This is a wonderful chapter and once again Okumura does an outstanding job of providing his knowledge to Dogen’s original text.
While I get the point of this section is really about the perspective we impose on the real world I also see a lot of discussion on the Absolute and Relative being implied in the writing (not two). I was surprised that Okumura didn’t delve there and use those terms but perhaps it is coming up.
The discussion about flowers and weeds brought to my mind mushrooms. Mushrooms are just mushrooms yet some can be eaten and others will make us quite sick. While it is important to understand mushrooms as mushrooms (absolute) it is important to distinguish the difference (relative).
As an adult I’ve acquired a seafood allergy. I used to love eating sushi but now if I eat it I will become extremely sick. Other people can eat seafoods without problems. Seafoods are just seafoods (absolute) yet again there is a distinction (relative) that is important.
As I understand it this practice is being able to see that both absolute and relative are there at the same time and really one.
Hopefully I’ve expressed myself well and this makes sense.
Edit: to answer Jundo’s question Can you give some examples of how the same objective, potentially frustrating situation in your life would be very different between when you (1) demand circumstance fit your standards and demands, or (2) let the circumstances just be the circumstances and flow along with (and be one with) you? Any real life examples?
Each year I grow a vegetable garden including to tomato plants. The squirrels in my neighbourhood take and eat quite a few of them. They take the tomatoes off the plant, partially eat them and then leave the remains in the lawn or on my deck for me to clean up. It is frustrating to see so many tomatoes go to waste but then I realize to the squirrel they aren’t my tomatoes they are just things to eat. They also don’t recognize the deck as mine or that they are making a mess to up cleaned up. They are just squirrels doing what squirrels do. Everything else - my tomatoes, my deck, the mess I have to clean up - is the story I am making up in my mind
Tairin
Sat today and lah
While I get the point of this section is really about the perspective we impose on the real world I also see a lot of discussion on the Absolute and Relative being implied in the writing (not two). I was surprised that Okumura didn’t delve there and use those terms but perhaps it is coming up.
The discussion about flowers and weeds brought to my mind mushrooms. Mushrooms are just mushrooms yet some can be eaten and others will make us quite sick. While it is important to understand mushrooms as mushrooms (absolute) it is important to distinguish the difference (relative).
As an adult I’ve acquired a seafood allergy. I used to love eating sushi but now if I eat it I will become extremely sick. Other people can eat seafoods without problems. Seafoods are just seafoods (absolute) yet again there is a distinction (relative) that is important.
As I understand it this practice is being able to see that both absolute and relative are there at the same time and really one.
Hopefully I’ve expressed myself well and this makes sense.
Edit: to answer Jundo’s question Can you give some examples of how the same objective, potentially frustrating situation in your life would be very different between when you (1) demand circumstance fit your standards and demands, or (2) let the circumstances just be the circumstances and flow along with (and be one with) you? Any real life examples?
Each year I grow a vegetable garden including to tomato plants. The squirrels in my neighbourhood take and eat quite a few of them. They take the tomatoes off the plant, partially eat them and then leave the remains in the lawn or on my deck for me to clean up. It is frustrating to see so many tomatoes go to waste but then I realize to the squirrel they aren’t my tomatoes they are just things to eat. They also don’t recognize the deck as mine or that they are making a mess to up cleaned up. They are just squirrels doing what squirrels do. Everything else - my tomatoes, my deck, the mess I have to clean up - is the story I am making up in my mind
Tairin
Sat today and lah
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