Hi Mike...
 
(My comments follow yours below)...
 
> I fully accept Bill's statement that zen is a-ethical.
 
I agree, but this doesn't give us the full picture either. If you look at many 
of the illustrations of Buddhist iconography you can see that to the right of 
buddha sits Manjusri (Bodhisattva of Wisdom)) and to his left sits 
Samantabhadra (Bodhisattva of Compassion). Without these two, Buddha is 
crippled. Without wisdom, compassion becomes a weak form of sentimentality - 
without compassion, wisdom becomes cold and abstract. I know this is not about 
"ethics" per se, but I find in Zen circles too much of the latter is prevalent 
(I put myself in this category).<<
 
As I understand Bill's practice-- he does not include reference to buddhism, so 
I don't know if he would ammend his statement with the above, but thats up to 
him. 
 
Yet, you do point to the heart of my "sadness" in all this.  I'm feeling  that 
I see  zen and similar practices as being a-emotional.  I'm troubled with the  
devotion  to becoming "detached" and "mindfully composed".  "Benign". Its said 
that false humility is the worst form of arrogance. I'm not sure thats true, 
but if so-- then similarly,  professing to be ego-less, non-dual  yet 
benignant, seems to be the epitome of self-centered rightiousness. Dunno.. 
maybe I'm just going thru a stage of cynicism, and like all things, "this too 
will pass". 
 
I like your references to wisdom and compassion. It appeals to my sense of 
balance. I understand homeostasis in medicine.  Equilibrium in economics. I 
think whats been bugging me is that I also  see the value of "passion" in all 
its connotations. Work, love-- and any chosen  contemplative practice. 
 
I don't believe in the five poisins. Labelling anything as inherently good or 
bad is by definition: Dualism.  But then-- so is passion as I understand it.   
Its ironic that you  are teaching language as this topic arises.  The words we 
choose to describe our experience-- become our experience. I see great value  
in anger, greed, hate and the like. I welcome them to my tea table with the 
rest.  They serve me in return,  as instructive guides and companions.  
"Anger", for example  can serve as a  very benevolent catalyst for change. The 
associations we create linking emotions with words become thoughts and actions.
 
As Easter is approaching,  I happened to read an article about St. Francis. He 
said, "You must lose your life-- to find your life". Through loss, trauma, 
crisis, stress and limits, we are offered a doorway to a deeper awareness and 
clarity of consciousness. Few here know this better than you, as you experience 
the events in Japan. I know from my own experience that  this process is not 
easy to recognize or embrace. But I  also know that "what we resist-- 
persists". I guess this is a process of 'letting go'. 
 
I was disappointed to read that St. Francis  spent  his whole life "finding 
himself". Seeking his "God-self" or "Christ-self" or "Buddha-self" ,  or what I 
call "authentic self"-- I think it IS important to do this, but I also see it 
as egotistic. So from this, I conclude that one has to embrace and cherish and 
even celebrate this ego-drive, to then--release it?  The ego as the Great 
illusion /deluder, yet the priest who wrote the article on St. Francis  wrote 
that moving into the "true" self , is a calling that is so powerful that  once 
set upon this path, one can never get enough of it, because  then you are 
living in the eternal.  
 
I would reject this.. as it seems like an addiction.  And again--ego-driven.  
So I am full circle on my dilemma:  How to indeed find the "buddha-nature" 
within --without spending your  whole life focused on yourself? 
 
Please take care, Mike.  I have been watching the debate over forcing all 
Americans to leave Japan.  Reading your other posts.. it does sound horrific.  
You are in my heart..
 
Kristy
 
 
 














      

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