ED;
 
Have your claim of being able to breath been credited by anyone with 
credibility?
 
There is no realization of buddha nature.  But just the tools that give us the 
choice to dwell in buddha nature or to dwell in duality. 
 
Mayka

--- On Wed, 23/3/11, ED <[email protected]> wrote:


From: ED <[email protected]>
Subject: [Zen] Re: Add Nothing Extra
To: [email protected]
Date: Wednesday, 23 March, 2011, 23:19


  





 
Mike and Mayka,
Have your claims to realization of Buddha Nature been accredited by authentic 
Zen Masters?
--ED
 
--- In [email protected], "ED" <seacrofter001@...> wrote:
>
Mike,
My question is simple and impersonal: 
What is the benefit to himself/herself or others of a person arriving at such a 
state?
--ED
 
--- In [email protected], mike brown <uerusuboyo@...> wrote:>




ED,
 
Haha, "So what?", indeed! I guess being on a Zen chat forum might have 
something to do with talking about it tho : ) I respect that some people are 
more 'Stevie Nicks' about keeping their crystal visions to themselves, but for 
me, if someone asks I'll try to give as honest an answer as I can. If I'm doing 
a hatchet job of answering those questions then, I can only hope that people 
respect that I'm doing the best with the tools that I have.
 
Mike
 





Mike and Mayka,
Whatever the experience you have that you refer to as your realization of, or 
experiencing of, or awakening to Buddha Nature, Buddha Mind, wisdom-insight or 
kensho-satori, so what?
--ED
 
ED,
 
I may be wrong here, but you still seem to think of 'Buddha Nature' in terms of 
something that has qualities 'out there' that can be experienced and known if 
we just follow certain steps (whether zazen, reason or science etc) 'Buddha 
Nature (or whatever) is not something that is attained, gained or even 
experienced (but 'experienced' is ok if we understand there is no 'I' for an 
experience to happen to). In fact, it's more about dropping/losing than 
adding/finding. 'Kensho'/'satori' are just rough pointers, 'tools' if you like, 
that symbolise a 'state' where our sense of 'I' has been dropped and duality 
has been transcended (Dogen's 'dropping of body and mind' is the best 
description IMO). This 'state' is impossible to be conveyed by words/logic 
although it can be hinted at. How this is done depends on the 
idiosyncronies/personality of the person expressing it and so will always be 
different from person to person. Thus Mayka's method of conveying
 what she has 'experienced' will be different to Bill's. How this 'experience' 
has been further cultivated and intergrated into one's daily living will 
also have a bearing on how it is expressed. The feeling I get on this forum is 
that some people have being practicing Zen for some time, doing all the 'right' 
things, going to sesshins, reading lots of material etc. but have yet to 
'experience' that 'experience' that turns the conceptual world upside down and 
so feel (maybe subconsciously) they have to knock (or hint at) other people's 
insights as just woo-woo or delusional. Just saying. 
 
Mike 
 
 












ED;
 
Budha nature is beyond any form and therefore the buddha nature Bill talks 
about is the same I'm referring to.  The form of the words are only like a 
finger pointing to the moon.  Knowing how to enter into the buddha nature 
doesn't mean in anyway that one is at all time into the wave of buddha nature.  
This requires years of training.  At times live in a monastery.  Attending 
retreats to have a good boost...  Living in the present moment in body and mind 
is not an easy task at all times.  But it doesn't mean in anyway being unable 
to have taste what is buddha nature about.  It's enough to practice mindfulness 
and buddha nature can started to gradually unfold by itself.   This is an 
endless experience of awakening.  It's not an static experience.
 
When buddha nature is absented in me is because I allow myself be drag down 
back by forgetfulness, habit energies, ego....and so goes for everybody else.
 
Mayka
 
 







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