I am just another voice and not a moderator of this group but I think that I 
can 
speak for all, that you are welcome here.  I am relatively new to the group and 
from what I've been seeing the participating members represent a fair 
cross-section of  Buddhist thought. 

 Bill not Bill! 




Find what makes your heart sing…and do it! 




________________________________
From: Glenn Rogers <rgthies...@yahoo.ca>
To: Zen_Forum@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wed, August 22, 2012 8:20:00 PM
Subject: [Zen] Hello

  
I'm new to this group; allow me to introduce myself. I'm not used to being this 
personal and I feel a bit vulnerable, but I have an inner need to reach out to 
a 
Sangha, since I haven't been able to find one where I live.

I grew up Christian and became a fundamentalist anabaptist pastor. Now in 
midlife, I'm a psychotherapist and Zen practitioner. My primary teacher is 
Thich 
Nhat Hanh and I have also benefited from teachings from Chogyman Trungpa 
Rinpoche, Pema Chodron and the Dalai Lama. I do not follow any religion or hold 
on to any religious beliefs, but rather search for Truth (Dharma) wherever it 
resonates with me and adjust those truths (because of impermanence) as need be. 
I strive (without striving) to experience each moment of life (here-and-now) as 
it comes to me. My worldview represents an attempt to integrate truth from 
psychology (particularly psychodynamic and existentialist), philosophy 
(especially Ken Wilbur), quantum physics, and an earth-centred spirituality. In 
my attempts to find a Sangha, I have found only meditation centres that focus 
more on beliefs than experience or practice. When I share my experience I am 
met 
with comments like, "That's not Buddhism!" I am frustrated to find the same 
resistance and judgment as I experienced in the church. Due to Depression, I 
have been seeing an excellent psychotherapist for nine years. My main struggle 
in life is the fear I have of looking deeply into my suffering and accepting 
the 
strong emotions that come from that. As a psychotherapist (and human being), I 
also encounter other's suffering and I must practice right diligence in order 
to 
manage the pain and anger I experience as counter-transference. I wonder how it 
is that humans can be so deliberately cruel to one another and why compassion 
is 
so difficult to practice. Coming full circle, I realize that I am caught in 
this 
same cycle of suffering--I do not stand outside of it. On the bright side, 
integrating Buddhist psychology (i.e., impermanence, non-discrimination and 
inter-being) has erased my life-long fear of death (heaven just couldn't cut it 
for me!). Through the contemplation of the Buddah-in-me (or Christ-in-me--it 
really doesn't matter), I am learning to love myself more all the time; I'm 
actually kind-of happy with who I am on the Path.

I am in my second marriage; my wife is a wonderful woman who embodies Zen 
wisdom 
without the need for the language. She is my soul mate and companion on the 
Path. We live on a beautiful acreage, surrounded by water and lush, green 
trees; 
innumerable birds (and a few insects, like misquotes!) and other wildlife 
during 
the summer--it's black-and-white in winter (another kind of beauty).


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