Where is Now? The Paradox of the Present

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • disastermouse

    #16
    Re: Where is Now? The Paradox of the Present

    Where is time when you don't think about it? I'm not talking about clock-time - I'm talking about one's sense of time?

    Chet

    Comment

    • Rich
      Member
      • Apr 2009
      • 2614

      #17
      Re: Where is Now? The Paradox of the Present

      Originally posted by disastermouse
      Where is time when you don't think about it? I'm not talking about clock-time - I'm talking about one's sense of time?

      Chet
      Agreed, without thinking there is no time or space. Like the dude said, 'Everything is made by mind alone'. But now what do I do?
      Besides just sitting the precepts are a good starting point.
      _/_
      Rich
      MUHYO
      無 (MU, Emptiness) and 氷 (HYO, Ice) ... Emptiness Ice ...

      https://instagram.com/notmovingmind

      Comment

      • ChrisA
        Member
        • Jun 2011
        • 312

        #18
        Re: Where is Now? The Paradox of the Present

        Thanks for sharing the article, even with its off-base notion of Buddhism. I think that Taigu linked flux with this "present" in a way that's far more useful:

        Originally posted by Taigu
        So this "now" is already past and as soon as seen it is gone...This is the very nature of reality, ever changing, always transformimg. At the same time, the now that we are living from is not something separated from past and future, this now is fully blown being-time in which all times playfully exist.
        I got into a conversation with someone at my local sangha about the verb tense of "gate" (as in the Heart Sutra's "Gate, gate"). While most translate that Sanskrit as the past participle "gone," there are those who translate it as the present participle "going." While this is all over my head, the idea that this present is going, going, gone by the time we conceptualize it seems to fit nicely with the perspective Taigu details.
        Chris Seishi Amirault
        (ZenPedestrian)

        Comment

        • Shokai
          Dharma Transmitted Priest
          • Mar 2009
          • 6410

          #19
          Re: Where is Now? The Paradox of the Present

          And the auctioneer announces, "Going, going, gone; sold to the highest bidder in the blue shirt sitting in the third to last row."
          Thank you all but, mostly thank you Rafael (and Taigu) for hitting this nail dead on. NOW is not the present moment. The present moment belongs to time. NOW is the unique NOW; and only ours to share with the universe if we might.
          合掌,生開
          gassho, Shokai

          仁道 生開 / Jindo Shokai

          "Open to life in a benevolent way"

          https://sarushinzendo.wordpress.com/

          Comment

          Working...