Dear Mel,

Don't worry, be happy!   Buddha loves you, and so do I.

--ED



--- In [email protected], Mel <gunnar19632000@...> wrote:
>
> Very interesting..give kindness, and one gets a slap across the face.
JMJM, look out or you'll get more. Be unkind, and one is rewarded with
gentleness. Amazin'..in fact, I've experienced both sides/ends myself
during my young days in the Australian Army
>
> I think Mike has had enough and he's ready to move on. ED being the
typical dualistically-minded Semite suddenly realizes the evil of his
ways and wishes to be forgiven for his 'sins'. Or, ED could have been
having a good belly-laugh as he typed below, but who knows?
>
> If I'm right about Mike above, then BigMind might have taken over.
However, in my opinion, watch the insignificant 'small self'...as that
could be behind the words of reproof towards ED below. When dealing with
irrational creatures, the sounds they emit soon become insignificant. I
simply watch for movement...for the waters of the waves do not discuss
with each other before, during, and after crashing onto each other
>
> ED values the 'small self', as exemplified by the online behaviour
below, unless he meant below as a joke. If my assumptions are correct,
then perhaps to lose 'kensho-tinged' Master Mike would just be too much
and ED's 'small self' cannot let go of the attachment. After all, the
'small self' has to hang onto something, no?
>
> I've worked with children of ages 0-5 years. Babies being babies, they
do what they do. When mother is gone, he cries. When she comes back,
he's happy. This is natural for a baby. There is nothing dualistic about
this. One even sees this with baby animals in the zoo. Normally, how
mother and young interact with each other is BigMind in operation.
However, we as adults in this forum are just that..adults. We don't need
to be needy. Unfortunately, influences from Semite and other cultures
teach us otherwise. Henceforth, we find difficulties due to dualistic
notions we have grown up with. It's hard to say whether becoming an
ordained Zen monk will take care of this problem. If it did, I would
have..
>
> - left all my worldly belongings
> - made myself a robe
> - bought a small cheap bowl, or bowl-like pot with a lid
> - walked out there in the outside world, ready to face misery and
on-coming death from from even the frost in the middle of winter
>
> Would I have done the above? Heck no! Like ED above and below, I'm
also guilty of dualism
>
> Buddha be praised
> Mel



> Mike,
> Whatever mercy and compassion you have to spare will be gratefully
accepted.
> --ED


> --- In [email protected], mike brown uerusuboyo@ wrote:
>
> ED,
> Sure, I can forgive you for those. I can also forgive you for being a
pompous, smug arsehole too, if you'd like?
>
> Mike
>
> --- In [email protected],   ED wrote:
>
> I had wrongly assumed that persons who had realised Buddha Nature
would have also attained the state of Muga: nonself, egolessness, and so
would not at all have been offended by a straight-forward question.
> Please forgive me for my lack of perspicacity and compassion.
>


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