Welcome home! Please contact
lincoln@icrontic.com if you have any difficulty logging in or using the site.
New registrations must be manually approved which may take several days.
Can't log in? Try clearing your browser's cookies.
Contemporary Bodhisattvas: Kurt Cobain
Comments
You can say anyone who does good things is a Bodhisattva. Does that cheapen the value any (of a bodhisattva)?
When I look back at your threads over time, I am beginning to come to the conclusion that you want to start controversy. In your opening sentence you even said, "This will be a controversial proposal".
'Any credibility you previously had with me is now gone.'
I don't understand what the point is of this. It's not necessary, it's not healthy, i'm sure it doesn't reflect who you are, so why bother? If you have a personal issue with me then feel free to PM me and we can discuss it. But in the meantime can we just keep our exchanges respectful, please? I try not to make any personal comments about anyone. I don't have any judgements on you. I don't know you. Let's all just try to stick to the discussion, and leave the personal comments aside.
:coffee:
It is not necessary to give them super human status to appreciate them.
They don't need to be bodhisattvas, angels, pixies or leprechauns to be impressive.
Jim Morrison has impact that Kurt Cobain could only dream about. Same with Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin and any number of living musicians. What about the great Neil Young? Still living and making great music.
Who you idolize depends on your generation of course.
It was the bodhisattva, puppet, avatar stuff that was too far out.
A Cup of Tea
Nan-in, a Japanese master during the Meiji era (1868-1912), received a university professor who came to inquire about Zen.
Nan-in served tea. He poured his visitor's cup full, and then kept on pouring.
The professor watched the overflow until he no longer could restrain himself. "It is overfull. No more will go in!"
"Like this cup," Nan-in said, "you are full of your own opinions and speculations. How can I show you Zen unless you first empty your cup?"
If a fellow decides he's Napoleon and chooses to go on some Napoleonic crusade, well, then there is some reason to step up and say something.
Just saying.
counting down ........
Using different forums and your blog is how you, @mindatrisk , are intending to spread the Dharma.
It is best to stick to the curriculum where ever uncertainty arises and flights of fancy start to take hold.
I really hope you can contain yourself when you are running your Buddhism class for the recovering addicts. You are going to need to be credible or you will lose them fast.
Remember they are vulnerable and are looking for something solid.
I don't generally use different forums to spread Dharma at all, and if you read my blog you'll see I don't talk about the dharma there. So, again, the same problem i've encountered on other threads here comes up again. There are a few of you who seem to feel it is your place to speculate on me, what my motives are, what i'm doing, what i'm like, all based on some words on a screen. Since none of you know a single thing about me, as none of you have met me, for the sake of quality discussion in a discussion forum, can I just suggest that you stick to discussing the subject and leave the speculative judgements aside? I don't comment on you as people because I don't know you. I just respond to your comments.
I love The Smiths, don't get me wrong, I disagree with your assertion here, but it's just a personal thing. I'm not talking strictly about Kurt's music, but his cultural impact, which I think is much bigger than Morrissey.
What is far out about the 4nt?
Buddhism teaches that the solution to life's suffering is found by examining the nature of the suffering itself. Then applying yourself to a new way of living.
Shoot for getting a handle on that. The rest you can take or leave in time.
It doesn't teach us to to look for magical beings who wear humans like a sock puppet.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0079470/?ref_=nv_sr_1
"I'm brian and so's my wife!" ... LOL
also ya know the thought I had when reading this. Why do only "kind and sensitive" types have to be bodisattvas... I wonder if Hitler was one. Think about it. His actions brought about more positive change in the last century then most anyone else.
I suppose on balance it would be difficult to say that Hitler was responsible for more good than bad. It would seem that his life was much more negative, much more harmful, the cause of much more suffering, than it was the cause of much goodness. 125 million people died in WW2. The fact that from this situation some positive things arose in reaction doesn't balance out that immense suffering.
Overall i'd suggest Hitler was still very much in debt. Kurt didn't create anywhere near that amount of suffering. He was very much in credit. The other point is the difference between reacting to and responding to something. People responded to the positives in Kurt and created more positives from that. Whereas people reacted to Hitler's negativity and created positives from it.
However, at the level of ultimate reality I am certain that all is goodness, all is love, all is positive, and all has its place. Hitler was our karma. He was our creation. He didn't gatecrash a utopia, he was a product of problems already firmly present. He provided us with a chance to see ourselves and to reflect upon who we are and what we want. Maybe over the course of the next 1000 years the problems he posed us and the solutions that arose from those problems will mean that his life ultimately was more positive than negative.
It's a difficult one to talk about. We are ignorant beings, it's all speculation. My interest in this thread is less to do with Kurt and more to do with a way of seeing reality, i.e. to see the manifest blessings we receive in as many plays as possible. If you can sincerely extend this to Hitler then well done you, i'm not sure I can, but maybe that is my small mindedness. Ultimately, it's worth thinking about it. All these discussions, questions, ideas are worth reflecting upon.