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Example of how deluded we are.

jlljll Veteran
edited July 2011 in Buddhism Basics
My teacher asked us a question recently. If your lover spit
into a cup and ask you to lick the saliva, how would you react?
But how do you feel when your lover gives you a passionate
french kiss?
«13

Comments

  • personperson Don't believe everything you think The liminal space Veteran
    edited July 2011
    I get what these kind of teachings are pointing at but, for me, in the end, context matters. A kiss is more than just swapping spit. If someone wanted to drill a hole in your head, how would you react? But how would you feel if a doctor wanted to drill a hole in your head to alleviate pressure of a swelling brain due to an accident?
  • aMattaMatt Veteran
    Your teacher does sound deluded. Thanks for the example!
  • RicRic
    edited July 2011
    what a bad attempt at showing delusion. Your teacher must be a horribly sloppy kisser. I know when I kiss I dont form a ball of saliva and try to transfer it.

    and I think most women would be repulsed if I tried to "spit" into their mouth.
  • genkakugenkaku Northampton, Mass. U.S.A. Veteran
    A determined and constant meditation practice is empirically more useful than a million "what if" questions.
  • @person
    I get what these kind of teachings are pointing at but, for me, in the end, context matters. A kiss is more than just swapping spit. If someone wanted to drill a hole in your head, how would you react? But how would you feel if a doctor wanted to drill a hole in your head to alleviate pressure of a swelling brain due to an accident?
    apples and oranges....your need for brain operation is a requirement for your physical survival...
    a kiss from your lover is the feeling of lust, a mind fabrication.
    You won't take salvia from a glass but we are ok to take salvia from our lover's mouth...at the end the reality is you are getting the salvia...the rest is the story your mind is making up, and then you are in delusion...

    Your teacher gave a great example jll...

  • personperson Don't believe everything you think The liminal space Veteran
    @person
    I get what these kind of teachings are pointing at but, for me, in the end, context matters. A kiss is more than just swapping spit. If someone wanted to drill a hole in your head, how would you react? But how would you feel if a doctor wanted to drill a hole in your head to alleviate pressure of a swelling brain due to an accident?
    apples and oranges....your need for brain operation is a requirement for your physical survival...
    a kiss from your lover is the feeling of lust, a mind fabrication.
    You won't take salvia from a glass but we are ok to take salvia from our lover's mouth...at the end the reality is you are getting the salvia...the rest is the story your mind is making up, and then you are in delusion...

    Your teacher gave a great example jll...

    Reduction of lust is what the teaching is getting at and I get that. I just don't care for them because drinking spit isn't the same as kissing. Physical survival compared to lust is apples to oranges, I'd just rather listen to the downside of lust and attachment than using this type of analogy. But if reflecting on the ugly aspects of the body helps one reduce attachment then go for it.
  • edited July 2011
    A determined and constant meditation practice is empirically more useful than a million "what if" questions.
    Really. This is a "straw man" question bordering on the idiotic.

    And the actual physical sharing of saliva, or other bodily fluids for that matter, in the usual and proper context is just a lot more pleasant.

  • VincenziVincenzi Veteran
    edited July 2011
    that is a lame metaphor.
  • reminds me of Jerry Seinfeld talking about how we love someone's hair when it's attached to thier head, but if we found one in our food it is completely gross. Not to mention pubes in the soap. :hair:

    I think it's a good example of how we project meaning onto things and how those meanings affect our mood and emotions unnecessarily.
  • auraaura Veteran
    edited July 2011
    I think the question provides a very good contemplation of the difference between the intention of control and the intention of mutuality.
    The question of control v. mutuality is by far the most dominant and pressing question of our era.
  • DhammaDhatuDhammaDhatu Veteran
    edited July 2011
    @jll Your teacher does sound deluded. Thanks for the example!

    Also, your posts seem to imitate the style of your teacher.

    In brief, this style tries too hard to pry open & get into people's heads. It is intrusion; trespass.

  • DhammaDhatuDhammaDhatu Veteran
    edited July 2011
    But how do you feel when your lover gives you a passionate french kiss?
    Your teacher is insulting the love & necessary relationships of ordinary people

    Why did I post a 2nd time? Due to the delusions of your so-called 'teacher'. :-/
  • I agree with Dhamma Dhatu, the deluded is the teacher... the example tries to hard and fails.
  • seeker242seeker242 Zen Florida, USA Veteran
    edited July 2011
    My teacher asked us a question recently. If your lover spit
    into a cup and ask you to lick the saliva, how would you react?
    But how do you feel when your lover gives you a passionate
    french kiss?
    Jil's teacher is not deluded you people! :) This is a perfect example of how your body and the body of others, and it's elements, are "nice and comfy" when it's elements are still part of it. However, the second that they are no longer part of it, those elements all of a sudden become "nasty and disgusting", when in fact they are still the same thing. Why is that? That is a direct contradiction! The elements are either disgusting or not disgusting. The delusion is how the elements of the body are "nice and comfy" when they actually aren't! The body is simply a conglomeration of skin, bones, spit, piss and shit, etc. All of which is disgusting regardless if it is inside the body or not! The delusion is thinking the body is nice and comfy, when it is really just a waking corpse.

  • I think there may be a sutra advicing against going to the extreme of viewing the body as disgusting... it is impermanet, but seeing it as "dirty" isn't conducive to Nirvana.
  • seeker242seeker242 Zen Florida, USA Veteran
    I think there may be a sutra advicing against going to the extreme of viewing the body as disgusting... it is impermanet, but seeing it as "dirty" isn't conducive to Nirvana.
    They say just the opposite actually. http://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/authors/khantipalo/wheel271.html



  • @seeker242

    too many sutras, why you don't just say the exact sutra?
  • MindGateMindGate United States Veteran
    I'd do it... does that make me weird?
  • seeker242seeker242 Zen Florida, USA Veteran
    edited July 2011
    @seeker242

    too many sutras, why you don't just say the exact sutra?
    Because there are so many :) Here are a couple though.

    "Come, bhikkhus, abide contemplating ugliness in the body, perceiving repulsiveness in nutriment, perceiving disenchantment with all the world, contemplating impermanence in all formations."

    — M. 50, trans. Ven. Ñanamoli

    The Blessed One said this: "This is the direct path for the purification of beings, for the overcoming of sorrow & lamentation, for the disappearance of pain & distress, for the attainment of the right method, & for the realization of Unbinding — in other words, the four frames of reference. Which four?

    "There is the case where a monk remains focused on the body in & of itself — ardent, alert, & mindful — putting aside greed & distress with reference to the world.

    "And how does a monk remain focused on the body in & of itself?

    [6] "Furthermore, as if he were to see a corpse cast away in a charnel ground — one day, two days, three days dead — bloated, livid, & festering, he applies it to this very body, 'This body, too: Such is its nature, such is its future, such its unavoidable fate'...

    "Or again, as if he were to see a corpse cast away in a charnel ground, picked at by crows, vultures, & hawks, by dogs, hyenas, & various other creatures... a skeleton smeared with flesh & blood, connected with tendons... a fleshless skeleton smeared with blood, connected with tendons... a skeleton without flesh or blood, connected with tendons... bones detached from their tendons, scattered in all directions — here a hand bone, there a foot bone, here a shin bone, there a thigh bone, here a hip bone, there a back bone, here a rib, there a breast bone, here a shoulder bone, there a neck bone, here a jaw bone, there a tooth, here a skull... the bones whitened, somewhat like the color of shells... piled up, more than a year old... decomposed into a powder: He applies it to this very body, 'This body, too: Such is its nature, such is its future, such its unavoidable fate.'

    "In this way he remains focused internally on the body in & of itself, or externally on the body in & of itself, or both internally & externally on the body in & of itself. Or he remains focused on the phenomenon of origination with regard to the body, on the phenomenon of passing away with regard to the body, or on the phenomenon of origination & passing away with regard to the body. Or his mindfulness that 'There is a body' is maintained to the extent of knowledge & remembrance. And he remains independent, unsustained by (not clinging to) anything in the world. This is how a monk remains focused on the body in & of itself.
    ~MN 10


    "Now what, monks, is the allure of forms? Suppose there were a maiden of the noble caste, the brahman caste, or the householder class, fifteen or sixteen years old, neither too tall nor too short, neither too thin nor too plump, neither too dark nor too pale. Is her beauty & charm at that time at its height?"

    "Yes, lord."

    "Whatever pleasure & joy arise in dependence on that beauty & charm: That is the allure of forms."

    "And what is the drawback of forms? There is the case where one might see that very same woman at a later time, when she's eighty, ninety, one hundred years old: aged, roof-rafter crooked, bent-over, supported by a cane, palsied, miserable, broken-toothed, gray-haired, scanty-haired, bald, wrinkled, her body all blotchy. What do you think: Has her earlier beauty & charm vanished, and the drawback appeared?"

    "Yes, lord."

    "This, monks, is the drawback of forms.

    "Again, one might see that very same woman sick, in pain, & seriously ill, lying soiled with her own urine & excrement, lifted up by others, laid down by others. What do you think: Has her earlier beauty & charm vanished, and the drawback appeared?"

    "Yes, lord."

    "This too, monks, is the drawback of forms.

    "Again, one might see that very same woman as a corpse cast away in a charnel ground — one day, two days, three days dead, bloated, livid, & oozing. What do you think: Has her earlier beauty & charm vanished, and the drawback appeared?"

    "Yes, lord."

    "This too, monks, is the drawback of forms.

    "Again, one might see that very same woman as a corpse cast away in a charnel ground picked at by crows, vultures, & hawks, by dogs, hyenas, & various other creatures... a skeleton smeared with flesh & blood, connected with tendons... a fleshless skeleton smeared with blood, connected with tendons... a skeleton without flesh or blood, connected with tendons... bones detached from their tendons, scattered in all directions — here a hand bone, there a foot bone, here a shin bone, there a thigh bone, here a hip bone, there a back bone, here a rib, there a breast bone, here a shoulder bone, there a neck bone, here a jaw bone, there a tooth, here a skull... the bones whitened, somewhat like the color of shells... piled up, more than a year old... decomposed into a powder. What do you think: Has her earlier beauty & charm vanished, and the drawback appeared?"

    "Yes, lord."

    "This too, monks, is the drawback of forms.

    "And what, monks, is the escape from forms? The subduing of desire-passion for forms, the abandoning of desire-passion for forms: That is the escape from form.
    MN 13

    I like this commentary from the above link though as it really hits at the core issue:

    §14

    Contemplation of the body's unattractiveness is not a popular meditation. People are happy to try to rid themselves of anger and hatred because they are painful. This can be done by the well-known meditations developing loving-kindness (metta). But meditating upon the nature of this body dulls the appetites rooted in greed — and greed is often associated with pleasure. And isn't pleasure what this life's all about?

    Safely bagged by Mara — Death and Lord of the sensual realm!




    The Buddha didn't send his monks to meditate in a cemetery over dead, bloated corpses for no reason. :)



  • VincenziVincenzi Veteran
    edited July 2011
    I prefer the middle path between aversion and attachment/craving, and don't read too much into specific meditation objects. thanks :)
  • seeker242seeker242 Zen Florida, USA Veteran
    I prefer the middle path between aversion and attachment/craving, and don't read too much into specific meditation objects. thanks :)
    What, you don't like dead, bloated, festering, maggot-filled corpses? Aww come on! :lol:
  • @seeker242

    we are talking about the living... I don't feel aversion for the living.
  • auraaura Veteran
    My teacher asked us a question recently. If your lover spit
    into a cup and ask you to lick the saliva, how would you react?
    But how do you feel when your lover gives you a passionate
    french kiss?
    In the first case, your lover is asking you to engage in an unshared and non-mutual activity with an intention that is solely for his/her own gratification/amusement/control/power trip.
    In the second case, the activity is shared and mutual, and the intention is the tender, mutual, shared, gentle gratification of both parties.

    The question forces contemplation of the difference between exploitation and communion, between control of another and communication with another, between pornography and love, between serving and sharing, between disgust and joy, between hell and heaven, between acting with intention that represents a whole lotta self and acting from an intention of no-self.

    Just how deluded is humanity?
    Sufficiently deluded to act all too often with a whole lotta self....
    and miss out on the beauty, the joy, and the wonder of acting with no-self.
    What is the goal of Buddhism? To help one learn the difference!
  • Since this is in the Buddhism for Beginners section, I'd like to give my un-scholarly opinion - I would be uncomfortable studying under that particular teacher. I would be curious as to what type of person this teacher is. I don't know if this question is awkward due to cultural or personality differences.
    I found the question inappropriate and demeaning in a way. Maybe I'm missing something. I don't look at other people and see ugliness- I see them as works in progress.

    -----------------------------------------------
    There is a healthful hardiness about real dignity that never dreads contact and communion with others, however humble.

    Washington Irving (1783 - 1859)
  • DaltheJigsawDaltheJigsaw Mountain View Veteran
    Goodness...

  • In the first case, your lover is asking you to engage in an unshared and non-mutual activity with an intention that is solely for his/her own gratification/amusement/control/power trip.
    This is reading an awful lot into it. Notice how the mind projects that the first act is "bad" or "gross" or "exploitive", but the second one is "good", "yummy", "gentle". Some French kisses (I wonder what the French call them?) can be invasive and abusive. I'd say it all depends on the lover's intent. What's the big deal in swallowing spit? Intent and context are everything.
  • MindGateMindGate United States Veteran
    My teacher asked us a question recently. If your lover spit
    into a cup and ask you to lick the saliva, how would you react?
    I'd look at them funny, and question their sanity. But, its not like I'd be grossed out by it (unless there were food chunks in it).
  • taiyakitaiyaki Veteran
    edited July 2011
    when i make out with a girl sometimes i think about how gross it is. you know swapping spit, so i stop making out with the girl.

    then i just keep making out. it was only thinking and interpretation, which brought me to stop.

    my body was saying yes yes yes keep kissing this is awesome.
  • MindGateMindGate United States Veteran
    Swapping spit is good for you. Thats why the body wants to kiss. It makes the immune system better.
  • taiyakitaiyaki Veteran
    thats some sound logic! back to kissing!
  • MindGateMindGate United States Veteran
    I can't sense is thats sarcasm or not, Tai. If so: :(

    Just like we can become slowly immune to penicillin, we can become more immune to bacteria by exposing small amounts of it to us. Thus, kissing = good.

    And on another note, did you know celibate nuns have a much higher chance of breast cancer?
  • taiyakitaiyaki Veteran
    lol i'm very sarcastic sorry! i mean no harm i swear!

    that's a shame. i wonder if celibate monks have prostrate cancer?

  • edited July 2011
    I can't sense is thats sarcasm or not, Tai. If so: :(
    I think he was saying--any excuse to get back to kissing! Oh boy!
    That's how I read it. (Thanks for the food chunks detail, MG. (now that was sarcastic--my "thanks", I mean.))

  • zenffzenff Veteran
    My teacher asked us a question recently. If your lover spit
    into a cup and ask you to lick the saliva, how would you react?
    But how do you feel when your lover gives you a passionate
    french kiss?
    How exactly is this an example of our delusion?

    We can experience disgust. We can experience bliss. And the circumstances are almost the same. Sometimes the circumstances are exactly the same and all it takes is looking at the same thing from another perspective.

    All our fixed ideas are delusions. That’s the lesson.

    Maybe your teacher was trying to pass a fixed idea like “the human body is disgusting” or “sexual desire is a hindrance on our path to enlightenment”.
    If that’s the case he misses the point of his own example (imo).


  • DaltheJigsawDaltheJigsaw Mountain View Veteran
    lol i'm very sarcastic sorry! i mean no harm i swear!

    that's a shame. i wonder if celibate monks have prostrate cancer?

    I wonder the same thing!
  • zombiegirlzombiegirl beating the drum of the lifeless in a dry wasteland Veteran
    I can't sense is thats sarcasm or not, Tai. If so: :(

    Just like we can become slowly immune to penicillin, we can become more immune to bacteria by exposing small amounts of it to us. Thus, kissing = good.

    And on another note, did you know celibate nuns have a much higher chance of breast cancer?
    fascinating bit about the bacteria.

    about the nuns, that's probably because women who don't have kids have a slightly higher risk of developing breast cancer.
  • zenffzenff Veteran
    Off topic maybe, but celibate monks probably have a normal risk of prostate cancer.

    http://ehealthmd.com/content/what-causes-prostate-cancer

  • zenffzenff Veteran
    Prostrate cancer. :)
    It took the spell check for me to see that one!

  • Bodha8Bodha8 Veteran
    I hope we can all see, that this thread is an example, of how far off the path we are from the precept of Right Speech.

    With Metta
  • MindGateMindGate United States Veteran
    How so, Bodha8?
  • ridiculous question, I hope there were lot's of ironic answers! lol
  • Prostrate cancer. :)
    It took the spell check for me to see that one!

    Still incorrect. It's prostate cancer. My spell check is fine.
  • personperson Don't believe everything you think The liminal space Veteran
    reminds me of Jerry Seinfeld talking about how we love someone's hair when it's attached to thier head, but if we found one in our food it is completely gross. Not to mention pubes in the soap. :hair:
    I feel that this is a much better analogy. When we like someone's hair who we feel attraction towards its pleasant when on their head but not when in the food. When we kiss someone we're not into it to get the spit and we like it because its in their mouth and not in a cup, generally we kiss in spite of the spit.

    It's a classic style of teaching to reduce our lust for the body to look at our reaction to the parts and fluids of a body outside of the context of the person of our attachment. I don't think teaching that makes the teacher deluded or anything I just think its a poor analogy.
  • DhammaDhatuDhammaDhatu Veteran
    edited July 2011
    Because there are so many :) Here are a couple though.
    Those suttas are for monks, those gone forth from the household life.

    When there are sexually active laypeople in an audience, it is not appropriate or moral to attempt to persuade those laypeople to renounce their sexuality.

    This is not dhammic.

    When a human being gives up sexuality, it is appropriate they do it via their own insight; via their own sense of unsatisfactoriness towards it

    Try to see the world clearly, like a Buddha, rather than viewing the world idiosyncratically.

    The Buddha taught laypeople as follows. :)
    Husband & wife, both of them
    having conviction,
    being responsive,
    being restrained,
    living by the Dhamma,
    addressing each other
    with loving words:
    they benefit in manifold ways.
    To them comes bliss.
    Their enemies are dejected
    when both are in tune in virtue.
    Having followed the Dhamma here in this world,
    both in tune in precepts & practices,
    they delight in the world of the devas,
    enjoying the pleasures they desire.

    http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/an/an04/an04.055.than.html
    13. (4) "Again, the Tathagata understands as it actually is the world with its many and different elements. That too is a Tathagata's power...

    14. (5) "Again, the Tathagata understands as it actually is how beings have different inclinations. That too is a Tathagata's power...

    15. (6) "Again, the Tathagata understands as it actually is the disposition of the faculties of other beings, other persons. That too is a Tathagata's power...

    http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/mn/mn.012.ntbb.html






  • DhammaDhatuDhammaDhatu Veteran
    edited July 2011
    too many sutras, why you don't just say the exact sutra?
    you can quote suttas until the cows come home but it is still unrelated to Dhamma

    :coffee:
    How, bhikkhus, does there come to be extolling and disparaging and failure to teach only the Dhamma? When one says:

    "All those engaged in the pursuit of the enjoyment of one whose pleasure is linked to sensual desires - low, vulgar, coarse, ignoble and unbeneficial - is a state beset by suffering, vexation, despair and fever and it is the wrong path (micchāpaṭipadā)", one disparages some.

    And how, bhikkhus, does there come to be neither extolling and disparaging but teaching only the Dhamma? When one instead says:

    "The pursuit is a state beset by suffering, vexation, despair and fever and it is the wrong path (micchāpaṭipadā)", then one teaches only the Dhamma.

    MN 139: Aranavibhanga Sutta: The Exposition of Non-Conflict

    :)

  • DhammaDhatuDhammaDhatu Veteran
    edited July 2011
    Jil's teacher is not deluded you people! :)
    I have demonstrated above, from the Lord Buddha's own lips, that both your mind and Jil's teacher are deluded. :buck: :wow:
  • My teacher asked us a question recently. If your lover spit
    into a cup and ask you to lick the saliva, how would you react?
    But how do you feel when your lover gives you a passionate
    french kiss?
    It's a harsh example, but nobody should criticize your teacher. It is making a very valid point about the emptiness of perceptions, and making it very well. The sutras and teachings, especially in the Zen tradition, are full of teachers using much worse examples than this.

    The Teacher knows full well there is a difference between "swapping spit" by kissing, and simply spitting into a cup and handing it to a lover. The difference is in our perceptions, not the end result, and that's the teaching.

    I am interested in how quickly people rejected the teaching because the image made you uncomfortable. But you'll remember the teaching, won't you? A vivid mental image is one way of breaking through words to the understanding.




  • DhammaDhatuDhammaDhatu Veteran
    edited July 2011
    ...nobody should criticize your teacher.
    I have quoted above, from the Lord Buddha's own lips, which censure this deluded teacher. Yet you wish to instruct the Lord Buddha? :eek2: :screwy:
  • CinorjerCinorjer Veteran
    edited July 2011
    Dhamma, the Lord Buddha speaks for himself and Buddhism is more than just memorizing the ancient sutras. You are enough of a scholar like myself, to know about the concept of Upaya or "Expedient Means". Teachers may use their own specific methods or techniques in order to cease suffering and introduce others to the Dharma. Those methods will not look or sound anything like the Buddha's legalistic method of question-and-answer dialog.

    The point that the teacher is making about emptiness of the skandhas is a valid one. It is not the way I would teach it, but Jil is not my student and I'm not that teacher.

    Someone asked Master Tozan, "What is essence of Buddha-Nature?"
    Master Tozan answered, "The cowshit in the fields and the Buddha in the temples is the same."

    Compared to this old fart of a Master, the one Jil is listening to is hardly extreme.

  • aMattaMatt Veteran
    edited July 2011
    As a lesson on delusion it is a poor one, in my opinion, because it incorrectly corelates two phenomena. If we remove the context of feeling love and passion for each other, most social conventions are like this.

    I called the example itself deluded, because it is eternalizing the form of spit, approaching the spit as an independent object outside of its context. This isn't helpful. Such as "we kill mosquitoes, but gasp and are appaled when someone kills their babies." Here, killing is the eternalized pattern of mind without context driving it.

    Perhaps if the OP title was "an example of the irony of context", the context of the teaching would be the kiss, not the cup. :)
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