--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Vaj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> 
> On Nov 17, 2006, at 1:07 AM, sparaig wrote:
> 
> >
> > Just as you "get it" about TM?
> 
> 
> What is there to get? It's pretty f*cking simple.
>

Neither simple nor complex.

And you keep claiming that shamatha is the same as TM. Here's what an 
apparently 
famous Shamatha advocate says about shamatha. He, at least, has the excuse that 
he 
never learned TM:


http://www.rinpoche.com/shamatha.html

[...]

The Mind in Meditation

When one meditates, do it for a short time; but do it again and again and 
again. The whole 
point is to develop a habit of meditation. If one meditates at first for too 
long, the mind 
just becomes more and more agitated and difficult to control. If one meditates 
for a short 
time and renews the session many times, then each time the mind will be fresh 
and clear 
and able to settle down more easily. So meditate again and again until the 
habit of 
meditation grows stronger.

It is important to control the mind in meditation. The uncontrolled mind is 
very strong and 
dangerous like an angry elephant. Not only can it not be controlled, but the 
mind just goes 
its own way. If a very strong negative feeling of anger or desire arises, we 
are normally not 
able to control it. But it is our mind, so we can control it if we use the 
right tools of 
mindfulness and awareness. Awareness is knowing exactly what we are doing while 
we are 
doing it. Mindfulness is having control of our mind and not letting it run out 
of control.

When meditating, we should not follow a thought about the past, we should not 
anticipate 
the future, and we should not be involved with thoughts of the present. 
Thoughts of the 
past are like what we did yesterday; thoughts of the future are like what we 
are planning 
to do tomorrow and thoughts of the present just pop up. In all cases we 
shouldn't follow 
the thread of these thoughts. We should just relax and leave them alone by not 
following 
them one way or another. For instance, in our meditation we may think of 
something that 
happened a month ago or think of a thought we just had and think, "I've been 
thinking 
about this." We then just end up following that thought. So we should not 
follow any of 
these thoughts. Similarly, we may be planning something for next week and 
immediately 
think, "I shouldn't be thinking of this!" We must avoid following thoughts in 
our meditation 
because meditation is simply leaving things just as they are without being too 
relaxed or 
too tense. If we manage to do this, we will find that the mind calms down quite 
naturally 
by itself.

General Obstacles to Meditation

During meditation the mind must have the right tension. For example, if we have 
a cat and 
we lock the cat up in a room, the cat will go crazy. Not finding a way to get 
out, it will start 
running up and down, mewing, and tearing things apart. But if we leave the door 
open, the 
cat will go out and take a little walk and then just come back in and fall 
asleep in the 
room. Similarly, if we begin our meditation thinking, "I really must stop 
thinking and keep 
my mind very concentrated and peaceful," we will constantly be worried and 
think, "Oh, 
I've had a thought!" or "Now I'm getting too tense." We will then work 
ourselves up so 
much that we can't stop thinking. So relax, just let the mind go and think, 
"Whatever 
comes, it just comes and goes." If we sit there very relaxed and let it all 
happen, we won't 
have very much trouble meditating.

If we use mindfulness and awareness properly in our meditation, our mind will 
become 
tranquil. There are two main obstacles to the tranquility of the mind. One is 
becoming too 
relaxed and the other is becoming too tense. When we become too relaxed, we 
start to 
follow our thoughts and become absorbed in them. When we are too tense, we make 
too 
much effort focusing on the idea of concentrating and being tranquil so that in 
the end 
our mind cannot remain tranquil and we become distracted. We have to constantly 
try to 
find the balance between being too tense and too relaxed by finding just the 
right amount 
of effort to put into our meditation. Saraha, a great mahasiddha, said that 
when we 
meditate, the mind should be like a thread of the Brahmin. In India the 
Brahmins used to 
spin a lot of thread. If one puts too much tension on it, the thread breaks. If 
the thread is 
too loose, then it won't be strong enough. In the same way, when we meditate, 
the mind 
should maintain the right amount of alertness; neither too tight, nor too loose.


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