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08-23-2010, 04:46 PM | #21 |
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It is relavent in that it is a realized master's observation how the benefits of meditation are not limited soley to the meditator - because we are all interdependent and to one degree or another share common karma since we are in the same world.
The later add-ons you refer to are the teachings of widely accepted realized beings or those who are called Bodhisattvas. It is the Mahayana belief that all beings are in reality seeking happiness and want to be rid of their suffering and we are Buddhists not just for ourselves alone to transcend suffering but because we see it as a vehicle to bring enlightenment to all. Mahayana Buddhists believe in a dark age when the Buddhist teachings will be lost - all humans will have to help them then are the Bodhisattvas who will remain of their own free will in samsara to help others become liberated and so that there is sufficient virtue in the world to bring about the manifestation of the next Buddha - Maitreya. |
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08-23-2010, 05:09 PM | #22 |
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It is relavent in that it is a realized master's observation... I'm not saying I found anything nasty about the teachers in any way... but what I did see was a number of different Tibetan men always with texts in front of them which they had been repeating since they were tiny children, receiving a lot adulation. (and who all had almost identical word-for-word answers to any questions after their "teachings"). Sure some of them had some insight in one-to-one conversations, but not always, and not exclusively. The later add-ons you refer to are the teachings of widely accepted realized beings or those who are called Bodhisattvas But they aren't necessarily the teachings of the Buddha It is the Mahayana belief ...... Mahayana Buddhists believe ....... Why are you telling me this? I already mentioned my offline experience in that area. |
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08-23-2010, 05:15 PM | #23 |
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Aloka-D, I am sorry to hear about your earlier experiences with Buddhism being unsatisfactory but happy you have found a way, which is more suitable for you. That is one of the great things about the Dharma - it is so vast and so profound - there is room for everyone here - you can go on a three year retreat, a three month retreat or a three minute retreat - you can study and recite one sutra, ten sutras, a hundred sutras or more than 1,000 sutras - you can recite mantras and light incense or not as you please. Even the precepts and vows are not necessarily obligatory - plenty of Buddhists don't mind the odd glass of wine when they claim it does not affect their mindfulness or meditation.
Andyrobyn, I am very happy your family is benefiting from your practice. |
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08-23-2010, 06:23 PM | #24 |
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Aloka-D, I am sorry to hear about your earlier experiences with Buddhism being unsatisfactory but happy you have found a way, which is more suitable for you. That is one of the great things about the Dharma - it is so vast and so profound - there is room for everyone here |
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08-23-2010, 07:30 PM | #26 |
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I do get that vibe from you Aloka-D and that is different from when we last spoke, if you are good with that then good I think this is now becoming very personal -so back to the topic. |
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08-23-2010, 07:49 PM | #27 |
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Personal is where it is at for me - lol ... anything else is not so "deep " - or analytical, in my experience - also do not want to make any one uncomfortable or go off topic xx xx |
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08-23-2010, 10:50 PM | #29 |
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Perhaps it's the difference between the Theravada motivation and the Mahayana motivation we are talking about here. From the forum of Lama Shenpen Rinpoche's Dharmaling Congregation: The difference is mainly in the motivation. Theravada practitioners will focus on reaching Nirvana, Emptiness, and once reached, will remain in it for eons! Mahayana practitioners will focus on helping others, wishing to reach omniscience for the sake of the others, reaching Emptiness as a means, not a goal. It adds some specific practices to transform every moment in practice, transforming the perceptions, the energies directly into the pristine nature of the Buddha practiced. The things that have been added -- oracles, deity worship, etc -- are practices that the Buddha specifically denied the efficacy of. The Therevada vehicle tends to rely only on Shakyamuni and his teachings whereas the Mahayana way takes into account Bodhisattvas and other Buddhas and their teachings and help. However, there are some who focus on the teachings of the Buddha, which are not in any need of embellishment or "improvement" from other, later, self-proclaimed "Buddhas and Bodhisattvas". "If we can attain nondual, nonconceptual awareness in meditation As our meditation becomes effective, the attitude of others towards us begins to change, and they themselves begin to turn inward and to search with greater conscientiousness through the stuff of their own minds and lives for spiritual solutions to their own problems. And that this only comes about through their version of "attain[ing] nondual, nonconceptual awareness" in meditation...? ...how the benefits of meditation are not limited soley to the meditator The later add-ons you refer to are the teachings of widely accepted realized beings or those who are called Bodhisattvas. It is the Mahayana belief that all beings are in reality seeking happiness and want to be rid of their suffering ... ...and we are Buddhists not just for ourselves alone to transcend suffering... but because we see it as a vehicle to bring enlightenment to all. Mahayana Buddhists believe in a dark age when the Buddhist teachings will be lost Funny that you say "Buddhist teachings" rather than "the Buddha's teachings". Whose teachings are the most relevant here? |
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08-23-2010, 10:55 PM | #30 |
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08-30-2010, 03:17 AM | #31 |
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i'm sure TNH is a truly wonderful person and obviously far more advanced than myself -and I do understand this approach ....but it also seems very romantic and unrealistic. It appears to me that one needs to be a fairly advanced practitioner to have the penetrating awareness that encompasses a deeper non-emotional understanding of another person and their needs |
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08-30-2010, 03:55 AM | #32 |
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