Mayka: "Mindfulness Affirmation" comes to say that the person who is putting 
into practice and having as a direct experience the meaning of mindfulness 
under the different descriptive situations given.  There is not other way of 
knowing,  having a real taste of mindfulness.  There is no visualisation of any 
kind here but a direct experience with what is in front of one, with what 
arises in the here and the now.  
 
 
ED: IMO, a person who claims complete actualization of the (printed) 
affirmations in the video is deluding himself, even if he claims to 
have realized Buddha Mind.
In particular I am referring to highlighted statements below.
"I am open to the experience of the present moment."
"I pay attention to the psycho-social conditioning behind my actions." 
"I see my mistakes and difficulties without judging them."
"I feel fully connected to my experience in the here and now."
 
Mayka:  This are the statements made by a person who is putting mindfulness 
into practice right in the here and and the now and the experience that person 
is having. There is no visualization or anything delusional about the 
experience the person is having.  But if you don't believe me you just have to 
have a go on yourself and you'll see that your experience will be very alike.  
Mindfulness is a way of living life.  The mind is trained into mindfulness in 
order to reach that 24 hours of full attention.  This is not easy for lay 
people and this is why one could play mindfulness for a short time during the 
day to start with.   There are instructions for that.
 
For a monk or nun mindfulness is like never leave the zazen cushion and bring 
with one wherever one goes, activity does.  The same is sitting down, sleeping, 
evacuating in the toilette, working....
 
 
 
--- On Tue, 1/3/11, ED <[email protected]> wrote:


From: ED <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [Zen] News: Mindfulness and death -- who wins?
To: [email protected]
Date: Tuesday, 1 March, 2011, 16:28


  




 
Excellent video!  
I view 'affirmations' as being Tantric in the sense that one makes believe 
(visualizes) that one is already what one wants to be.
In Tibetan Tantra, one follows the visualization with a short meditation in 
which one dissolves the visualization into emptiness. The reason given for 
this is to preclude the possibility that one may begin to actually believe the 
visualization to be reality and become arrogant and conceited.
IMO, a person who claims complete actualization of the (printed) affirmations 
in the video is deluding himself, even if he claims to have realized Buddha 
Mind.
In particular I am referring to highlighted statements below.
"I am open to the experience of the present moment."
"I pay attention to the psycho-social conditioning behind my actions." 
"I see my mistakes and difficulties without judging them."
"I feel fully connected to my experience in the here and now."
--ED
 
--- In [email protected], Maria Lopez <flordeloto@...> wrote:
>

Hi Edgar:
 
I didn't get through all the reading from your article but I can certainly 
confirm out of (and in and off) practise and personal experience of mindfulness 
that is one of the greatest, practical, effective and shortcut tools given to 
lead one to what Bill calls "Shi....."
 
And here it goes a practical video that can be of inspiration towards 
mindfulness.  The song is from one of the Sisters in the TNH tradition.  The cd 
is with the tittle: "A basket of Plums".  And as for the show it was created 
first in the power point by one of my friends.  Then someone else took the 
powerpoint show and a song from that cd and created this straight forward to 
the point of mindfulness affirmation or in action.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gbwZ_fe623E
 
Thanks Edgar
Mayka






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