If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
the tragic truth might be that no-one can tell you, because nothing that anybody else puts into words will reflect the deep nature of your own experience. Striving is a big problem in itself however, maybe even the biggest.
There is nothing whatsoever you can do to become what you already are.
Gassho,
Hans Chudo Mongen
Is it fair to say that striving ("trying to catch a feather with a fan") can't be bypassed? It has to play out?
Taigu is bound to have a much better answer than me.....I am running the risk of sounding less fortune cookie like than in my last posting, but here it goes
Striving to not-strive doesn't work....but nevertheless, we are humans so we will always fall into that trap again and again, we might just as well get used to it.
The "playing out" bit can indeed naturally happen by itself however, once a certain level of frustration has been reached. The intellectual insight behind all this sadly doesn't help at all in real life, other than making one feel guilty about still not having reached a point where one strives less.
Let's illustrate this example by using a rather shallow analogy: If you operate in your daily life based on the idea that shopping brings you lasting happiness, you might repeat the same mistake of buying stuff to make you happy again and again.....the Dharma as a practise path for developing deep attention will not get rid of this urge simply through your reading about it...but it might enable you to actually be present and notice clearly what it is that arises whenever your old reactional pattern of equating peace and happiness with something you can buy kicks in again.
There might come a point (or points actually, since this is not a one-off affair), where you will have developed a certain awareness-attention-capacity that might enable you to really experience the frustration of this repetitive circle....after having repeated a certain pattern for thousands of times, you might indeed be suddenly in a position where you can intuitively spot the soft underbelly of dualistic striving: "Wait a second...I've done this a million times...this is bullshit!"
That's how I found the dharma, I had to be so frustrated with my uncountable previous approaches (religious and otherwise) to reality, that the only thing that was left was the Dharma. Other people recognize the greatness of the Dharma a lot sooner I had to bang my head against every wall life threw at me before I arrived at the Dharma....
When your capacity for truly open insight and attention has become stronger than the momentum of your striving....that's when something will have played out.
Other than the mere technicality of practising the Dharma/Zazen for some time, another big problem is to be found on the level of self-esteem. If deep down inside yourself you don't believe in the possibility that someone like you (and I mean all of us and not you personally) could ever be a "finder" instead of a "seeker"....finding is impossible. Usually being too proud is the problem, but being too humble (Oh silly pathetic me...I could never get IT) is also a problem.
So is maintaining a practise considered "striving"? I would guess for some it would. Perhaps becouse we drop expectations (thank you Taigu) while practising Zazen, on and off the cushion, we are maintaining the middle way. Great discussion by the way.
Gassho, Shawn Jokudo Hinton
Gassho, Shawn Jakudo Hinton
It all begins when we say, “I”. Everything that follows is illusion.
"Even to speak the word Buddha is dragging in the mud soaking wet; Even to say the word Zen is a total embarrassment."
寂道
Taigu is bound to have a much better answer than me.....I am running the risk of sounding less fortune cookie like than in my last posting, but here it goes
Striving to not-strive doesn't work....but nevertheless, we are humans so we will always fall into that trap again and again, we might just as well get used to it.
The "playing out" bit can indeed naturally happen by itself however, once a certain level of frustration has been reached. The intellectual insight behind all this sadly doesn't help at all in real life, other than making one feel guilty about still not having reached a point where one strives less.
Let's illustrate this example by using a rather shallow analogy: If you operate in your daily life based on the idea that shopping brings you lasting happiness, you might repeat the same mistake of buying stuff to make you happy again and again.....the Dharma as a practise path for developing deep attention will not get rid of this urge simply through your reading about it...but it might enable you to actually be present and notice clearly what it is that arises whenever your old reactional pattern of equating peace and happiness with something you can buy kicks in again.
There might come a point (or points actually, since this is not a one-off affair), where you will have developed a certain awareness-attention-capacity that might enable you to really experience the frustration of this repetitive circle....after having repeated a certain pattern for thousands of times, you might indeed be suddenly in a position where you can intuitively spot the soft underbelly of dualistic striving: "Wait a second...I've done this a million times...this is bullshit!"
That's how I found the dharma, I had to be so frustrated with my uncountable previous approaches (religious and otherwise) to reality, that the only thing that was left was the Dharma. Other people recognize the greatness of the Dharma a lot sooner I had to bang my head against every wall life threw at me before I arrived at the Dharma....
When your capacity for truly open insight and attention has become stronger than the momentum of your striving....that's when something will have played out.
Other than the mere technicality of practising the Dharma/Zazen for some time, another big problem is to be found on the level of self-esteem. If deep down inside yourself you don't believe in the possibility that someone like you (and I mean all of us and not you personally) could ever be a "finder" instead of a "seeker"....finding is impossible. Usually being too proud is the problem, but being too humble (Oh silly pathetic me...I could never get IT) is also a problem.
Gassho,
Hans Chudo Mongen
Thank you for this clear answer, and framing it in daily life. I bang my head against the wall a lot, but maybe the good thing about that is after 1000 times... the message really sinks in by 1001.
"When your capacity for truly open insight and attention has become stronger than the momentum of your striving....that's when something will have played out." H. Chudo M.
Thanks!
Gassho, Ed Seido B.
"Know that the practice of zazen is the complete path of buddha-dharma and nothing can be compared to it....it is not the practice of one or two buddhas but all the buddha ancestors practice this way."
Dogen zenji in Bendowa
thanks for the positive feedback. Although I'd like to point out that the following sentence "When your capacity for truly open insight and attention has become stronger than the momentum of your striving....that's when something will have played out." is also a reflection of some things I read by Ken McLeod a few years ago (wasn't able to remember the exact words, which is why I used my own), which touched me deeply. No matter what people say about him these days, his Heart Sutra commentary is wonderful IMHO.
Retruning over and over for a thousand times to the "ordinary profundity of the present moment" insight lights. I suspect it is barely discernible at first but with practice it opens. To chase it is to lose it, to get stuck on this side. No sides doen't help then, only the returning, again and again, making it just this! each time.
What a scam!! "Like selling water by the river."
Peace!!
"Know that the practice of zazen is the complete path of buddha-dharma and nothing can be compared to it....it is not the practice of one or two buddhas but all the buddha ancestors practice this way."
Dogen zenji in Bendowa
Comment