Dear Bodyminds that are not Bodyminds,
We continue from the end of p. 80 ("Clearly, for the last four or five hundred years ... "), ending at the very top of p. 84 (just before "The Buddha Shakyamuni addressed a great assembly ... ")
Zazen of the body, of the mind, of the bodymind, of the bodymind that is not the bodymind.
I believe that there is Zazen which is more a mental experience of clarity and letting go ...
... and more a bodily experience, such as in dancing or sports ...
... but truly Zazen is always both.
More than words, this must be experienced.
I have developed the theory, based on years of observing many kinds of Zazen practitioners, that different folks tend to lean to different poles of mind/body/bodymind forms of Zazen. Which do you feel suits you most?
Do you think that physical activity (e.g., dancing, hiking, weight training, etc.) can perfectly substitute for seated still Zazen? Or do your feel that there is something special about seated Zazen that is unlike moving Zazen? (Hint: I am completely biased toward this latter "position," pun intended.
)
Gassho, Jundo
stlah
We continue from the end of p. 80 ("Clearly, for the last four or five hundred years ... "), ending at the very top of p. 84 (just before "The Buddha Shakyamuni addressed a great assembly ... ")
Zazen of the body, of the mind, of the bodymind, of the bodymind that is not the bodymind.
I believe that there is Zazen which is more a mental experience of clarity and letting go ...
... and more a bodily experience, such as in dancing or sports ...
... but truly Zazen is always both.
More than words, this must be experienced.
I have developed the theory, based on years of observing many kinds of Zazen practitioners, that different folks tend to lean to different poles of mind/body/bodymind forms of Zazen. Which do you feel suits you most?
Do you think that physical activity (e.g., dancing, hiking, weight training, etc.) can perfectly substitute for seated still Zazen? Or do your feel that there is something special about seated Zazen that is unlike moving Zazen? (Hint: I am completely biased toward this latter "position," pun intended.
)Gassho, Jundo
stlah
) body-mind. That is the practice that allows me to let all of the inseparable body-mind-aggregate be. Zazen is the place of coming home. More physically-oriented activities that can work for me tend to be more focused and require single-minded attention. Like cleaning and organizing the spice cupboard, putting together a model kit, things like that. In a group sport setting, I am too focused on everything that is going on and while there is a certain amount of large awareness going on, it is not the same.
Comment