Help with Homework or How Do You Translate That Into Zen

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  • chicanobudista
    Member
    • Mar 2008
    • 864

    Help with Homework or How Do You Translate That Into Zen

    A good friend of mine is doing a presentation on Pema Chodron's usage of the word shenpa and Buddhism. He wanted to include a part comparing that in other traditions, specifically in Zen Buddhism. My friend wanted to see if there were articles, writers, or teachers that address with a similar concept. Since I don't thread into the Tibetan Buddhism path, I was stumped. I didn't even know what the word meant or how she was expounding on it. I googled and got the following articles:

    http://www.shambhala.org/teachers/pema/shenpa3a.php
    http://www.shambhalasun.com/index.php?o ... ew&id=1610

    I am less stumped, but I still trying to think of an article or a teacher that would address that concept.

    Can someone un-stump a bit more? :P :mrgreen:
    paz,
    Erik


    Flor de Nopal Sangha
  • natezenmaster
    Member
    • Oct 2009
    • 160

    #2
    Re: Help with Homework or How Do You Translate That Into Zen

    Hmmmm.... well, I am not knowledgeable enough to site a passage of this or that book for you. However, the attached came to mind where it is referred to as a "tug of sense desire and aversion" as a relative or similar concept to shenpa.

    Hope it helps.. though the author may not be a Soto or Zen practitioner. Couldn't find out via couple mins on google..



    P.S. In trying to figure out where I grabbed this from, it appears to be a Tricycle article..



    _/_

    Comment

    • Jundo
      Treeleaf Founder and Priest
      • Apr 2006
      • 40972

      #3
      Re: Help with Homework or How Do You Translate That Into Zen

      Hi Choco,

      This reminds me of some of those Spanish or Yiddish words like Tiene Duende or Chutzpah that one can almost translate into English ... but not quite.

      But I think, actually, that this concept runs all through Buddhism, in every Buddhist school. I like Pema's own definition, "the feeling of being 'hooked' and having the trigger pulled, the urge or itch we have for something we are attached to or addicted to." Also, "tug of sense desire and aversion" sounds good. She writes ...

      Shenpa is the urge, the hook, that triggers our habitual tendency to close down. We get hooked in that moment of tightening when we reach for relief. To get unhooked we begin by recognizing that moment of unease and learn to relax in that moment.

      Release of the hook, that trigger, the itch is, of course, at the Heart of Shikantaza Practice as well.

      A history of Indian Buddhism I have been reading presents some of the oldest descriptions of Gautama Buddha's teachings in which he speaks of psychological "foods" (ahara) that trigger a "hunger" or "thirst" (khuda) in us to give in to such actions as greed, anger, ignorance, laziness, discontent, vanity. For example, seeing physical beauty can be a food that triggers hunger (or lust) for physical pleasure. So, there are old Pali terms such as khajjamana (to be "consumed by hunger"). There are also other terms like Jsppati ("to hunger for, to desire, yearn,
      long for"). I am not expert in Pali and Sanskrit, but as you can see such concepts run all through Buddhist philosophy. Nibbana/Nirvana is often called a "quenching of the hunger/thirsts" within us.

      I am sure that there is even a term for Tiene Duende or Chutzpah too. :wink:

      Gassho, Jundo
      ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

      Comment

      • chicanobudista
        Member
        • Mar 2008
        • 864

        #4
        Re: Help with Homework or How Do You Translate That Into Zen

        As a small digression.

        Oh. Noes. Jundo! :-(

        You have been confusing me with Chocobuda! I
        :-o

        Chicanobudista vs Chocobuda

        :mrgreen:

        Sent from my SPH-D710 using Tapatalk
        paz,
        Erik


        Flor de Nopal Sangha

        Comment

        • chicanobudista
          Member
          • Mar 2008
          • 864

          #5
          Re: Help with Homework or How Do You Translate That Into Zen

          Thanks for all the info/leads/reading. Gassho.... 8-)

          Sent from my SPH-D710 using Tapatalk
          paz,
          Erik


          Flor de Nopal Sangha

          Comment

          • Jundo
            Treeleaf Founder and Priest
            • Apr 2006
            • 40972

            #6
            Re: Help with Homework or How Do You Translate That Into Zen

            Originally posted by chicanobudista

            Chicanobudista vs Chocobuda

            :mrgreen:

            Sent from my SPH-D710 using Tapatalk
            Ah, this must be do to my diet, which has led to a real shenpa for Chocolate on my mind. :?

            Sorry Erik.

            Gassho, J
            ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

            Comment

            • chicanobudista
              Member
              • Mar 2008
              • 864

              #7
              Re: Help with Homework or How Do You Translate That Into Zen

              Originally posted by Jundo

              Ah, this must be do to my diet, which has led to a real shenpa for Chocolate on my mind. :?

              Sorry Erik.
              :mrgreen:

              Thanks, Jundo, for the info. I has de-stumped me.
              paz,
              Erik


              Flor de Nopal Sangha

              Comment

              • chicanobudista
                Member
                • Mar 2008
                • 864

                #8
                Re: Help with Homework or How Do You Translate That Into Zen

                Originally posted by natezenmaster
                Hmmmm.... well, I am not knowledgeable enough to site a passage of this or that book for you. However, the attached came to mind where it is referred to as a "tug of sense desire and aversion" as a relative or similar concept to shenpa.
                thanks! good read.
                paz,
                Erik


                Flor de Nopal Sangha

                Comment

                • Rimon
                  Member
                  • May 2010
                  • 309

                  #9
                  Re: Help with Homework or How Do You Translate That Into Zen

                  Mmmm... Never considered to connect "tener duende" with Buddhism before. Next time I finish reading a chapter of Shobogenzo, instead of doing gassho I'll shout "ole" to Dogen :P

                  Disgressing a little bit more, the expression "tener duende" was popularized by the Spanish poet Federico Garcia Lorca, in an essay he wrote about Flamenco. And zenny poet Leonard Cohen is a great fan of Garcia Lorca...

                  Everything is interconnected..

                  Ole I mean Gassho :lol:

                  Rimon
                  Rimon Barcelona, Spain
                  "Practice and the goal of practice are identical." [i:auj57aui]John Daido Loori[/i:auj57aui]

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