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Just a rank beginner's thoughts....

Straight_ManStraight_Man Gentle Man Veteran
Ultimate existence? I agree that even Christianity says "all shall pass away" and that it means that what man or woman perceives as reality shall pass away. What remains? Remnants. Consciousness, POSSIBLY.

Consciousness needs knowledge. So limited consciousness can only perceive limitedly. SIMPLE. But oh so complex at the one and same time.

I think verbally to myself, to a degree. I think using words. I think ABOUT words even. And sometimes laugh to myself at my "spinning my wheels."

I do not know the "vocabulary of Buddhism" yet. Does that mean that I think I might in some future present? If I try to learn, yes. But I mean rather than an animal ID me, if my consciousness focuses on accumulating the knowledge I need about the middle way while working to express it instant by instant more and more.

That is part of where I, my consciousness, is NOW. Help mold me into the middle way, you who are further along the "pathing" of the middle way, please.

Comments

  • genkakugenkaku Northampton, Mass. U.S.A. Veteran
    @Straight_Man -- Take your time. Exercise your own good patience and courage and doubt. Find a practice and practice it. On the one hand, Buddhism is more complex than a strand of DNA (all those intellectual and emotional monkeys bouncing around). On the other hand, it is as simple as a smile. But...

    Do not take my word for it.

    Do not take anyone's word for it.

    Find out for yourself.

    Best wishes.
    Deepankar
  • Straight_ManStraight_Man Gentle Man Veteran
    edited January 2013
    What I need is words-- understood words-- so thank you for yours. I already meditate, so Buddhism is a fit in that way. But, a consciousness like mine needs conceptual lumps to process, and for me those are words. So thank you for yours, they will help.
  • ToshTosh Veteran


    Consciousness needs knowledge.

    Buddhism teaches that the properties of consciousness is 'clear and knowing'. I guess when things settle down, for short periods when I meditate, I experience 'clear and awareness (knowing)', not 'knowledge'.

    Deepankar
  • In Buddhism it is said that there is no ultimate existence.

    But just because it is negated doesn't assume nothingness or void or any kind of nihilistic ground.

    Buddhism negates that which is asserted already. So what is asserted already? Inherent existence is asserted. We through language and other factors project inherent existence onto "reality".

    Because we assert inherent existence we can only see in duality or in black and white. We see existence or non-existence, both or neither.

    But "reality" has nothing to do with our conceptual assumptions.

    For instance lets talk about a tree. When we experientially look at a tree with our eyes we see color. Then we see color meeting another color say like the trunk meeting the sky or ground. Onto these colors we project ideas such as sky is blue, tree is green and brown. Then we attach stories to trees like this is how a tree grows, it needs sun, etc. Tree's are paper, etc.

    These are just ideas, though they serve a certain pragmatic function its just a human minds assertion.

    So really we see the world in a dualistic way. We see a tree and then we see everything else apart from the tree. This is a conceptual assumption that has become so embedded into our karmic vision that we cannot perceive without the symbol and referent being apart.

    Out of this ignorance we construct and solidify the world and ourselves. And because of this we suffer because we cling to assumed things.

    Anyways that is just my rant and I know its a lot to digest.

    And a side note about consciousness. You presuppose that there is a consciousness and it can be owned and it is prior to experience waiting to experience things.

    That is a definition of dualistic vision.

    Its like we are knee deep in shit our whole lives and we don't even notice it because we have nothing to contrast it.

    The nondualistic vision is of consciousness as the arising itself, as the experience itself.

    If you want me to simplify, clarify or just make more sense in general please ask.
    Deepankar
  • taiyakitaiyaki Veteran
    edited January 2013
    Okay I totally misread your OP.

    Sorry about that.


    In the present moment, which there isn't a container or a thing called present moment. Its more like we call whatever is arising in the immediate the present.

    So its good to think about the present as a continuous flow of nows. now, now, now, now, now, now, now, now, now, etc.

    These arising are the sensations, the smells, the tastes, the colors (shapes, forms), the sounds, and the thoughts (can be auditory, colors, etc).

    This "now" is always experienced as the body. The mind is always the conceptual generator, which goes hey a bird, I see a bird.

    But what one must understand is that everything is essentially non verbal, non conceptual and doesn't reference anything other than itself.

    So in the moment there is a sound. A pure sound as it is. Then we project distance, space, time, loudness, qualities, aversion towards it, attachment towards it, etc. We give the sound more reality than it has thus we suffer. We give ultimate existence. Sound really, truly exists. Or it doesn't. See the dualistic view?

    The reality of the sound is that it arises due to everything. Think of each NOW as the BIG BANG continually happening then dissolving. SOUND BAM THEN GONE. Then another sound bam and gone. What conditions are required for that sound to be there? You need a ear, you need to label it as a sound, you need the sound to happen, and if we look further you need EVERYTHING.

    The sound in fact is the universe giving its very best and conclusion in each instant without a center, location, source, subject, object, etc. The sound hears the sound.

    And thats a nice view but we can experience this view. Listen and hear sounds. Where is it actually? Where exactly is it? And don't come up with an idea because that is a projection. In our lived experience where is the sound? And we look and we look as we don't find it. Yet there is sound, that is apparent. So we cannot deny its apparent existence, yet we cannot find the source of it, the essence of it. The solidity is missing.

    Thus we conclude that the sound arises dependent upon causes and conditions. The sound requires everything thus this is the inter connectivity Buddhism speaks about. For there to be sound there has to be everything in play, in motion.

    Remember the old saying if there was a falling free and no one heard it did it happen? Well thats what we are talking about.

    The sound never occurred unless one heard it. And one must be there is hear a sound. Because if you take another word for it then its just another idea.

    So examine you immediate experience without conceptual assumptions. Even thoughts are not what they seem.

    I hope this helps.

    Also read this for more clarity, mind you I am not the best writer, nor am I very clear on such matters. But this article is spot on.

    http://awakeningtoreality.blogspot.com/2010/04/buddhism-is-not-what-you-think.html
    Deepankar
  • genkakugenkaku Northampton, Mass. U.S.A. Veteran
    "But, a consciousness like mine needs conceptual lumps to process, and for me those are words."
    @Straight_Man -- OK ... chew, swallow, digest and, of course, shit.
    sova
  • Straight_ManStraight_Man Gentle Man Veteran
    I am asking for clarification, and getting it.

    I think of consciousness as thinking individually-- as a "ness" of that. I think verbally, not in pictures nor diagrams, so can read. I think as I read, then reflect on what is read, in a flow of nows.

    But I am a baby Buddhist, undifferentiated as to subpractice yet. While I do not know what practice in more detail I want, I know from reading here that there are as many detailed subvarieties of practices as there are individuals here in the sense of thinkings expressed. The problem is, like a baby I am lost in Buddhist terms many times reading here. If each explains practice some I can begin to "grok" (as Robert Heinlein had his character make said) what aspects of the practices I can adopt and mold into my now flow.

    I think of knowledge as grist/data for thought. Thoughts to me arise as my own voice mostly-- almost totally. I am lost in reality thinking now, want to break free, and even rants provide some grist, so thank you @genkaku and @taiyaki .

    As a baby I do not even what to ask, so any data can be grist for later analysis/meditation. I gather but have to use the grist I have to process/sort/analyze/meditate on what I add to the grist pile.

  • http://www.amazon.com/How-See-Yourself-You-Really/dp/0743290461/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1357930253&sr=8-1&keywords=dalai+lama+how+to+see+yourself+as+you+really+are

    Buy this book. Its very accessible and goes into the highest wisdom Buddhism has to offer. It also puts a cultural, social, collective and individual purpose and function to what practice and study is about.

    Since you like to think this is a good book. Nagarjuna and emptiness teachings are a pain in the ass to access as a beginning but the Dalai Lama does an excellent job expressing the subtle and complex teachings of emptiness and dependent origination.

    My advice for a beginner of anything is to keep an open mind and most importantly keep practice and study in consistency.

    Good luck.
    Deepankar
  • Have you started a meditation practice?
    Deepankar
  • GuiGui Veteran
    As soon as you think of NOW, it is gone.
    Better not to think at all, IMO.
    Deepankar
  • Gui said:

    As soon as you think of NOW, it is gone.
    Better not to think at all, IMO.

    I'm not sure if that is wise.

    Thinking isn't bad. As thinking is healthy and quite normal.

    I think one should think about the correct things and investigate accordingly.

    Not thinking isn't the goal because thinking itself is suchness in action.

    Its important to understand that there is only the conventional assumption aka symbols and ideas about reality. And there is no reality apart from the assumptions. Thus it isn't ideas that are the problem, it is the clinging and construction of suffering through the proliferation of wrong perceptions.

    Calling a cat a cat isn't really a problem. It is the suffering that results of giving inherent existence and thus moving in a way of aversion and attachment.

    And of course everyone has their opinion on what is helpful and not helpful.

    As a whole I think its all about balance. There is a time to just be and there is a time for serious intellectual study and contemplation.

    Liberation is the result of practice, view and realization.
    Deepankar
  • Straight_ManStraight_Man Gentle Man Veteran
    edited January 2013
    Well, I have been a meditative person, for a long time. So much so that I can forget reality (which is, yes, a series of nows). Which to my mind is full meditation. I am older and disabled several ways, so I meditate in a lot of short periods. Maintaining longer periods of meditation without monkey interruptions is difficult. That is what I need to develop more.

    I only consciously do one thing well at a time. If I get lost in thought/meditation, since I have poor vision and no depth perception (monkey "fact") I almost run into things. So I am used to sitting still pretty much when I want to think deeply (that may be a shit concept set to Buddhists) except when I get monkey "discomfort" and then "move" in a series of nows (I accept that folks use different concepts differently) until the monkey discomfort fades.

    I will get the book @tiyaki and read more about the base concepts, so I may seem to lurk for a succession of nows.
  • So do you do formal sitting meditation, or do you call it meditation when you think about something? Sorry, I am a little confused by what you mean with 'meditation'.

    Regarding monkey mind in meditation it is normal and no reason to be discouraged.
    Deepankar
  • Straight_ManStraight_Man Gentle Man Veteran
    I cannot cross my legs, so I do sit, yes, but in a comfortable chair with my legs outstretched on a padded footstool. My legs do not fold to a cross-legged position any more. I have one hip that is artificial and my legs are chunky. So, yes I sit, but not in the particular ways depicted for Buddha sitting in modern sculpture.
  • Straight_ManStraight_Man Gentle Man Veteran
    edited January 2013
    Monkey to me is things physical, including physicality affecting knowledge retained and lost and used in thought in physically influenced ways. I am too much monkey to escape that, as are almost all of us if not all of us (IMHO).
  • Oh that's fine and good. A lot of people sit in a chair. I do myself sometimes. I just wondered if a formal meditation would ground your curiosity to learn new terminology and ways of teaching.

    For me the most important thing is to notice. Have fresh eyes and relax. And then read something each day. I'm sure you can find a lot on the web or a bookstore. I like the youtubes of Mooji.
  • Straight_ManStraight_Man Gentle Man Veteran
    In a sense, I am seeking a teacher or set of teachers, so will begin with books and reading on the web and discussing here some. I learn terms first from formally taught English and German language analysis, so in a sense I have lots of monkey mind. Once I get enough read data my mind starts cross-corellating by itself, whether I tell it to or not.

    I used to try to schedule meditation (and found that useless), but found I adopt it almost automatically now. I am 59+ years old in "monkey years." First tried meditating when 12.
    Deepankar
  • edited January 2013
    For arresting monkey mind, a method to beginning with may be helpful. Im any firm of meditation focus your preferred way like for instance breathing in and out, use counting in your mind one to ten and then one to ten while do breathing meditation, focus on it, dont bother those wandering thoughts start flowing in but focus on the 1-10 breath calmly, momentarily slow in your own comfort choice of pace. Dont even bother when you feel bliss or tranquility, keep meditate until statelessly bliss feltlessly sort of.
    This is developing the 5 faculties of faith, diligent, mindfulness, stillness and wisdom. For conceptual understanding is essential to explore this 5 faculties in great details.
    Straight_Man
  • Straight_ManStraight_Man Gentle Man Veteran
    Thank you!
  • Don't rank yourself or others, that leads to suffering and all kinds of afflictive emotions. Much advice above already so I cannot personally add anything else really, learn to love you for who you are as that is all you have to work with, get to know the kind and how it interacts with it's surroundings and go from there.
  • Straight_ManStraight_Man Gentle Man Veteran
    Well, we are each limited by monkey mindedness. So, we can forgive ourselves that. I am adding the advice to my other reading.
  • seeker242seeker242 Zen Florida, USA Veteran
    One of the great benefits of a structured meditation practice is that you can sit there and just observe how your mind functions. Even with just a simple breathing practice. Doing "just breathing" you can naturally acquire "wisdom", without needing to "think about stuff". Even if it is for 10 minutes once a day, such a practice can be very beneficial! Doing that you can experience impermanence, emptiness, not self, etc. first hand. So rather than thinking about those things, you experience those things directly without even thinking about them. The direct experience of those things is an integral part of the way. "Thinking about stuff" can only bring you so far, direct experience of them is what can bring you all the way home. :)
  • Straight_ManStraight_Man Gentle Man Veteran
    True, but trying blindly to experience you know not what is also a futile thing. So BOTH is the goal, I would agree with.
  • Reading is like chopping down a tree. Contemplation is chopping it into logs and pieces that you can use. Meditating is like sitting by the fireside and burning the logs.
  • Straight_ManStraight_Man Gentle Man Veteran
    edited January 2013
    But when beginning to work to make firewood of tree, or building material, my brother saws it down. Then he splits it, then he chops it into what he needs. To know what one seeks, some, helps to let one weed out what is not sought, right?

    I grant that it is true that experience is needed and that the experience brings greater progress toward a goal than mere considering the aspects of what the experience should be.
    robot
  • Oh absolutely, the help of one who has done the work before is a good thing.

  • We usually start with a view then move to experience.

    Then once we have experience then we have a wider perspective and we then express from that wider perspective into the view.

    But it is always the case that experience when trusted and explored push up against the view and even go beyond the view.

    There is a Dzogchen saying:

    Trust your experience and refine your view. Both are very important.
    Jeffrey
  • Straight_ManStraight_Man Gentle Man Veteran
    taiyaki said:


    But it is always the case that experience when trusted and explored push up against the view and even go beyond the view.

    There is a Dzogchen saying:

    Trust your experience and refine your view. Both are very important.

    "even go beyond the view" is understood as "modifying the view, expanding the view". Correct?

  • Well to modify and expanding is still the view. To go beyond is to rest in the natural state, which is the seat of enlightenment.

    Ideas have their function until that which governs ideas become aware of itself.

    Prajna wisdom is what cuts through and liberates. And such wisdom is not conceptual but known through correct seeing and letting go.
  • Straight_ManStraight_Man Gentle Man Veteran
    Thank you, @taiyaki , that helps.
  • PatrPatr Veteran

    Ultimate existence? I agree that even Christianity says "all shall pass away" and that it means that what man or woman perceives as reality shall pass away. What remains? Remnants. Consciousness, POSSIBLY.

    Consciousness needs knowledge. So limited consciousness can only perceive limitedly. SIMPLE. But oh so complex at the one and same time.

    I think verbally to myself, to a degree. I think using words. I think ABOUT words even. And sometimes laugh to myself at my "spinning my wheels."

    I do not know the "vocabulary of Buddhism" yet. Does that mean that I think I might in some future present? If I try to learn, yes. But I mean rather than an animal ID me, if my consciousness focuses on accumulating the knowledge I need about the middle way while working to express it instant by instant more and more.

    That is part of where I, my consciousness, is NOW. Help mold me into the middle way, you who are further along the "pathing" of the middle way, please.


    From the post above, it seems in your contemplation, you have realised two concepts; Impermanence and mind only.

    Impermanence is easier to comprehend, as you said, all shall pass away!, Yes, everything comes and goes, decays eventually.

    Mind only concept is a follow up to impermanence, the mind, or consciousness can be sub-divided into 3 areas, which we wont go into now. Suffice to say, the mind is the only remnant after the body is gone. The six senses comprise of 5 physical and one mental component, the mind (consciousness).

    In this concept, the 5 physical senses are all linked to the mind, which then perceives the objects, feelings, sight, etc. So in essence, all are recognized or imprints on our mind. Hope what Im saying is clear.

    Finally, the middle way is about using just the right effort to get on in our daily lives, using moderation. Do not try too hard, like steal, fight or cheat or backstab others to gain our goal, yet do not wait for thing to drop from the sky, again moderation in our actions. Difficult to do as we are in the rat race.
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