I revere Jundo and think that healthy reverence is probably mostly best expressed in silence and a gassho, at times questions and a voicing of differing opinion.
For example: I can think of two cases where healthy reverence might go astray that I've been guilty of:
1. Hero worship. We all have "curative fantasies" where we think that something might be deeply wrong with us and can be cured "only if," the problem might be that we see Jundo as the hero with the secret knowledge that can cure our problems once and for all. When Jundo is the hero we are overly sensitive to what Jundo says even though he is human like us. We put our problems on Jundo's shoulders.
2. Clinging and imitation. We are unsure of ourselves so we repeat almost verbatim the teachings, hoping we got it right. We are needy and need attention.
Gassho
Tom
SatLah
For example: I can think of two cases where healthy reverence might go astray that I've been guilty of:
1. Hero worship. We all have "curative fantasies" where we think that something might be deeply wrong with us and can be cured "only if," the problem might be that we see Jundo as the hero with the secret knowledge that can cure our problems once and for all. When Jundo is the hero we are overly sensitive to what Jundo says even though he is human like us. We put our problems on Jundo's shoulders.
2. Clinging and imitation. We are unsure of ourselves so we repeat almost verbatim the teachings, hoping we got it right. We are needy and need attention.
Gassho
Tom
SatLah
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