[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-06 Thread dhamiltony2k5


Well, writing as a conservative meditator from experience, as the case may be 
the case does matter.

This rant of yours is very good for starters and obviously heartfelt, but Dear 
Turq;
 is also way more than that. Just is.  I pray you can sit with it some more.  
Nice rant.  It was a joy to read.
-D in FF






[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-06 Thread dhamiltony2k5


 Nice rant.  It was a joy to read.
 -D in FF


Is a great rant really.  The punctuation thing evidently goes way back
in human experience.   an opportunity of
a lifetime to discern it.

Know thy '(S)elf'

Remember these?

B.Gita

Let a man raise his self by his Self,
let him not debase his Self; he alone, indeed, is his own friend, he alone his 
own enemy.
V.I5

That state in which thought,
settled through the practice of Yoga,
retires, in which seeing the Self by 
the Self alone, he finds contentment
in the Self. VI.20



[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-06 Thread TurquoiseB
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, dhamiltony2k5 dhamiltony...@... wrote:

 This rant of yours is very good for starters and obviously 
 heartfelt, but Dear Turq; is also way more than that. Just is.  
 I pray you can sit with it some more. Nice rant. It was a joy 
 to read.

Careful, dude. You know the olde saying:
Say something complimentary about Barry 
and wind up on the Enemies List.

:-)

Original rant (for the convenience of the
person who is now going to feel compelled 
to dump on it):
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/message/237892

As for sitting with it, it was just a 
cafe rant, dude...so yesterday. Or last
Saturday, actually...




[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-06 Thread dhamiltony2k5


 
 
  Nice rant.  It was a joy to read.
  -D in FF
 
 
 Is a great rant really.  The punctuation thing evidently goes way back
 in human experience.   an opportunity of
 a lifetime to discern it.
 
 Know thy '(S)elf'
 
 Remember these?
 
 B.Gita
 
 Let a man raise his self by his Self,
 let him not debase his Self; he alone, indeed, is his own friend, he alone 
 his own enemy.
 VI.5
 
 That state in which thought,
 settled through the practice of Yoga,
 retires, in which seeing the Self by 
 the Self alone, he finds contentment
 in the Self. VI.20


Let him gradually retire through
the intellect possessed of patience;
having established the mind in the
Self, let him not think at all. VI.25

For the supreme happiness comes to the
yogi whose mind is deep in peace,
in whom the spur to activity is stilled,
who is without blemish and has become
one with cosmic consciousness.  VI.27

is Science like.



[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-06 Thread authfriend
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, TurquoiseB no_re...@... wrote:

 --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, dhamiltony2k5 dhamiltony2k5@ wrote:
 
  This rant of yours is very good for starters and obviously 
  heartfelt, but Dear Turq; is also way more than that. Just is.  
  I pray you can sit with it some more. Nice rant. It was a joy 
  to read.
 
 Careful, dude. You know the olde saying:
 Say something complimentary about Barry 
 and wind up on the Enemies List.

Doug can be very, um, tactful.

 :-)
 
 Original rant (for the convenience of the
 person who is now going to feel compelled 
 to dump on it):
 http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/message/237892

snicker

Already did, several days ago.




[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-04 Thread WillyTex


  A good distinction, but one still based on the
  view from outside, not the view from within. The
  world might perceive one's life as suffering, but
  that is no reason that the person experiencing 
  that life must perceive it that way...
 
Judy wrote:
 That was kind of Buddha's point, wasn't it, that 
 one need not experience life as suffering? His whole
 teaching was how to *avoid* experiencing life as 
 suffering...
 
The Buddha's point was that we should not strive for 
what we are not going to get.

To do that entails 'suffering' because goals are not 
attained.

His point was to avoid striving for more enlightenment 
than you are going to get.



[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-03 Thread TurquoiseB
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, metoostill metoost...@... wrote:

  --- On Sat, 1/2/10, TurquoiseB no_re...@yahoogroups.com wrote:
  
  For all I know I may be the only person on this forum who 
  thinks this is REEEALLY REEEALLY STOOOPID. But then 
  I believe that that First Noble Truth indicates that Buddha 
  was somewhat of a Wuss. Life is suffering as the basis of 
  all of his teachings? Give me a fuckin' break.
 
 I think the quote is not Life is Suffering but Suffering 
 is inevitable...

A good distinction, but one still based on the
view from outside, not the view from within. The
world might perceive one's life as suffering, but
that is no reason that the person experiencing 
that life must perceive it that way.

None of the experiences you list below involve
suffering unless one *chooses* to experience them
as suffering.

I still say that Buddha was just tailoring his 
message to his demographic, and as stated before
I do not fault him for that. If you're talking to
people whose perception of their lives is that it
has always been suffering, you talk suffering and
the cessation of it. Personally, I would like to
have heard a discourse from Buddha talking to
someone who did *not* perceive his life as suffer-
ing. That would have been interesting. Would he
have preached the Same Old Same Old, or would he
have found a carrot to appeal to the non-
sufferer, as he used the cessation of suffering
carrot to appeal to the sufferer?

 ...one being as pessimistic and imbalanced (yes 
 even really stupid) as it sounds, the other stating an 
 unavoidable reality, as Buddha seems, in that well known 
 story (even if hagiographic or apocryphal), to have noticed 
 that without exception we all will age and die, and watch 
 our loved ones age and die as that is inevitable, and quite 
 appropriately none of us laugh about that, mixed with other 
 more wondrous or awe inspiring experiences.




[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-03 Thread cardemaister




--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Bhairitu noozg...@... wrote:

 TurquoiseB wrote:
  Much is said in traditional Eastern spirituality about
  realization of the Self. Capital S. As opposed to
  that awful lower-case s word, self. But if you 
  analyze what most of the spiritual teachers you revere
  actually said, most of them were teaching that self and
  Self were exactly the same thing.
 
 For those who have realized the Self the self can be hard to find.  
 But it is there as it has to be or one would be unable to communicate 
 with the other selves.  IOW, you have to localize when dealing with 
 the world.  One may go a whole week without realizing they have not 
 focused on the self but then one of these occasions arises when they 
 have to.   Also an enlightened person may act more like a realist than a 
 bliss ninny.  The latter is a show that gurus often put on.


uddharedAtmanAtmAnaM nAtmAnamavasAdayet.h .
Atmaiva hyAtmano bandhurAtmaiva ripurAtmanaH .. 6\-5..

[without sandhi, a bit different transliteration,
that e.g. A  aa]:

uddharet; aatmanaa aatmaanam; na aatmaanam avasaadayet.
aatmaa; eva hi; aatmanaH; bandhuH; aatmaa; eva ripuH;
 aatmanaH .. 6\-5..

Exactly the same word (nom. sing: aatmaa; lemma: aatman)
appears in the above shloka(?) seven times, in different
inflectional forms:

aatmanaa -- instrumental singular (by self)
aatmaanam -- accusative sing. (self-im, like 'him' from 'he')
aatmaanam -- ditto
aatmaa -- nominative sing. (self)
aatmanaH -- (ablative/)genitive sing. ([from/] of self, self's)
aatmaa -- nom. sing.
aatmanaH -- gen. sing.

Maharishi's translation:

Let a man raise his self by his Self,
let him not debase his Self; he alone,
indeed, is his own friend, he alone 
his own enemy.




[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-03 Thread authfriend
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, TurquoiseB no_re...@... wrote:

 --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, metoostill metoostill@ wrote:
 
   --- On Sat, 1/2/10, TurquoiseB no_re...@yahoogroups.com wrote:
   
   For all I know I may be the only person on this forum who 
   thinks this is REEEALLY REEEALLY STOOOPID. But then 
   I believe that that First Noble Truth indicates that Buddha 
   was somewhat of a Wuss. Life is suffering as the basis of 
   all of his teachings? Give me a fuckin' break.
  
  I think the quote is not Life is Suffering but Suffering 
  is inevitable...

 A good distinction, but one still based on the
 view from outside, not the view from within. The
 world might perceive one's life as suffering, but
 that is no reason that the person experiencing 
 that life must perceive it that way.

Erm. That was kind of Buddha's point, wasn't it,
that one need not experience life as suffering?
His whole teaching was how to *avoid* experiencing
life as suffering.

 None of the experiences you list below involve
 suffering unless one *chooses* to experience them
 as suffering.

Chooses isn't quite the right term here; it
trivializes the process and makes people wrong for
having the experience of suffering. 

 I still say that Buddha was just tailoring his 
 message to his demographic, and as stated before
 I do not fault him for that. If you're talking to
 people whose perception of their lives is that it
 has always been suffering, you talk suffering and
 the cessation of it.

Interpreting suffering as material deprivation is
too narrow. Even those who lead comfortable lives
may experience suffering, an inexplicable inability
to be happy and satisfied with what they have, or the
suffering of losing loved ones, or of being ill, or
simply afraid of dying. His demographic wasn't only
the less-than-fortunate in a material sense.

 Personally, I would like to
 have heard a discourse from Buddha talking to
 someone who did *not* perceive his life as suffer-
 ing. That would have been interesting. Would he
 have preached the Same Old Same Old, or would he
 have found a carrot to appeal to the non-
 sufferer, as he used the cessation of suffering
 carrot to appeal to the sufferer?

Most likely he wouldn't have bothered to talk to
them. Those who do not experience that life is
suffering have either achieved nirvana, or they are
in a state of denial.

He had nothing to offer the former because they had
already reached the goal of his Eightfold Path, either
through his teaching or on their own. He had no
carrots beyond that of the end of suffering, nirvana.

And he had nothing to offer the latter until their
lives became so miserable, for whatever reason--
material deprivation or emotional pain--that they
could no longer deny their suffering. The carrot has
appeal only if one recognizes that one is hungry.




[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-02 Thread Jason
 
  Try telling this to people caught in Nazi holocaust, Partition riots, 
Khemer rouge genocide in Cambodia,  Stalinist purge in Soviet Union,  Cancer 
patients,  children suffering from mal-nutrition in third world countries etc 
etc.
 
   Life is not exactly cool for them.  eh.??

--- On Sat, 1/2/10, TurquoiseB no_re...@yahoogroups.com wrote:
Subject: [FairfieldLife] Self is just self capitalized
Date: Saturday, January 2, 2010, 4:14 AM

 
Today's cafe rants are probably going to have a theme.
This theme was inspired by an old friend saying with a 
straight face on another Internet forum that exclusive 
aim of human existence is to break free the from the 
repetitive phenomenon of birth and death.

On one level, I feel for this friend. I used to parrot
this crap myself once, and actually believed it. I now
look back on the being who believed that as incredibly
narcissistic and incredibly lazy and incredibly self-
serving. I too once preferred the silence of meditation
to the noise of the streets, and thus bought the teach-
ings of recluses who were so afraid of noise that they
withdrew into ashrams that the ultimate goal of life was 
to eliminate life entirely. By withdrawing from life and 
living the life of a recluse until one realizes enlight-
enment, and then ultimately by withdrawing from life 
entirely so much so that it never happens again. All 
that would be left is the silence. That was perceived 
as the goal.

Some here perceive that as the goal still. I do not, and
in this particular cafe rap I'm going to rap a bit about
why. Caveat emptor.

Much is said in traditional Eastern spirituality about
realization of the Self. Capital S. As opposed to
that awful lower-case s word, self. But if you 
analyze what most of the spiritual teachers you revere
actually said, most of them were teaching that self and
Self were exactly the same thing.

Meditation -- meaning eyes-closed, withdraw-from- the-
senses-and-the- world meditation -- is the *easy* path
to realization of the Self. You shut everything out, and
if you're lucky you manage to transcend the noise and
experience silence. And you call that experience Self. 
Capital S. If you bought the dogma that the teachers 
revere taught you, you hope that someday this silence 
will be 24/7 and that you will experience it all the time.

Nothing wrong with that, IMO. It's just the belief that
self is something *different* than Self that I don't buy.

Self is just self realizing what's really going on. And
a self can do that as easily in activity as it can with
eyes closed in meditation. If this were not true, then
enlightenment could not exist.

So why do so many *rag* on self, and talk about eliminating
the self, or becoming Self, as if the latter somehow
left self *behind* like a snake shedding its skin? That's
not how I see things, or experienced them during my personal
enlightenment experiences.

I always saw -- and experienced -- enlightenment as an 
*additive* process, not a *subtractive* one. Perception of
everything as silence with eyes closed in sitting meditation
was not any different than perception of everything as 
silence in a traffic jam. My experience was always the 200%
of life that Maharishi talked about. And 200% was always
perceived as more interesting than 100% -- on *either* side
of the equation. That is, 24/7 samadhi in activity tended
to be more fun and more fulfilling not only than 100% lost
in the relative with no samadhi, it *also* tended to be more 
fun and more fulfilling than 100% lost in samadhi, with 
eyes closed.

So I find it difficult to comprehend why so many profess
the latter as their goal in life.

They claim to be working towards 200% of life, but the 
actual goal they speak of is to have the relative half of 
life GO AWAY, so that they are left with only the silence 
of samadhi. They wish to become the drop merged with the 
ocean, Self with *no* self component. 

Seems to me that what they're hoping by believing this is 
that *after* having realized 200% of life by realizing their 
enlightenment, the *payoff* for this is reverting to 100% 
again. 

For all I know I may be the only person on this forum who 
thinks this is REEEALLY REEEALLY STOOOPID. But then 
I believe that that First Noble Truth indicates that Buddha 
was somewhat of a Wuss. Life is suffering as the basis of 
all of his teachings? Give me a fuckin' break.

Life is cool. If the teachers we revere are really to be 
believed, relative existence is not only not lesser than
the Absolute, it *is* the Absolute. 200% of life is being
able to realize and appreciate both simultaneously. 

And yet thousands if not millions strive for enlightenment
*so that* they can theoretically eliminate one half of life.
They set as the *goal* of their spiritual path getting off
the wheel, and ending incarnation entirely. They *look 
forward* to leaving 100% of the relative behind, *rejecting*
the accomplishment of 200% of life, and becoming 100% of 
the Absolute for 

[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-02 Thread TurquoiseB
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Jason jedi_sp...@... wrote:

 Try telling this to people caught in Nazi holocaust, Partition 
 riots, Khemer rouge genocide in Cambodia,  Stalinist purge in 
 Soviet Union,  Cancer patients,  children suffering from 
 mal-nutrition in third world countries etc etc.
  
 Life is not exactly cool for them.  eh.??

Actually, the teaching of every realized being in
history is that life *is* cool for them. Coolness
dependeth not on one's external circumstances. It
dependeth only on how one perceives those external
circumstances. As my man Bruce Cockburn once said:

Little round planet
In a big universe
Sometimes it looks blessed
Sometimes it looks cursed
Depends on what you look at obviously
But even more it depends on the way that you see 

I do not delude myself that I am 'way fortunate. I 
am the luckiest fuckin' human being I've ever met. 
I should have died dozens of times. Or wound up 
behind bars somewhere. I have systematically 
ignored the rules and popular wisdom presented
to me *as* wisdome most of my life. And I have 
gotten away with it.

I honestly do not know which is the chicken and 
which the egg in this scenario. Did I manage to
ignore or break all the rules and have a smokin'
life anyway because I dreamed it into existence
by never imagining that there was any other way
to live my life, or did the good fortune of my
life just tempt me into thinking that the rules
didn't apply to me? Beats the fuck outa me. All
I know is that I have been phenomenally lucky.

Others have not been so fortunate. One could go 
so far as to say that *most* have not been so 
fortunate. I feel for them. So did all of the 
spiritual teachers in history. That is probably
why they taught using the *metaphors* and the
*desires* of the less-than-fortunate.

Find yourself preaching to an audience who believe
that life is suffering -- because that is what they
perceive their lives to have been -- and which
metaphors are you going to pick to convey a way
*past* suffering? Duh. I do not *fault* the Buddha
for starting with Life is suffering. Look at his
demographic.

It's just that lately I am more drawn to teachings
that don't speak to that demographic. There are a 
few of us out here in the spiritual smorgasbord
whose lives have *not* been perceived as suffering.
They've been perceived as one fuckin' glorious 
E-ticket ride, in fact. 

For whatever reason, our lives rocked. They rock
still. Every morning presents a new opportunity for
additional rock-on-age. 

So the life is suffering metaphors don't *work* as
well for me as they might for those who are suffering.
I do not deny their suffering or the desire for a 
cessation of that suffering. It's just that -- for
whatever reason -- I find it difficult to *feel* that
desire for a cessation of suffering or a cessation
of relative life itself. Relative life has just
fuckin' *rocked* for me. In this incarnation and in
several more that I have memories of.

In some of them I was persecuted and literally tortured
to death. Slowly. By people who were *getting off* on
torturing me. These memories -- whatever they are and
wherever they came from -- are part of my personal
memory bank, my recollection of my personal past. To 
me they feel just as real as memories of last week. 

But those incarnations rocked, too. I would not change
one moment of any of them. If I did, I wouldn't be here
the way I am now, and I kinda like here and the way I
am now. 


 --- On Sat, 1/2/10, TurquoiseB no_re...@yahoogroups.com wrote:
 Subject: [FairfieldLife] Self is just self capitalized
 Date: Saturday, January 2, 2010, 4:14 AM
 
  
 Today's cafe rants are probably going to have a theme.
 This theme was inspired by an old friend saying with a 
 straight face on another Internet forum that exclusive 
 aim of human existence is to break free the from the 
 repetitive phenomenon of birth and death.
 
 On one level, I feel for this friend. I used to parrot
 this crap myself once, and actually believed it. I now
 look back on the being who believed that as incredibly
 narcissistic and incredibly lazy and incredibly self-
 serving. I too once preferred the silence of meditation
 to the noise of the streets, and thus bought the teach-
 ings of recluses who were so afraid of noise that they
 withdrew into ashrams that the ultimate goal of life was 
 to eliminate life entirely. By withdrawing from life and 
 living the life of a recluse until one realizes enlight-
 enment, and then ultimately by withdrawing from life 
 entirely so much so that it never happens again. All 
 that would be left is the silence. That was perceived 
 as the goal.
 
 Some here perceive that as the goal still. I do not, and
 in this particular cafe rap I'm going to rap a bit about
 why. Caveat emptor.
 
 Much is said in traditional Eastern spirituality about
 realization of the Self. Capital S. As opposed to
 that awful lower-case s word, self. But if you 
 analyze what most of the spiritual 

[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-02 Thread Jason
 
    Has it occured to you that both of us are an elite minority on this 
planet. I mean how many of us really pondered over the meaning of existence.?
 
    You seem to believe in an infinite series of re-incarnations.  That 
dosen't sound logical to me.  all things ultimately end.

--- On Sat, 1/2/10, TurquoiseB no_re...@yahoogroups.com wrote:
Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized
Date: Saturday, January 2, 2010, 5:08 AM

 
Actually, the teaching of every realized being in
history is that life *is* cool for them. Coolness
dependeth not on one's external circumstances. It
dependeth only on how one perceives those external
circumstances. As my man Bruce Cockburn once said:

Little round planet
In a big universe
Sometimes it looks blessed
Sometimes it looks cursed
Depends on what you look at obviously
But even more it depends on the way that you see 

I do not delude myself that I am 'way fortunate. I 
am the luckiest fuckin' human being I've ever met. 
I should have died dozens of times. Or wound up 
behind bars somewhere. I have systematically 
ignored the rules and popular wisdom presented
to me *as* wisdome most of my life. And I have 
gotten away with it.

I honestly do not know which is the chicken and 
which the egg in this scenario. Did I manage to
ignore or break all the rules and have a smokin'
life anyway because I dreamed it into existence
by never imagining that there was any other way
to live my life, or did the good fortune of my
life just tempt me into thinking that the rules
didn't apply to me? Beats the fuck outa me. All
I know is that I have been phenomenally lucky.

Others have not been so fortunate. One could go 
so far as to say that *most* have not been so 
fortunate. I feel for them. So did all of the 
spiritual teachers in history. That is probably
why they taught using the *metaphors* and the
*desires* of the less-than-fortunate .

Find yourself preaching to an audience who believe
that life is suffering -- because that is what they
perceive their lives to have been -- and which
metaphors are you going to pick to convey a way
*past* suffering? Duh. I do not *fault* the Buddha
for starting with Life is suffering. Look at his
demographic.

It's just that lately I am more drawn to teachings
that don't speak to that demographic. There are a 
few of us out here in the spiritual smorgasbord
whose lives have *not* been perceived as suffering.
They've been perceived as one fuckin' glorious 
E-ticket ride, in fact. 

For whatever reason, our lives rocked. They rock
still. Every morning presents a new opportunity for
additional rock-on-age. 

So the life is suffering metaphors don't *work* as
well for me as they might for those who are suffering.
I do not deny their suffering or the desire for a 
cessation of that suffering. It's just that -- for
whatever reason -- I find it difficult to *feel* that
desire for a cessation of suffering or a cessation
of relative life itself. Relative life has just
fuckin' *rocked* for me. In this incarnation and in
several more that I have memories of.

In some of them I was persecuted and literally tortured
to death. Slowly. By people who were *getting off* on
torturing me. These memories -- whatever they are and
wherever they came from -- are part of my personal
memory bank, my recollection of my personal past. To 
me they feel just as real as memories of last week. 

But those incarnations rocked, too. I would not change
one moment of any of them. If I did, I wouldn't be here
the way I am now, and I kinda like here and the way I
am now. 

 
 


  

[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-02 Thread TurquoiseB
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Jason jedi_sp...@... wrote:

 Has it occured to you that both of us are an elite minority 
 on this planet. I mean how many of us really pondered over 
 the meaning of existence.?

Absofuckinglutely. A critic once said, when discussing
the films of Woody Allen, Neurosis is a disease only
the well-to-do have time for. 

I would suggest that enlightenment and the spiritual
path are things that only the well-to-do have time for.
If we had been born into the karma of *most* of the
sentient beings on this planet, would we *ever* have
had time to ponder them?

 You seem to believe in an infinite series of re-incarnations.

Yes, I guess I do.

 That dosen't sound logical to me.  all things ultimately end.

I do not believe this. 

I think that's an anthropomorphism projected 
onto a universe that never ends. I do not believe
that there is a goal or an end to sentient
existence or to spiritual seeking. I tend to believe 
that, as the Tao Te Ching says, From wonder into 
wonder life will open. I further believe that it 
will keep opening forever.

At least I hope so. I would view reaching a state 
in which I thought I had attained the goal or end
of life as an indication of FAILURE, and a sign that
I should press the Restart button and buy a humility
clue. I would hope that the purpose of life -- if 
there is one -- is that wonder keeps opening into 
wonder eternally.


 --- On Sat, 1/2/10, TurquoiseB no_re...@yahoogroups.com wrote:
 Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized
 Date: Saturday, January 2, 2010, 5:08 AM
 
  
 Actually, the teaching of every realized being in
 history is that life *is* cool for them. Coolness
 dependeth not on one's external circumstances. It
 dependeth only on how one perceives those external
 circumstances. As my man Bruce Cockburn once said:
 
 Little round planet
 In a big universe
 Sometimes it looks blessed
 Sometimes it looks cursed
 Depends on what you look at obviously
 But even more it depends on the way that you see 
 
 I do not delude myself that I am 'way fortunate. I 
 am the luckiest fuckin' human being I've ever met. 
 I should have died dozens of times. Or wound up 
 behind bars somewhere. I have systematically 
 ignored the rules and popular wisdom presented
 to me *as* wisdome most of my life. And I have 
 gotten away with it.
 
 I honestly do not know which is the chicken and 
 which the egg in this scenario. Did I manage to
 ignore or break all the rules and have a smokin'
 life anyway because I dreamed it into existence
 by never imagining that there was any other way
 to live my life, or did the good fortune of my
 life just tempt me into thinking that the rules
 didn't apply to me? Beats the fuck outa me. All
 I know is that I have been phenomenally lucky.
 
 Others have not been so fortunate. One could go 
 so far as to say that *most* have not been so 
 fortunate. I feel for them. So did all of the 
 spiritual teachers in history. That is probably
 why they taught using the *metaphors* and the
 *desires* of the less-than-fortunate .
 
 Find yourself preaching to an audience who believe
 that life is suffering -- because that is what they
 perceive their lives to have been -- and which
 metaphors are you going to pick to convey a way
 *past* suffering? Duh. I do not *fault* the Buddha
 for starting with Life is suffering. Look at his
 demographic.
 
 It's just that lately I am more drawn to teachings
 that don't speak to that demographic. There are a 
 few of us out here in the spiritual smorgasbord
 whose lives have *not* been perceived as suffering.
 They've been perceived as one fuckin' glorious 
 E-ticket ride, in fact. 
 
 For whatever reason, our lives rocked. They rock
 still. Every morning presents a new opportunity for
 additional rock-on-age. 
 
 So the life is suffering metaphors don't *work* as
 well for me as they might for those who are suffering.
 I do not deny their suffering or the desire for a 
 cessation of that suffering. It's just that -- for
 whatever reason -- I find it difficult to *feel* that
 desire for a cessation of suffering or a cessation
 of relative life itself. Relative life has just
 fuckin' *rocked* for me. In this incarnation and in
 several more that I have memories of.
 
 In some of them I was persecuted and literally tortured
 to death. Slowly. By people who were *getting off* on
 torturing me. These memories -- whatever they are and
 wherever they came from -- are part of my personal
 memory bank, my recollection of my personal past. To 
 me they feel just as real as memories of last week. 
 
 But those incarnations rocked, too. I would not change
 one moment of any of them. If I did, I wouldn't be here
 the way I am now, and I kinda like here and the way I
 am now. 
 
  
  





[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-02 Thread authfriend
--In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, TurquoiseB no_re...@... wrote:
snip
 So why do so many *rag* on self, and talk about eliminating
 the self, or becoming Self, as if the latter somehow
 left self *behind* like a snake shedding its skin? That's
 not how I see things, or experienced them during my personal
 enlightenment experiences.

Oh, really?

The fascinating thing is that none of the ways that
these selves-attached-to-their-selves present them-
selves are 'them,' either. Only Self is really 'them,'
and Self doesn't cast a shadow.

--Barry Wright, June 8, 2009 (#221177)

Barry's views about Life, the Universe, and Everything
as expressed in his cafe rants are determined by
whatever he's selected as his dumping target for the
day. Today it's those who value the Self over the self,
regardless of how often he himself has proclaimed this
same value in the past, as in the June post (only one
of many I could have quoted).





[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-02 Thread WillyTex


TurquoiseB wrote:
 But if you analyze what most of the spiritual 
 teachers you revere actually said, most of them 
 were teaching that self and Self were exactly 
 the same thing.
 
Well, I don't know what teachers you've been 
seeing, but no Buddhist would teach the idea of 
'self' or 'Self' - Buddhists don't agree with 
the notion that individuals each have an eternal 
soul-monad.

I always figured that Turq didn't understand 
Advaita Vedanta or the Ramana Maharshi, and this 
proves it! Maybe I should pass this message over
to alt.buddha.short.fat.guy - LOL!!!

 Meditation -- meaning eyes-closed, withdraw-from-the-
 senses-and-the-world meditation -- is the *easy* path
 to realization of the Self. You shut everything out, and
 if you're lucky you manage to transcend the noise and
 experience silence. And you call that experience Self. 
 Capital S. If you bought the dogma that the teachers 
 revere taught you, you hope that someday this silence 
 will be 24/7 and that you will experience it all the time.
 
 Nothing wrong with that, IMO. It's just the belief that
 self is something *different* than Self that I don't buy.
 
 Self is just self realizing what's really going on. And
 a self can do that as easily in activity as it can with
 eyes closed in meditation. If this were not true, then
 enlightenment could not exist.
 
 So why do so many *rag* on self, and talk about eliminating
 the self, or becoming Self, as if the latter somehow
 left self *behind* like a snake shedding its skin? That's
 not how I see things, or experienced them during my personal
 enlightenment experiences.
 
 I always saw -- and experienced -- enlightenment as an 
 *additive* process, not a *subtractive* one. Perception of
 everything as silence with eyes closed in sitting meditation
 was not any different than perception of everything as 
 silence in a traffic jam. My experience was always the 200%
 of life that Maharishi talked about. And 200% was always
 perceived as more interesting than 100% -- on *either* side
 of the equation. That is, 24/7 samadhi in activity tended
 to be more fun and more fulfilling not only than 100% lost
 in the relative with no samadhi, it *also* tended to be more 
 fun and more fulfilling than 100% lost in samadhi, with 
 eyes closed.
 
 So I find it difficult to comprehend why so many profess
 the latter as their goal in life.
 
 They claim to be working towards 200% of life, but the 
 actual goal they speak of is to have the relative half of 
 life GO AWAY, so that they are left with only the silence 
 of samadhi. They wish to become the drop merged with the 
 ocean, Self with *no* self component. 
 
 Seems to me that what they're hoping by believing this is 
 that *after* having realized 200% of life by realizing their 
 enlightenment, the *payoff* for this is reverting to 100% 
 again. 
 
 For all I know I may be the only person on this forum who 
 thinks this is REEEALLY REEEALLY STOOOPID. But then 
 I believe that that First Noble Truth indicates that Buddha 
 was somewhat of a Wuss. Life is suffering as the basis of 
 all of his teachings? Give me a fuckin' break.
 
 Life is cool. If the teachers we revere are really to be 
 believed, relative existence is not only not lesser than
 the Absolute, it *is* the Absolute. 200% of life is being
 able to realize and appreciate both simultaneously. 
 
 And yet thousands if not millions strive for enlightenment
 *so that* they can theoretically eliminate one half of life.
 They set as the *goal* of their spiritual path getting off
 the wheel, and ending incarnation entirely. They *look 
 forward* to leaving 100% of the relative behind, *rejecting*
 the accomplishment of 200% of life, and becoming 100% of 
 the Absolute for all eternity. Go figure.
 
 I do not share their goal. My goal is not to transcend the
 relative but to experience it as *both* relative and Absolute, 
 all the time. And then to *continue* experiencing it as both,
 as long as that continues. I do not seek a cessation of 
 life or a cessation of self or a cessation of seeking. 
 I hope that life is set up such that seeking continues 
 eternally, and that I -- as self or Self -- never tire of it.





[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-02 Thread WillyTex


  So why do so many *rag* on self, and talk about 
  eliminating   the self, or becoming Self, 
  as if the latter somehow left self *behind* like 
  a snake shedding its skin? That's not how I see 
  things, or experienced them during my personal
  enlightenment experiences...
  
Judy wrote 
 Oh, really...?
 
So, I'm going to need some help here, can anyone name 
a spiritual teacher that is teaching materialism, that 
the 'self' is the same thing as the 'Self'?

For those well versed in the Vedaanta the world 
is like a city of Gaandharvas - an illusion.

Source:

'Gaudapada' 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaudapada



[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-02 Thread m 13
meh- ixneh on the negative closing things out
 
To me
more loving and real is to sit with eyes closed and accept with no judgement, 
in fact, with open mind/arms -Welcome each sound, each car driving by, each 
bird talking while flying by,the sound of the air swirling...
any and every sound
all are existing here along with me
Acknowledge each 's existance by just listening and thereby accepting it's 
lifeforce/essence with me
Seems negative to 'delete' sounds
This way I become more aware 
and okay with all that is existing
how arrogant to think I am the only one that is important.
these birds have families and bellies of their own to feed and thoughts-
just listen and do not close the door on them ,
include them in your world
because they are there already
they are there for a good reason
open up the doors of the heart 
and see
heart open link
There is a time for close
(open-close)(breathe in, breathe out)
but my own opinion is that meditation is not the time for close.
Y all can disagree, it is my own experience, that this works for me.
Listen, acknowledge, welcome, let go-
listen...wait, patience, quiet the mind/body,next sound-and so on , and give 
thanks for all.
We need the bitter with sweet, and that with the sounds and people as well as 
foods.
 
 
Commentary by Meow


  

[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-02 Thread authfriend
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, TurquoiseB no_re...@... wrote:
snip
 So the life is suffering metaphors don't *work* as
 well for me as they might for those who are suffering.
 I do not deny their suffering or the desire for a 
 cessation of that suffering. It's just that -- for
 whatever reason -- I find it difficult to *feel* that
 desire for a cessation of suffering or a cessation
 of relative life itself. Relative life has just
 fuckin' *rocked* for me. In this incarnation and in
 several more that I have memories of.
 
 In some of them I was persecuted and literally tortured
 to death. Slowly. By people who were *getting off* on
 torturing me. These memories -- whatever they are and
 wherever they came from -- are part of my personal
 memory bank, my recollection of my personal past. To 
 me they feel just as real as memories of last week. 
 
 But those incarnations rocked, too. I would not change
 one moment of any of them. If I did, I wouldn't be here
 the way I am now, and I kinda like here and the way I
 am now.

The interesting thing is that a lesson learned in one
life may be forgotten in the next, which means one may
have to repeat it in a subsequent life. (Remembering
what happened in one life is not the same as learning
the lesson it represented; either can occur without the
other.)

One may have to go through many cycles of learning a
lesson, forgetting it, and then having to learn it all
over again, until eventually the lesson sticks from
one life to the next, so that one no longer repeats
the mistakes that necessitated the lesson in the first
place.




[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-02 Thread m 13
I m going to choose to revel in my illusion 
 
savor each grain of laughter and chunky salt, and creamy smoothness with a bite 
goats milk, and the heat of smirks.Spice, and texture in all
I love my illusion, full of interesting things to play with and be amused by.
 
wow
three blue jays just now are all sharing the seed bowl!
They most times i observe, are so 'alpha male ' ish, chasing each other away, 
only one can eat at a time-it seems, King of the Mountain type energy.
That was sure nice to see them all taking turns;one deep in the bowl, two 
perched on top.And a sparrow they did not chase away.
How lovely.
 


  

[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-02 Thread BillyG


--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, TurquoiseB no_re...@... wrote:

 Today's cafe rants are probably going to have a theme.
 This theme was inspired by an old friend saying with a 
 straight face on another Internet forum that exclusive 
 aim of human existence is to break free the from the 
 repetitive phenomenon of birth and death.
 
 On one level, I feel for this friend. I used to parrot
 this crap myself once, and actually believed it. I now
 look back on the being who believed that as incredibly
 narcissistic and incredibly lazy and incredibly self-
 serving. I too once preferred the silence of meditation
 to the noise of the streets, and thus bought the teach-
 ings of recluses who were so afraid of noise that they
 withdrew into ashrams that the ultimate goal of life was 
 to eliminate life entirely. By withdrawing from life and 
 living the life of a recluse until one realizes enlight-
 enment, and then ultimately by withdrawing from life 
 entirely so much so that it never happens again. All 
 that would be left is the silence. That was perceived 
 as the goal.
 
 Some here perceive that as the goal still. I do not, and
 in this particular cafe rap I'm going to rap a bit about
 why. Caveat emptor.
 
 Much is said in traditional Eastern spirituality about
 realization of the Self. Capital S. As opposed to
 that awful lower-case s word, self. But if you 
 analyze what most of the spiritual teachers you revere
 actually said, most of them were teaching that self and
 Self were exactly the same thing.
 
 Meditation -- meaning eyes-closed, withdraw-from-the-
 senses-and-the-world meditation -- is the *easy* path
 to realization of the Self. You shut everything out, and
 if you're lucky you manage to transcend the noise and
 experience silence. And you call that experience Self. 
 Capital S. If you bought the dogma that the teachers 
 revere taught you, you hope that someday this silence 
 will be 24/7 and that you will experience it all the time.
 
 Nothing wrong with that, IMO. It's just the belief that
 self is something *different* than Self that I don't buy.
 
 Self is just self realizing what's really going on. And
 a self can do that as easily in activity as it can with
 eyes closed in meditation. If this were not true, then
 enlightenment could not exist.
 
 So why do so many *rag* on self, and talk about eliminating
 the self, or becoming Self, as if the latter somehow
 left self *behind* like a snake shedding its skin? That's
 not how I see things, or experienced them during my personal
 enlightenment experiences.
 
 I always saw -- and experienced -- enlightenment as an 
 *additive* process, not a *subtractive* one. Perception of
 everything as silence with eyes closed in sitting meditation
 was not any different than perception of everything as 
 silence in a traffic jam. My experience was always the 200%
 of life that Maharishi talked about. And 200% was always
 perceived as more interesting than 100% -- on *either* side
 of the equation. That is, 24/7 samadhi in activity tended
 to be more fun and more fulfilling not only than 100% lost
 in the relative with no samadhi, it *also* tended to be more 
 fun and more fulfilling than 100% lost in samadhi, with 
 eyes closed.
 
 So I find it difficult to comprehend why so many profess
 the latter as their goal in life.
 
 They claim to be working towards 200% of life, but the 
 actual goal they speak of is to have the relative half of 
 life GO AWAY, so that they are left with only the silence 
 of samadhi. They wish to become the drop merged with the 
 ocean, Self with *no* self component. 
 
 Seems to me that what they're hoping by believing this is 
 that *after* having realized 200% of life by realizing their 
 enlightenment, the *payoff* for this is reverting to 100% 
 again. 
 
 For all I know I may be the only person on this forum who 
 thinks this is REEEALLY REEEALLY STOOOPID. But then 
 I believe that that First Noble Truth indicates that Buddha 
 was somewhat of a Wuss. Life is suffering as the basis of 
 all of his teachings? Give me a fuckin' break.
 
 Life is cool. If the teachers we revere are really to be 
 believed, relative existence is not only not lesser than
 the Absolute, it *is* the Absolute. 200% of life is being
 able to realize and appreciate both simultaneously. 
 
 And yet thousands if not millions strive for enlightenment
 *so that* they can theoretically eliminate one half of life.
 They set as the *goal* of their spiritual path getting off
 the wheel, and ending incarnation entirely. They *look 
 forward* to leaving 100% of the relative behind, *rejecting*
 the accomplishment of 200% of life, and becoming 100% of 
 the Absolute for all eternity. Go figure.
 
 I do not share their goal. My goal is not to transcend the
 relative but to experience it as *both* relative and Absolute, 
 all the time. And then to *continue* experiencing it as both,
 as long as that continues. I do not seek a cessation of 
 life or a 

[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-02 Thread pranamoocher
Nice, but Goat's Milk is just plain disgusting!

--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, m 13 meowthirt...@... wrote:

 I m going to choose to revel in my illusion 
 �
 savor each grain of laughter and chunky salt, and creamy smoothness with a 
 bite goats milk, and the heat of smirks.Spice, and texture in all
 I�love my illusion, full of interesting things to play with and be amused 
 by.
 �
 wow
 three blue jays just now are all sharing the seed bowl!
 They most times i observe, are so 'alpha male ' ish, chasing each other away, 
 only one can eat at a time-it seems, King of the Mountain type energy.
 That was sure nice to see them all taking turns;one deep in the bowl, two 
 perched on top.And a sparrow they did not chase away.
 How lovely.
 �





[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-02 Thread BillyG


--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, pranamoocher bh...@... wrote:

 Nice, but Goat's Milk is just plain disgusting!
 
 --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, m 13 meowthirteen@ wrote:
 
  I m going to choose to revel in my illusion 

And of course the Lord gives you that freedom, the choice is yours and if your 
choices are good you'll have an easier time of itBut they say even the 
Sattvic choices and consequences become stale over time, and nothing, NOTHING, 
worldly can compare to the bliss of Spirit. You won't know that until you have 
first hand experience of it, then there will be NO doubt.




[FairfieldLife] Re: Self is just self capitalized

2010-01-02 Thread metoostill


--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Jason jedi_sp...@... wrote:
  
   Try telling this to people caught in Nazi holocaust, Partition riots, 
 Khemer rouge genocide in Cambodia,  Stalinist purge in Soviet Union,  Cancer 
 patients,  children suffering from mal-nutrition in third world countries etc 
 etc.
  
    Life is not exactly cool for them.  eh.??
 
 --- On Sat, 1/2/10, TurquoiseB no_re...@yahoogroups.com wrote:
 Subject: [FairfieldLife] Self is just self capitalized
 Date: Saturday, January 2, 2010, 4:14 AM
 
 For all I know I may be the only person on this forum who 
 thinks this is REEEALLY REEEALLY STOOOPID. But then 
 I believe that that First Noble Truth indicates that Buddha 
 was somewhat of a Wuss. Life is suffering as the basis of 
 all of his teachings? Give me a fuckin' break.

I think the quote is not Life is Suffering but Suffering is inevitable, one 
being as pessimistic and imbalanced (yes even really stupid) as it sounds, the 
other stating an unavoidable reality, as Buddha seems, in that well known story 
(even if hagiographic or apocryphal), to have noticed that without exception we 
all will age and die, and watch our loved ones age and die as that is 
inevitable, and quite appropriately none of us laugh about that, mixed with 
other more wondrous or awe inspiring experiences.

As to those more horrific events which we are at risk to experiencing, that is 
why one of my favorite summaries of advaita is sticks and stones can break my 
bones but names will never hurt me.  Mamma was right, the error of 
superimposition is the root of much unnecessary mental anguish.  But realizing 
that does not neuter the other reality, that sticks and stones can break my 
bones.  Buddha, for what its worth, did there draw a line in the sand and part 
with magical thinking.