Emotionally charged, passively charged teaching or a combination thereof produces different results.
1) Emotional teacher and passive student: Student is scared into awakening.
2) Emotional teacher and passive student: Student is so scared that he only remembers that teacher is scary, nothing else.
3) Passive teacher and emotional student: Student calms down and becomes more apt to pay attention and learn.
4) Passive teacher and emotional student: Teacher is unable to reign in student’s emotions hindering students learning.
5) Passive teacher and passive student: ………….? (and on and on)
One shoe size does not fit all. I like the approach that Jundo and Taigu use here. I personally need different teaching styles at different stages of learning. When I first came to Treeleaf, my ego was very disturbed by the fact it did not know what it thought it did. It felt threatened, feared disintegration and assumed a highly defensive posture, which in my case is not conducive to learning. Gentle whacking (in my perception) helped to crack open my denial defenses just enough so that I become more teachable and so the Soto style began to sink in. I could have walked away from Zen altogether and just stuck to mindfulness psychology if skillful means had not been used. Rinzai and I would probably not mix well.
Gassho, John
1) Emotional teacher and passive student: Student is scared into awakening.
2) Emotional teacher and passive student: Student is so scared that he only remembers that teacher is scary, nothing else.
3) Passive teacher and emotional student: Student calms down and becomes more apt to pay attention and learn.
4) Passive teacher and emotional student: Teacher is unable to reign in student’s emotions hindering students learning.
5) Passive teacher and passive student: ………….? (and on and on)
One shoe size does not fit all. I like the approach that Jundo and Taigu use here. I personally need different teaching styles at different stages of learning. When I first came to Treeleaf, my ego was very disturbed by the fact it did not know what it thought it did. It felt threatened, feared disintegration and assumed a highly defensive posture, which in my case is not conducive to learning. Gentle whacking (in my perception) helped to crack open my denial defenses just enough so that I become more teachable and so the Soto style began to sink in. I could have walked away from Zen altogether and just stuck to mindfulness psychology if skillful means had not been used. Rinzai and I would probably not mix well.
Gassho, John
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