Re: [Zen] Re: Intellectualizing -

2013-07-02 Thread pandabananasock

Thought : Experience :: Masturbation : Sex

Bill the the cartoon character whose crazy buddy says "Thanks, I needed that" 
after Bill slaps him.

By the way, does anyone else see the humor: Bill posts about the frivolity of 
intellectualizing, and people immediately start ripping his semantics to 
shreds.  Did anyone even READ his post, or did they just do as most people in 
conversation, which is to count down the seconds until the other person stops 
talking so that their own point can be made?  Do you also complain that a 
painting of a fire gives no actual heat or light?

There is no mindfulness to be found on this forum, only signposts, and a sign 
is not the place to which it points (except the one that says "If you lived 
here, you'd be home by now!)

On Tue, 7/2/13, Bill!  wrote:

 Subject: [Zen] Re: Intellectualizing -
 To: Zen_Forum@yahoogroups.com
 Date: Tuesday, July 2, 2013, 6:03 AM
 
 ABSOLUTELY!
 
 Although I'd even drop the list of "see, hear, touch, taste,
 smell,*" and just use the word 'experience'.  When
 you're just experiencing (Buddha Nature) there is no
 discrimination between seeing, hearing, touching, tasting
 and smelling.  It's all Just THIS!
 
 * I've intentionally left out "think" because I do not
 consider that an experience and not part of Buddha
 Nature.  I know that's not orthodox, but that's what I
 have experienced and now believe.
 
 ...Bill! 
 
 
 --- In Zen_Forum@yahoogroups.com,
 "pudgala2"  wrote:
 >
 > 
 > As soon as you see something,
 > The unenlightened only see what their preconditioned
 constituent
 > sentient beings (beliefs, attitudes, opinions, moods,
 values, etc.) will
 > allow or force them to see and nothing more,
 > 
 > you already start to intellectualize it.
 > sentient beings automatically process it.
 > 
 > 
 > As soon as you intellectualize something,
 > As soon as sentient beings process something,
 > 
 > it is no longer what you saw.
 > only the mental results of what sentient beings made up
 your mind to see
 > will be seen.
 > 
 > 
 > The Enlightened see, hear, touch, taste, smell, and
 think immediately
 > without opinionated processing.
 > 
 > 
 > --- In Zen_Forum@yahoogroups.com,
 "Bill!"  wrote:
 > 
 > 
 > As soon as you see something, you already start to
 intellectualize it.
 > As soon as you intellectualize something, it is no
 longer what you saw.
 >   ~ Sunryu Suzuki
 > 
 >   I call these intellectualizations
 'perceptions' or 'delusions'.
 >   ...Bill!
 >
 
 
 
 
 
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[Zen] Re: Intellectualizing -

2013-07-02 Thread Bill!
ABSOLUTELY!

Although I'd even drop the list of "see, hear, touch, taste, smell,*" and just 
use the word 'experience'.  When you're just experiencing (Buddha Nature) there 
is no discrimination between seeing, hearing, touching, tasting and smelling.  
It's all Just THIS!

* I've intentionally left out "think" because I do not consider that an 
experience and not part of Buddha Nature.  I know that's not orthodox, but 
that's what I have experienced and now believe.

...Bill! 


--- In Zen_Forum@yahoogroups.com, "pudgala2"  wrote:
>
> 
> As soon as you see something,
> The unenlightened only see what their preconditioned constituent
> sentient beings (beliefs, attitudes, opinions, moods, values, etc.) will
> allow or force them to see and nothing more,
> 
> you already start to intellectualize it.
> sentient beings automatically process it.
> 
> 
> As soon as you intellectualize something,
> As soon as sentient beings process something,
> 
> it is no longer what you saw.
> only the mental results of what sentient beings made up your mind to see
> will be seen.
> 
> 
> The Enlightened see, hear, touch, taste, smell, and think immediately
> without opinionated processing.
> 
> 
> --- In Zen_Forum@yahoogroups.com, "Bill!"  wrote:
> 
> 
> As soon as you see something, you already start to intellectualize it.
> As soon as you intellectualize something, it is no longer what you saw.
>   ~ Sunryu Suzuki
> 
>   I call these intellectualizations 'perceptions' or 'delusions'.
>   ...Bill!
>





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[Zen] Re: Intellectualizing -

2013-07-02 Thread Bill!
Joe,

This quote doesn't bother me as it does you.  I read Suzuki's 'see' as already 
perceiving.  If you're 'seeing' something you're already intellectualizing it. 
You've already created pluarlity - a seer and a seen..  If you are just 
experiencing (Buddha Nature) there is no 'see' and of course no 
intellectualizing - Just THIS!

...Bill!

--- In Zen_Forum@yahoogroups.com, "Joe"  wrote:
>
> Yes, Bill!
> 
> quoting:
> "As soon as you see something, you already start to intellectualize it. As 
> soon as you intellectualize something, it is no longer what you saw." 
> 
> Now, what about when that's not so?
> 
> The out-of-context line is too glaringly black and white.
> 
> What about when you see something, and do not intellectualize?
> 
> The Roshi says (incorrectly, because "not always so"), "...you already 
> start...".  What about if you don't?  When you don't.  Start.
> 
> The quote uses too, too broad a brush.  As you know!
> 
> What you call 'perceptions' or 'delusions', to match the Roshi's 
> "intellectualizations", my Chan teacher called "Vexations" ...a bit less 
> neutral-sounding and laudatory than "intellectualizations".
> 
> I think he picked a good word, for his English-speaking students' sake. (I'll 
> see if I can research the Chinese word, and obtain several English synonym 
> translations, and bring them here).
> 
> Vexations we're particularly attached to give us an especially hard time.  I 
> sometimes call them "bewitchments", and I like what the old-fashioned 
> menacing feel of the term communicates.
> 
> --Joe
> 
> > "Bill!"  wrote:
> >
> > 
> > As soon as you see something, you already start to intellectualize it.
> > As soon as you intellectualize something, it is no longer what you saw.
> > ~ Sunryu Suzuki
> > I call these intellectualizations 'perceptions' or 'delusions'.
> > ...Bill!
>






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[Zen] Re: Intellectualizing -

2013-07-01 Thread pudgala2

As soon as you see something,
The unenlightened only see what their preconditioned constituent
sentient beings (beliefs, attitudes, opinions, moods, values, etc.) will
allow or force them to see and nothing more,

you already start to intellectualize it.
sentient beings automatically process it.


As soon as you intellectualize something,
As soon as sentient beings process something,

it is no longer what you saw.
only the mental results of what sentient beings made up your mind to see
will be seen.


The Enlightened see, hear, touch, taste, smell, and think immediately
without opinionated processing.


--- In Zen_Forum@yahoogroups.com, "Bill!"  wrote:


As soon as you see something, you already start to intellectualize it.
As soon as you intellectualize something, it is no longer what you saw.
  ~ Sunryu Suzuki

  I call these intellectualizations 'perceptions' or 'delusions'.
  ...Bill!




[Zen] Re: Intellectualizing -

2013-07-01 Thread Joe
Yes, Bill!

quoting:
"As soon as you see something, you already start to intellectualize it. As soon 
as you intellectualize something, it is no longer what you saw." 

Now, what about when that's not so?

The out-of-context line is too glaringly black and white.

What about when you see something, and do not intellectualize?

The Roshi says (incorrectly, because "not always so"), "...you already 
start...".  What about if you don't?  When you don't.  Start.

The quote uses too, too broad a brush.  As you know!

What you call 'perceptions' or 'delusions', to match the Roshi's 
"intellectualizations", my Chan teacher called "Vexations" ...a bit less 
neutral-sounding and laudatory than "intellectualizations".

I think he picked a good word, for his English-speaking students' sake. (I'll 
see if I can research the Chinese word, and obtain several English synonym 
translations, and bring them here).

Vexations we're particularly attached to give us an especially hard time.  I 
sometimes call them "bewitchments", and I like what the old-fashioned menacing 
feel of the term communicates.

--Joe

> "Bill!"  wrote:
>
> 
> As soon as you see something, you already start to intellectualize it.
> As soon as you intellectualize something, it is no longer what you saw.
> ~ Sunryu Suzuki
> I call these intellectualizations 'perceptions' or 'delusions'.
> ...Bill!





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