Mayka,

I hope you're enjoying this thread as much as me : ) ! I think we might 
definitely be getting tangled up in words, but I'm afraid we're definitely not 
talking about the same thing. As you keep saying, mindfulness is something that 
comes and goes (it's transient), but as I keep saying aware is something you 
always are even before you decide to be mindful. Personally, I don't feel I 
need 
to pay attention to TNH whatsoever (great man as he undoubtedly is). Whilst he 
might have many more worthwhile attributes than me, the one thing he can't have 
more than me is that awareness. Pay attention to and trust your inner-self, 
that 
is your best teacher/guru. I think this is a problem for many seekers of 
enlightenment, and particularly Zen, in that the answer alsways seems to be 
'just around the corner': if I just read one more article/book/wise saying then 
I'll 'get it'. The irony being that all the masters worth listening too keep 
saying the same thing - you're already enlightened now and no different from 
them
 





________________________________
From: Maria Lopez <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Fri, 4 March, 2011 2:02:21
Subject: Re: [Zen] Realization

  
Mike:
 
Mindfulness is both: The technique  in order to produce it and the energy that 
you get through the tools used.  

 
We may both mean at the end the same thing but are getting entangled with the 
words.  

You said that those techniques may be something at the end one will need to let 
go.  Once mindfulness becomes ones natural daily way of living there is nothing 
to let go as that is one second skin. Pay attention to TNH.  Mindfulness is his 
second skin.  He doesn't need to be worried about any technique and yet 
he makes 
use of his in and out conscious breath, most important tool in mindfulness.  
But 
all that is as natural in him as eating, sleeping, sitting down, 
laughing....There is nothing to let go.  We let go something when we cling onto 
it.  There is no clinging in mindfulness.
 
Mayka
 
 


--- On Thu, 3/3/11, mike brown <[email protected]> wrote:


>From: mike brown <[email protected]>
>Subject: Re: [Zen] Realization
>To: [email protected]
>Date: Thursday, 3 March, 2011, 16:31
>
>
>  
>Mayka,
>
>>zazen is a technique. Using the awareness of the in and out breathing to come 
>>back hone to your true home is also a >technique or a tool whatever you want 
>>to 
>>call it.  And so what? .  Why you shouldn't made use of it if it's available 
>>there >for you to use it when you need it?. 
>
>
>But that's exactly what I'm saying! All the above (including mindfulness) are 
>techniques and ultimately have to be let go of. And what is left after they 
>have 
>been let go of? Awareness. Awareness always is even before you decide to do 
>something. You can forget about being mindful, but you can't be anything other 
>than aware. That's why all the great masters say you are already enlightened 
>and 
>there is nothing to do. 
>
>
>
>>Why you should open a can beer with your teeth when you can use your both 
>>hands?. Why you should give to your teeth a hard time >when you have your 
>>both 
>>hands to open it?
>You're stuck on the technique again, rather than what the technique is for. If 
>I 
>tell you how the beer tastes from the glass, why focus on the methods used to 
>open the can?
>
>Mike
> 



      

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