I've been re-reading an old book by Trungpa and Herbert Guenther (The Dawn of Tantra). Not sure why, but it is a read I have returned to a few times, and this comment on the nature of freedom stood out this morning..
Recent discussion here about dukkha also brought this to mind. I was wondering how it could be that over the recent death of a friend, I could feel grief and tears but no “dukkha”, and I realized that it was because the grief was whole and simple and free. Whatever is going on in this body and mind.. joy, sadness, pleasure or pain,.. it is innately free and whole. This innate freedom is not a good feeling vs. a bad feeling. Every state of being is innately whole and free, regardless of its tone or flavor.
In a way this is just repeating the same jargon I've heard a million times, but recently it has been lived more and I'm not sure why. It is like there is an existential core beyond the reach of life's ups and downs, or maybe no existential core at all. Ironically this is becoming more clear by no longer holding back from difficulty, and more fully feeling and fully engaging these ups and downs.
Just saying it out loud here. can any one relate? Thanks.
Gassho,Daizan
What does it mean to free something? In the western world, freedom has usually been used as a negative term: we speak of freedom from this or freedom from that. The logical conclusion from this usage, a conclusion that nobody likes to draw, is that we must also reach a point of getting rid of freedom from freedom. It does not help to have recourse to the construction of “freedom to”, freedom to do this, freedom to do that. Freedom-to implies subordination to some transcendental hocus-pocus and that makes freedom disappear as quickly as the negative proposition does. We see, then, that freedom cannot be considered as a separate thing relative to something else. It must be itself an existential fact. In this sense freedom is not something that has to be achieved, it is basic to everything.” Freedom is inherent in all the cognitive processes.
Recent discussion here about dukkha also brought this to mind. I was wondering how it could be that over the recent death of a friend, I could feel grief and tears but no “dukkha”, and I realized that it was because the grief was whole and simple and free. Whatever is going on in this body and mind.. joy, sadness, pleasure or pain,.. it is innately free and whole. This innate freedom is not a good feeling vs. a bad feeling. Every state of being is innately whole and free, regardless of its tone or flavor.
In a way this is just repeating the same jargon I've heard a million times, but recently it has been lived more and I'm not sure why. It is like there is an existential core beyond the reach of life's ups and downs, or maybe no existential core at all. Ironically this is becoming more clear by no longer holding back from difficulty, and more fully feeling and fully engaging these ups and downs.
Just saying it out loud here. can any one relate? Thanks.
Gassho,Daizan
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