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.
FoibleFullVeteran
The only Buddhist chaplains I have ever heard of was a Tibetan monk who first got his 20-year Geshe degree from the Dalai Lama and were assigned to act as chaplain to a Tibetan regiment in the Indian army. The only comment the made was that the tent he lived in was very very hot.
In the Buddhist tradition, it takes years of learning how to do the practicings, mastering our mind, under the guidance of a teacher. And it is considered wrong to teach until our teacher has assessed us as being ready TO teach. Teaching before we have developes some firm ego-mastery only increases our ego and we create negative karma for ourselves. And it is considered negative karma to teach before we have the inner wisdom TO teach. Buddhism is learning from doing the practices, and this takes decades ... no book or spoken words will teach us Buddhism, because is about inner insight and experience, and words are merely intellectual concepts that cannot convey experience adequately.
We are not enlightened, nor are we perfect Buddhists. Each of us struggles to grow in our own way, and each of us has our individual struggles. But for those who are serious about the path of Buddhis… (View Post)
The "heart storm" you refer to is part of the condition of being human. Next time it arises, don't try to "fix it" with intellectual argument. In fact, don't try to "fix it&q… (View Post)
Transmission of teachings, transmission of power, transmission of the lineage ... you find this in just about all religions. Certainly in Buddhism, Hinduism/yoga, Judaism and Catholicism. Can the tea… (View Post)
It is both. Curiosity is defined as a state of not-knowing accompanied by a drive TO know. The need to know is a direct contradiction of the state of enlightenment .. which is an openness to whatever… (View Post)
Yeah, I moan over things too! My response is MY problem to work with. Whether you take a Buddhist or a Cognitive-Behavioral psychological approach ... we are what we think, and our responses come fro… (View Post)