美道 Bidou Beautiful Way
恩海 Onkai Merciful/Kind Ocean
I have a lot to learn; take anything I say that sounds like teaching with a grain of salt.Comment
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