Hi all,
I have a quick clarifying question.. I believe I am quite clear about what to do with thoughts when they appear during zazen. Nothing. If possible allow them to appear, and don't interfere with them. If I am fortunate enough to get the sense of that urge to engage with the thought, let it pass. If I notice I am engaged, I am no longer engaged.
Does this apply to other sense objects in the same way?
So let's say I get an itch. My awareness naturally goes to it (or maybe the sensation comes to my awareness?). My understanding is, the important point is not to direct towards, or away or actively investigate and dive into or away from. Is that correct?
So its more about not directing, and not doing? Catching that urge to engage and "putting the brakes on" letting it pass?
If awareness is going quite indepth into a sensation by itself (or it presents strongly eg, if an unknown insect lands on me for example haha), no problem if attention is "very firmly" on it, by itself. If I drive my awareness into a sensation though, no longer just sitting?
I guess I am sortof checking for a more global understanding based on all sensations, as thoughts tend to get singled out for instruction (because they are a bit peskier and grab us and we end up doing a whole lot of doing stuff without realising).
Hope this all makes sense.
Gassho
Rob
Sat/lah
I have a quick clarifying question.. I believe I am quite clear about what to do with thoughts when they appear during zazen. Nothing. If possible allow them to appear, and don't interfere with them. If I am fortunate enough to get the sense of that urge to engage with the thought, let it pass. If I notice I am engaged, I am no longer engaged.
Does this apply to other sense objects in the same way?
So let's say I get an itch. My awareness naturally goes to it (or maybe the sensation comes to my awareness?). My understanding is, the important point is not to direct towards, or away or actively investigate and dive into or away from. Is that correct?
So its more about not directing, and not doing? Catching that urge to engage and "putting the brakes on" letting it pass?
If awareness is going quite indepth into a sensation by itself (or it presents strongly eg, if an unknown insect lands on me for example haha), no problem if attention is "very firmly" on it, by itself. If I drive my awareness into a sensation though, no longer just sitting?
I guess I am sortof checking for a more global understanding based on all sensations, as thoughts tend to get singled out for instruction (because they are a bit peskier and grab us and we end up doing a whole lot of doing stuff without realising).
Hope this all makes sense.
Gassho
Rob
Sat/lah
Comment