--- In [email protected], anonymousff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> --- In [email protected], Peter Sutphen
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > 
> > 
> > --- anonymousff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > 
> > snip
> > > 
> > > Read the full gita text, quote after quote. Upon
> > > reading that, and in
> > > your personal experience of silence and wholness,
> > > tell us what role
> > > does anger play for spritually absorbed, spiritually
> > > mature people?
> > > Its an experiential oxymoron to me.
> > 
> > It does appear to be an oxymoron, but I see our
> > understanding of these lines from the Gita as
> > incomplete. The enlightened can get angry, period.
> > Some get angrier than others. 
> 
> Or perhaps you are dismayed (or angry) that you get angry and thus
> can't be considered enlightenedd by any Gita-related tradition. And
> your denial mechanisms are so strong you can't see the glaring
> difference between two quite contradictory states: an intense
> corrective focus of a teacher and an explosive chaotic flaming anger
> that the Gita is referring to.


Or perhaps the difference is in the eye of the beholder? Or many other 
possibilities...




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