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Is this description about (meditation 'is' enlightenment) correct?? opinions pls!!
When one meditates properly
He masters all precepts
He doesnt kill
He doesnt steal or lie
He isnt dwelling in a particular state
He is completely living in the moment
Hence when we meditate
We are living as an Enlightened being
Free from the worry around us and within us
Sitting completely perfect
Therefore its true,
meditation is infact 'Enlightenment'
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Comments
The key appears to be 'properly'... whatever that means to you...
But let's not get too sexy here; let's not tie ourselves up in deliciously 'paradoxical' and 'profound' and 'spiritual' knots. Instead, perhaps, it may be useful to consider the lowly sneeze. No one has a problem sneezing ... they just do it... a great, big, whole-hearted and sometimes gooey sneeze. Where is "buddha" or "Buddhism" or "compassion" or "emptiness" or any other $5 construct when you sneeze? Isn't sneezing so complete, so 'utter' that even "sneezing" cannot find a foothold? It's complete and unfettered and as easy as mayonnaise. It's not possible to act "as if" you are sneezing unless you are playing let's-pretend with the other kids. And if you are playing such a game, then everyone laughs because everyone knows that pretending to sneeze is silly: Sneezing is just sneezing and everyone knows it -- no pretense, no "as if" necessary.
An audience member once addressed the Korean Zen teacher Soen Sa Nimh: "Sometimes I feel like such a phoney when I meditate. Such a schmuck." And SSN replied, "You're either a Buddha or a schmuck. There is no in between."
And the same is true for sneezing or being a Buddha ... there is no "in between," no "as if." It simply does not compute. And none of this is a big deal any more than sneezing is a big deal. Our practice aims to get us out from under the in-betweens in our lives ... the imaginative, fretful, joyful, adoring, weeping, elevating, philosophizing in-betweens. Our in-betweens have the power of long-standing practice -- what the hell, we've been doing it all our lives -- but that doesn't mean we can't revise the scenery a bit, relax a little and stop in-between-ing our sneezes, and as-if-ing our buddhas.
Sorry ... got off on a bit of a toot there.
I think that's why it's done, so as not to think about it but to experience it, to let the mind gradually unwind of its own accord and drop off. It's not about knowing what a buddha is already, but about not knowing. I'm not a Zen practitioner so don't take my word for it...
Think you took the "as if" thing a little different than I meant it. What I meant to convey is more like having your nose tickled until you sneeze than "acting as if" you're sneezing. Eventually the sneeze will happen... you don't have to "do" anything (other than set up the right conditions and let nature take its course), which is exactly how zazen seems to be. It's not that you're sitting there meditating and you're a buddha or pretending to be, but that in finding the meditative mind of a buddha this will eventually cause the mind to sneeze (to realize Nirvana).
Or so I think. It seems to be the same basic principle as other types of meditation, down to the bare bones.
Also when he learned meditation from his teachers, he went on because he was not satisfied yet. He didn't think it was the final unbinding.
So to be temporary free from worries or other defilements doesn't mean we're enlightened. Enlightenment is beyond all that.
To me it would also be quite a useless enlightenment; one that only lasts as long as we're meditating.
Metta!
That is a traditional Theravada view. Mahayana, in at least some sects (Soto Zen for example), is different. Zen Master Dogen taught that zazen (Shikantaza) and enlightenment are one in the same. Dogen’s account of Zazen as Shikantaza is that Zazen is conceived not as a means to an end but as a practice of the end itself. Cultivation (shu) is not different from authentication (sho), practice from Enlightenment. If we are practicing Shikantaza correctly, then we are practicing Enlightenment itself. Zen Patriarch Hui Neng also made similar statements. Unless you are doing meditation 24/7, then it could be quite useful!
So enlightenment is beyond meditative states. But that doesn't mean meditation is not useful, or doesn't provide a sense of direction.
Metta!