This weeks section is the entirety of chapter three (p43-50, complete chapter)
In this chapter, Darlene talks about pleasure, and specifically that we can still experience pleasure in the middle of suffering, which can seem counter-intuitive. Although Buddhism is neither about seeking out pleasure, or pushing away pain, being able to observe the instances of pleasure while we also experience pain, can provide some sense of relief and comfort.
She points out the difference between consuming in order to get pleasure and finding pleasure in the small and ordinary – birdsong, the warmth of bath water (or even washing the hands), the softness of a favourite blanket – and notes that western culture still bears the hallmarks of the body/spirit split of Abrahamic religious thought, in which the body, and pleasures of the body, are seen as either sinful or not to be encouraged. The human body has nerve endings which can experience both pain and pleasure and meditation practice is about opening ourselves to both as the wholeness of life.
Darlene notes that Buddhist teachings are correct in that we tend to be attracted to pleasure and to experience aversion to pain, but she is not talking about doing this, or judging the amount we have of one against the other, but instead opening ourselves to the fullness of experience without neglecting either part.
Experiencing the fullness of live means being attentive to your body, but not to the extent of hypervigilance, rather checking in with how you are doing, or gently responding to cues in the body without overreacting. Darlene talks about having an intimate relationship with our body by attending to this moment right now, rather than thinking about whether we felt better yesterday, or will feel better tomorrow.
It can feel selfish to nurture our own joy, especially in the case of illness when we might be unable to fulfil our share of domestic tasks or salaried work. However, Darlene points out that by doing this, we become able to share what we do have and be generous, rather than feel obligated to hand over what little remains of our energy out of guilt.
The chapter ends with Darlene noting that healing is often found is pleasure, and we should endeavour to make our lives pleasurable as part of healing (in terms of making whole, not just medical healing).
Question prompts:
1. Where do you find pleasure in your life, especially pleasures of the body?
2. How do you feel when you deliberately seek out pleasure? Do you think of it somehow being 'not Buddhist'?
Gassho
Kokuu
-sattoday/lah-
In this chapter, Darlene talks about pleasure, and specifically that we can still experience pleasure in the middle of suffering, which can seem counter-intuitive. Although Buddhism is neither about seeking out pleasure, or pushing away pain, being able to observe the instances of pleasure while we also experience pain, can provide some sense of relief and comfort.
She points out the difference between consuming in order to get pleasure and finding pleasure in the small and ordinary – birdsong, the warmth of bath water (or even washing the hands), the softness of a favourite blanket – and notes that western culture still bears the hallmarks of the body/spirit split of Abrahamic religious thought, in which the body, and pleasures of the body, are seen as either sinful or not to be encouraged. The human body has nerve endings which can experience both pain and pleasure and meditation practice is about opening ourselves to both as the wholeness of life.
Darlene notes that Buddhist teachings are correct in that we tend to be attracted to pleasure and to experience aversion to pain, but she is not talking about doing this, or judging the amount we have of one against the other, but instead opening ourselves to the fullness of experience without neglecting either part.
Experiencing the fullness of live means being attentive to your body, but not to the extent of hypervigilance, rather checking in with how you are doing, or gently responding to cues in the body without overreacting. Darlene talks about having an intimate relationship with our body by attending to this moment right now, rather than thinking about whether we felt better yesterday, or will feel better tomorrow.
It can feel selfish to nurture our own joy, especially in the case of illness when we might be unable to fulfil our share of domestic tasks or salaried work. However, Darlene points out that by doing this, we become able to share what we do have and be generous, rather than feel obligated to hand over what little remains of our energy out of guilt.
The chapter ends with Darlene noting that healing is often found is pleasure, and we should endeavour to make our lives pleasurable as part of healing (in terms of making whole, not just medical healing).
Question prompts:
1. Where do you find pleasure in your life, especially pleasures of the body?
2. How do you feel when you deliberately seek out pleasure? Do you think of it somehow being 'not Buddhist'?
Gassho
Kokuu
-sattoday/lah-
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