Re: Jundo's latest vid
Hi Greg,
I just wanted to say that I can sympathise with you, so don't feel that you're the only one a year behind everyone else in the class and feeling wrong at every turn.
(I also have self imposed "shut up" modes, from time to time, although I don't contribute enough in depth or frequency for anyone to notice!)
I would just say this though: try and take some time to look at your own feelings about what you've read here, whatever they are - they're not wrong, even when they feel 'wrong'.
Maybe you can recognise something in this, if not just ignore it: while reading this, or any other 'lively' thread I often find a "self-defence commentator" interposed somewhere between me and the screen telling me what to think about each post. In the current thread he's been calling out all sorts of names, (fey, passive aggressive, intransigent, self serving, honest, perceptive, correct, witty, disarming - he's been having a field day), and if I pay him attention I can feel my mood change depending on what he happens to be calling out, and it's really disconcerting.
I reckon he's there to try to put me on my guard against anything that is threatening 'my' little world view and the cosy little nest which contains my notions about what 'my' practice is and 'my' ideas of what Buddhism should be. It's perfectly natural and I wish I could just get over him, but no joy on that front so far. I just react, react react, in any way he says. And drifting off to the 'peace' and sanctuary of the zafu until everyone in Treeleaf gets their heads sorted out (i.e. comes back round to my way of thinking), might feel very appealing, might even be what I do from time to time, but isn't really what this is all about.
There's a lot to learn here (this thread has really helped with one of the blocks I had about the whole idea of rakusu sewing - I was very caught up in it being a buddhist 'thing', but in Jundo's post I got a glimpse of what it can be used for in terms of adding cohesion to the sangha, and beng more than an end in itself), and the lessons change and we change and we get glimpses here and there and we forget other stuff too. And some folks seem to get everything in flashes of lightning, and can express it again perfectly, and some of us are just bobbing in the water hoping to absorb something by osmosis. But the best way to do learn anything is to get stuck into it, which you already do far me than me as it is, so I hope you continue to stick with it, and give yourself time to digest how you feel about it all, and allow yourself to learn not just from what is said here, but from yourself, because you'll remember that teaching better than any other.
gassho,
Monkton
Hi Greg,
I just wanted to say that I can sympathise with you, so don't feel that you're the only one a year behind everyone else in the class and feeling wrong at every turn.
(I also have self imposed "shut up" modes, from time to time, although I don't contribute enough in depth or frequency for anyone to notice!)
I would just say this though: try and take some time to look at your own feelings about what you've read here, whatever they are - they're not wrong, even when they feel 'wrong'.
Maybe you can recognise something in this, if not just ignore it: while reading this, or any other 'lively' thread I often find a "self-defence commentator" interposed somewhere between me and the screen telling me what to think about each post. In the current thread he's been calling out all sorts of names, (fey, passive aggressive, intransigent, self serving, honest, perceptive, correct, witty, disarming - he's been having a field day), and if I pay him attention I can feel my mood change depending on what he happens to be calling out, and it's really disconcerting.
I reckon he's there to try to put me on my guard against anything that is threatening 'my' little world view and the cosy little nest which contains my notions about what 'my' practice is and 'my' ideas of what Buddhism should be. It's perfectly natural and I wish I could just get over him, but no joy on that front so far. I just react, react react, in any way he says. And drifting off to the 'peace' and sanctuary of the zafu until everyone in Treeleaf gets their heads sorted out (i.e. comes back round to my way of thinking), might feel very appealing, might even be what I do from time to time, but isn't really what this is all about.
There's a lot to learn here (this thread has really helped with one of the blocks I had about the whole idea of rakusu sewing - I was very caught up in it being a buddhist 'thing', but in Jundo's post I got a glimpse of what it can be used for in terms of adding cohesion to the sangha, and beng more than an end in itself), and the lessons change and we change and we get glimpses here and there and we forget other stuff too. And some folks seem to get everything in flashes of lightning, and can express it again perfectly, and some of us are just bobbing in the water hoping to absorb something by osmosis. But the best way to do learn anything is to get stuck into it, which you already do far me than me as it is, so I hope you continue to stick with it, and give yourself time to digest how you feel about it all, and allow yourself to learn not just from what is said here, but from yourself, because you'll remember that teaching better than any other.
gassho,
Monkton
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