"One sees the oneness, the okayness in each moment, just before the
layers of reaction try to cover it up in your attention".

Chris;
 
Your last two written lines inspires me:
 
One experiences the oneness all at once with the okayness and the non okayness 
in each moment, just before silence is broken by the sound of one spoken word.
 
Mayka
 


--- On Sun, 6/3/11, Chris Austin-Lane <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Chris Austin-Lane <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [Zen] Realization
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Date: Sunday, 6 March, 2011, 17:24


  



On Saturday, March 5, 2011, ED <[email protected]> wrote:

> Chris, replace the third statement of my post below with:
> "If not in a state of kensho-satori, the human mind can not apprehend the 
> truth of: 'Samsara is no different than nirvana.'"

That seems so absolutist. I do not know about kensho-satori, but I
think the path that zen training is taking me down is that non duality
is not adding something to life, not getting the brain into some
special state.  It is towards seeing the simple life right here, and
not putting my attention into the gap between the life that is and the
life I was expecting or hoping for.

I think that belieiving something has many shades. You can belief
something so that you act on it rather tentatively, with half of your
body protesting; you can act on it being pretty confident, but ready
for things to go wrong, or you can be whole heartedly in it,
completely sure from neocortex to brainstem to toes in the belief.

All is one, there is no problem!

Air planes fly!

One might refuse to board, board but clutch to the seat all the time,
read a book,but jump whenever the noises changes, or long to sit in
the window seat, eyes glued to the wonder around.

One sees the oneness, the okayness in each moment, just before the
layers of reaction try to cover it up in your attention.

> --ED
>
> --- In [email protected], Chris Austin-Lane <chris@...> wrote:
>>
>> The patriarchs did not regard non duality as a trick.
>
> 'Samsara is no different than nirvana.'
> Yes, but only to the non-rational mind or no-mind.
> The neocortex/limbic_system which is the mind we normally reside in cannot 
> perform that trick.
> --ED
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