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zen buddhism

  • UpTrust AdminSA•...

    What is enlightenment?: Contemplative traditionalists

    Ordinary mind Joshu asked Nansen: "What is the Way?" Nansen said: "Ordinary mind is the Way." Joshu asked: "Should I try to direct myself toward it?" Nansen said: "If you try to direct yourself toward it, you move away from it." Ninth-century China....
    spirituality
    philosophy of mind
    zen buddhism
    neuroscience of meditation
    meditation and contemplative practice
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  • UpTrust AdminSA•...

    What is enlightenment?: The Story

    Sit down, shut up, keep sitting In 1966, a Zen master named Shunryu Suzuki arrived in San Francisco and opened a meditation center in a former synagogue. He told his students to sit still, face a wall, and count their breaths. Some had come from acid trips....
    meditation and mindfulness
    developmental psychology
    zen buddhism
    neuroscience of meditation
    spirituality and religious studies
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  • jordan avatar

    Enough/not enough are the same. If you’ve lived in the shadow of not-enoughness for most of your life, there often comes a moment where you declare “I am enough!” It feels glorious! Triumphant!

    It’s a step forward, I guess. But it keeps the whole busted frame in place. 

    “Enough” and “not enough” are built from the same mental overlay, which frankly is bullshit. You are. That’s unquestionable, and there were no requirements for your being. American culture, or your parents, or Instagram may have convinced you that you had to earn your right to exist (or be loved) but they lied.

    One reason we make this mistake is because the frame of “enough” legitimately applies to specific goals: if I don’t have enough gas to drive to Louisiana, I won’t make it there. If I don’t have enough followers, I won’t get the brand sponsorship. But these all concern capacity relative to goals, not existence. Enoughness cannot be a statement of being. Being is. It’s tautological. Recognizing this tautology is transformative, because it undermines the whole edifice of enough/not-enough.

    #TTT 

    Xuramitra PPARK•...
    just another frame, in buddhism there's a sudden vs gradual enlightenment debate that's not really a debate. but there's a sense in rinzai zen of get the breakthrough first and then work on your form/healthy ego formation second....
    philosophy
    buddhism
    zen buddhism
    enlightenment
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  • Robbie Carlton avatar

    On the plethora of Therapeutic modalities.

    There's a genre of book that's the therapy modality book. They're all the same. They go

    I was a therapist and what I was doing wasn't working, and then I discovered <specific technique the book is advocating> and then it cured me and all my clients and now things are great and we just need to teach everybody this technique.

    So many therapy books are like this. Focussing, the IFS book, the EFT book, to name a few. The various ACT books. Waking the Tiger.

    And the specific technique is different from book to book. Radically different. And even contradictory.

    So what's going on here? Apart from probably there's some book somewhere about how to write a therapy book, or some ghostwriter that's cranking these out?

    If we take these stories as more or less true, how do we make sense of these seeming contradictions?

    This is not a rhetorical question! I'm going to give you my best guess below, but please take a moment to think of your answer, and ideally post it in the comments for everyone to see. I am very much interested in other answers here.

    Ok, my best guess (at least, the guess that I find most interesting):

    What works is having a therapist who believes they are helping. It's like the placebo effect. If the doctor handing you a sugar pill is like "Yeah, idk, people told me this is helpful. lmk what you think", my guess is, you're not going to get much placebo effect out of that pill (actually they've done research and you do still get some but not as much iirc).

    So when the therapist is out of school, they're doing what they were told works, but for a certain kind of mind, that doesn't give them confidence. So then they have to go on a big heroes journey, and come back with some technique, some approach, that for whatever reason they believe in.

    Now they're back, and they believe it works, and low and behold, it does!

    It's like Dumbo's magic feather.

    "some technique, some approach, that for whatever reason they believe in."

    So why do they believe in the technique they chose? Because they love to do it. Because, when they're doing it, they feel most like themselves, and they feel most connected with the person they're working with. Or they feel most connected with what they consider important, about a mind, about a heart, about a life.

    And maybe this gives it some extra sauce too. Maybe this love of themselves, this intrinsic interest, radiates out, and reminds their clients that they too can love themselves, love life, be enthusiastic, and intrinsically interested.

    Or maybe that last part is just what I have come to believe works ;)

     

    Robbie Carlton•...
    Love it. You reminded me of a zen koan, which I will now walk around my post-modern ironic discomfort to post here: A monk asked Fuketsu: “Without speaking, without silence, how can you express the truth?” Fuketsu observed: “I always remember springtime in southern China....
    philosophy
    literature
    zen buddhism
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  • jordanSA•...

    The time we call spring blossoms directly as an existence called flowers. The flowers, in turn, express the time called spring. This is not existence within time; existence itself is time.

    - Dōgen

    philosophy
    nature
    zen buddhism
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  • xander avatar

    ... No belief is true, no matter how popular or plausible

    annabeth•...

    like a koan

    spirituality
    philosophy
    mindfulness
    literature
    zen buddhism
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  • xander avatar

    ... No belief is true, no matter how popular or plausible

    xander•...

    What’s weird about it? It’s just a finger pointing to the moon, the finger doesn’t matter.

    spirituality
    philosophy
    communication
    metaphor
    zen buddhism
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