Hi everyone,
I hope no one minds the silly title, I'm a terribly silly man. I just wanted to put out a thought I had about the precepts (if this painfully obvious to others, please excuse my ignorance) that really made me thing of them in a new light. I know the precepts are not imperatives (commandments) and they are guides for our behaviour. I used to think of them as something like guard rails on a road. They keep you from straying into dangerous territory. But I think it's more like Bodhisattva training wheeIs. We integrate them into how we think and over time we begin to act in accordance with them without the linguistic component. E.g. If you continuously practice Dana (generosity) then eventually you do so as an automatic response. It's not like the raft we leave behind when we reach the other shore. It's more like we were learning to swim by staying close to the raft when we started to get tired. The precepts are just a formulation of how a bodhisattvas lives in and sees the world. So the precepts are there to help us develop the way of behaving and the way of seeing the world as a bodhisattva does. I sure I've read Jundo say many times that sometimes you have to fake it till you make it. I think this is what it's about.
Thoughts?
Gassho,
Hoseki
sattoday/lah
I hope no one minds the silly title, I'm a terribly silly man. I just wanted to put out a thought I had about the precepts (if this painfully obvious to others, please excuse my ignorance) that really made me thing of them in a new light. I know the precepts are not imperatives (commandments) and they are guides for our behaviour. I used to think of them as something like guard rails on a road. They keep you from straying into dangerous territory. But I think it's more like Bodhisattva training wheeIs. We integrate them into how we think and over time we begin to act in accordance with them without the linguistic component. E.g. If you continuously practice Dana (generosity) then eventually you do so as an automatic response. It's not like the raft we leave behind when we reach the other shore. It's more like we were learning to swim by staying close to the raft when we started to get tired. The precepts are just a formulation of how a bodhisattvas lives in and sees the world. So the precepts are there to help us develop the way of behaving and the way of seeing the world as a bodhisattva does. I sure I've read Jundo say many times that sometimes you have to fake it till you make it. I think this is what it's about.
Thoughts?
Gassho,
Hoseki
sattoday/lah
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