Hi Marsha,

Please forgive me if sometimes I apply bombastic rhetoric to make a
point.  I appreciate your certainty of No-Self, as it is much better
than the alternative, which is Ego.  Such Ego is wrecking havoc on the
human spirit, imo.  More of you are needed in this Juggernaut of human
"progress".  This mode of teaching was fully developed by Nagarjuna,
as you probably know.  Such teaching cannot be considered "Doctrine"
because that would destroy the message that Buddha was trying to
convey.  I have been taught that Buddha was firmly against Doctrine,
and therefore did not write any of his teachings down.  Buddha was of
course educated and could have done so.  In contrast we have the more
recent "prophet" from the Middle East which initiated Islam.  He was
uneducated, yet he was able to convey endless complex concepts which
others then wrote down verbatim.  The vast difference between Islam
and Buddhism can be attributed to the Doctrine/No Doctrine approach.
The first is a Law, the second is an attitude.  The second can be
discarded as written once the approach has worked.

To firmly "believe" in the No-Self, is the single sided form of
approach that Buddha tried for so many years.  That is, enlightenment
through extreme methods.  While this may have aided in his
enlightenment, he chose to teach through the Middle Way.  This
teaching claims that one cannot get to Nirvana by believing
exclusively in the Self, or by believing exclusively in the No-Self.
In fact, the whole notion of steadfast belief is not an end in itself.
 The purpose is to become free of such "beliefs".  Therefore, when one
resorts to the written "Doctrine" as an end, one is mislead in ones
travels and effectively stays in the same place.  Such "loitering"
needs to be dispelled and one needs to move on.

While I sometimes use forceful arguments, it is nothing compared to
the teachings which I received through various circumstances years
ago.  Buddha's use of rhetoric dispel firm positions of others, was
completely fluid and depended on the nature of the "student".  Buddha
is said to analogize his speakings as a "raft".  He warned the
recipients of his lessons, that this raft must be left behind one the
river is crossed.  Who carries a raft with them once they have reached
to other shore?  No-Self was one of many such teachings of which the
Pali Cannons are replete.  My guess is that he would have been
disappointed with the firm conviction of No-Self.  He himself thought
(as is written anyway), that his teachings would not last more than a
few hundred years, and apparently he was right.  We are once again
entrenched in dogma.

Therefore, the belief in No-Self is appropriate to a point.  The
important thing (imo) is to find out where such meditation brings one.
 Once there, the concept of No-Self is not necessary, and one can act
as if there is Self.  With such new "Self", one adopts an attitude of
altruism towards all "sentient beings".  With Self comes
responsibility; it is the "Self of No-Self" if you will.  However,
there is no longer responsibility towards one's own gratification.
Just the "opposite", it is responsibility towards not gratifying
oneself, but others.  So, I can suggest that you maintain this idea of
No-Self for a while, but keep a look out for the banks of the other
shore.

Meditation on the rhetoric used by Pirsig is for exactly the same
purpose.  It can be considered a Western raft.  Yes, Pirsig does write
that there is no "humunculus" with his rhetoric.  But is that truly
what he saw when he was sitting in his own waste and letting
cigarettes burn is fingers (as he admits to in ZMM)?  Just a question
for you to contemplate, no answer required.  The analogies therein are
not Truths, for Pirsig had realized that such a thing did not exist.
While he cannot remember exactly what that felt like since he was
"treated" to cure him of such "affliction", he is thankful for the
personal benefits that it brought him in his daily life and attitude
once he returned to "sanity".  Such is the power of ZMM which was a
bestseller for a while.

Once one "gets" what is being taught, one can then return to the
"normal" world, and the "Mountains are once again the Mountains" as
they say in Zen.  There is really nothing special about it.  To think
that logic brought one to a special place would be a form of Ego
clinging.  It is not an adjustment of logic that one is after; one is
seeking freedom from such logic.  Words are rhetoric, not truths.
Rhetoric is a painting, one cannot live in a picture.  One
participates in the world and should not try to dictate it.  Such
dictation only results in Bitterness.

Cheers,
Mark

On Sat, Oct 15, 2011 at 3:48 AM, MarshaV <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Greetings Mark,
>
> On Oct 15, 2011, at 2:39 AM, 118 wrote:
>
>> Mark to Ham:
>> Don't take Marsha's word for it.  The No-Self is a meditative technique used 
>> to achieve awareness.
>
> anatta, ( Pali: “non-self” or “substanceless”)  Sanskrit anatman,  in 
> Buddhism, the doctrine that there is in humans no permanent, underlying 
> substance that can be called the soul. Instead, the individual is compounded 
> of five factors (Pali khandha; Sanskrit skandha) that are constantly 
> changing. The concept of anatta, or anatman, is a departure from the Hindu 
> belief in atman (“the self”). The absence of a self, anicca (the impermanence 
> of all being), and dukkha (“suffering”) are the three characteristics of all 
> existence (ti-lakkhana). Recognition of these three doctrines—anatta, anicca, 
> and dukkha—constitutes “right understanding.”
>
>
>
> Marsha
>
> ___
>
>
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