Dear all,
I'm posting this as a question maybe to be answered in preparation for upcoming Ango, knowing it is well much too advanced for me.
Some practices seem to emphasize the necessity of seclusion and silence (like the retreat or Sekishi's suggestion).
On the other hand, if all of life is to be our practice, and I do not live in a monastery where everybody is silent, how do I put things together?
Sewing my zafu with only the wind howling around the house was nice.
But sewing with my mother shouting at me while she had the radio blasting folk music was a bit more difficult practice (though also nice).
We cannot expect the world to treat us like monks or nuns, can we, the world is fast and loud!
I do not have the zazen experience to guide me very much.
I think I feel what I'm aiming for, only it gets disturbed very easily.
I'm hoping for explanations how to approach work, talking to people, people wanting to make a chat, without being distanced and secluded, while continuing practice.
The only thing I can imagine by now is to be right there with them, but to refrain from some behaviour.
Gassho,
Danny
I'm posting this as a question maybe to be answered in preparation for upcoming Ango, knowing it is well much too advanced for me.
Some practices seem to emphasize the necessity of seclusion and silence (like the retreat or Sekishi's suggestion).
On the other hand, if all of life is to be our practice, and I do not live in a monastery where everybody is silent, how do I put things together?
Sewing my zafu with only the wind howling around the house was nice.
But sewing with my mother shouting at me while she had the radio blasting folk music was a bit more difficult practice (though also nice).
We cannot expect the world to treat us like monks or nuns, can we, the world is fast and loud!
I do not have the zazen experience to guide me very much.
I think I feel what I'm aiming for, only it gets disturbed very easily.
I'm hoping for explanations how to approach work, talking to people, people wanting to make a chat, without being distanced and secluded, while continuing practice.
The only thing I can imagine by now is to be right there with them, but to refrain from some behaviour.
Gassho,
Danny
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