DP,
Like I said in a previous post, I think zen practice can help ameliorate the
effects of OCD, but not cure it. From what I understand OCD is the result
of some kind of physical abnormalities - like a chemical imbalance in the
brain or a 'wiring' difference. Whatever it is, OCD is your
It appears to me that .Bill! has furnished the 'correct' perspective of
zen/dharma toward suffering.
http://www-usr.rider.edu/~suler/zenstory/cliffhanger.html
http://www-usr.rider.edu/~suler/zenstory/cliffhanger.html
--ED
--- In Zen_Forum@yahoogroups.com, billsm...@... wrote:
DP,
Like I
I hear you loud and clear. I too for decades used to get very frustrated
that persons would not hear or could not understand or would not attempt
to apprehend what I was trying to say.
Now I view this phenomenon as being part and parcel of the human
condition - and I have been and tend to be
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it first thing after getting up in the morning.
Should I do it at a different time? It's hard to find the same time every
day when I can do it, as my schedule is erratic.
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