Itches, shifting positions, restlessness

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  • AmongTheLilies
    Member
    • Dec 2009
    • 15

    Itches, shifting positions, restlessness

    The title says it all. How do you folks deal with the urge to move? At what point does scratching an itch once or twice become a hindrance to practice? What about small movements (not getting up, just stretching and the like)?

    Oh, and I should probably say--I have Tourette's Syndrome (not the kind with yelling obscenities) which sometimes makes not moving an impossibilitiy, but aside from that, how do you work with impulses to move?
    _/_ Gassho,
    Lily
  • Jundo
    Treeleaf Founder and Priest
    • Apr 2006
    • 40327

    #2
    Re: Itches, shifting positions, restlessness

    Originally posted by AmongTheLilies
    The title says it all. How do you folks deal with the urge to move? At what point does scratching an itch once or twice become a hindrance to practice? What about small movements (not getting up, just stretching and the like)?

    Oh, and I should probably say--I have Tourette's Syndrome (not the kind with yelling obscenities) which sometimes makes not moving an impossibilitiy, but aside from that, how do you work with impulses to move?
    Hi Lily,

    If we have Tourette's Syndrome, we sit with Tourette's Syndrome. See if this helps ...

    Hi Guys,

    Here is my perspective on sitting with itchy noses, aching legs and backs, crawly spiders and such ...

    Let me mention first that one day I was sitting at Sojiji (head temple of Soto Zen in Japan) in a 150 year old wooden building, with rafters nibbled by termites and with an overly heavy roof, when a big earthquake hit ... the roof is swaying. Everyone but me was Japanese. I looked around to see if folks would run for the door ... nobody moved from Zazen or even looked around but me! There is a great cultural tendency in Japanese culture to just "bear up" with pain and disturbances, and I have rarely if ever seen an experienced Japanese sitter move, shift legs or scratch during Zazen. In fact, my Japanese dentist tells me that there are two main difference between his Western patients and Japanese patients: (1) Westerners ask a lot more questions about the dental procedure and everything else; (2) Westerners moan and scream much more easily. :shock:

    So, I have to balance my recommendations by taking into consideration what is just "Japanese culture", what is "Zen teachings", and what may be "BOTH"!

    Generally, our Way of Shikantaza Zazen is about "just sitting" with whatever is, just how it is. As in life-in-general, not every moment is peaches and cream, fun and games. So, it is wonderful Practice for us to sit with discomforts, pain, annoyances. We drop all thought of the words "discomfort", "pain", "annoyance", "like" "dislike" "good" "bad" ... and just sit with what is.

    On the other hand, the Buddha's way was never one of masochism or asceticism, complete denial of the body. In fact, ours is the Middle Way, the path of moderation in all things. Furthermore, we do not harm the body.

    Thus, my advice is to just "sit with" the itches, discomforts and spiders (unless a highly poisonous spider!) . Note it, then move back to open, spacious sitting. In fact, you will find that the more your mind fixates on it, and thinks about it, the more of a problem it becomes. By not thinking about it, the so-called "problem" may even fade away on its own, or not be experienced as a problem.

    But if you reach the point that there is truly the risk of harm to the body, then please give a small "Gassho" and discreetly and quietly change position (even do your Zazen standing or do Kinhin walking), or move the giant killer spider away.

    Furthermore, our Way is not about ALWAYS having discomfort, so if your legs or back hurt all the time, you may have to change your sitting position or wait for your legs and back to adjust. We do not sit with leg pain every day or most days.

    But, on the other-other hand, if you have a physical condition that means you ALWAYS have pain and there is absolutely no way to avoid that (for example, if you have arthritis that is always there), you just sit with that. You allow it, not thinking "good" or "bad".

    You have to decide for yourself when is the time to sit with the ache or spider, when is the time not to.

    Gassho, Jundo

    PS- Wonderful true story about the Dali Lama and a mosquito, ...

    During a 1990 interview with the Fourteenth Dalai Lama, Bill Moyers once asked if it was acceptable to kill a mosquito. The Dalai Lama thought for a moment and said something like this while miming the hand gestures:

    “Well, if it bothers me, I wave it away. And if it comes back, I wave it away again. But if it comes back again . . . [sound of the Dalai Lama hitting his face].” Then he smiled. Mindful. Practical.
    viewtopic.php?p=10701#p10701
    ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

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    • Unmon
      Member
      • Mar 2009
      • 97

      #3
      Re: Itches, shifting positions, restlessness

      haha...just today i tried sitting on a new surface (travel a lot for work and have to make due with whatever i can find sometimes). stupidly, i tried using a small metal suitcase as a zafu...it seemed like an idea at the time - the edges are rounded, the height was perfect. dumb, i know - but hey, "sit with it" right?? so, of course it started sliding sloooowwwly. i tried to "let go", but i figured it would just "interrupt" my sit when my ass hit the floor...so i switched position and make it into a makeshift seiza bench.

      in retrospect, i probably should have stuck with it. i bet that ass-hitting-the-floor moment could have been tantamount to bodhi!
      Gassho,
      Tim

      Comment

      • scott
        Member
        • Oct 2009
        • 138

        #4
        Re: Itches, shifting positions, restlessness

        Originally posted by mahakalaugh
        haha...just today i tried sitting on a new surface (travel a lot for work and have to make due with whatever i can find sometimes). stupidly, i tried using a small metal suitcase as a zafu...it seemed like an idea at the time - the edges are rounded, the height was perfect. dumb, i know - but hey, "sit with it" right?? so, of course it started sliding sloooowwwly. i tried to "let go", but i figured it would just "interrupt" my sit when my ass hit the floor...so i switched position and make it into a makeshift seiza bench.

        in retrospect, i probably should have stuck with it. i bet that ass-hitting-the-floor moment could have been tantamount to bodhi!
        I sit on all sorts of stuff too but for long trips I take along an inflatable zafu. I think Carolina Morning will sell them to you. Essentially it's just a small beachball stuck into a zafu cover. Don't inflate it too much of you'll bounce around when you twitch.

        Comment

        • Unmon
          Member
          • Mar 2009
          • 97

          #5
          Re: Itches, shifting positions, restlessness

          scott,
          cool..thanks for the tip!
          Gassho,
          Tim

          Comment

          • bayamo
            Member
            • Nov 2009
            • 411

            #6
            Re: Itches, shifting positions, restlessness

            loved the dalai lama/ mosquito story!!
            gassho
            Oh, yeah. If I didn't have inner peace, I'd go completely psycho on all you guys all the time.
            Carl Carlson

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            • Jundo
              Treeleaf Founder and Priest
              • Apr 2006
              • 40327

              #7
              Re: Itches, shifting positions, restlessness

              Originally posted by bayamo
              loved the dalai lama/ mosquito story!!
              gassho
              Here is the video of that, by the way ...

              http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W083nSzx1Rc[/video]]
              ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

              Comment

              • bayamo
                Member
                • Nov 2009
                • 411

                #8
                Re: Itches, shifting positions, restlessness

                on the other side of the coin, from the view of doing what needs to be done, what fits the situation better than "if you got an itch, scratch it"?
                Oh, yeah. If I didn't have inner peace, I'd go completely psycho on all you guys all the time.
                Carl Carlson

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