People are wont to say: "Zen is _____..."

This is not Zen. This is ordinary mind creating stories of Zen.

With the nature of mind revealed, ordinary mind as Buddha Mind, any illusion of "stopping" mind is no more special than any other apparent state of mind.

Please don't take my word for this.

K



On 5/23/2012 1:47 PM, ED wrote:


    " Zen Meditation  [???]


      Mindfulness

Zen is about living in the present with complete awareness.

Practitioners turn off the automatic pilot that most of us operate from throughout the day -- we don't really notice all the things that are going on around us or within our own minds.

They try to experience each moment directly. They don't let thoughts, memories, fears or hopes get in the way.

They practice being aware of everything they see, hear, feel, taste, and smell.

Another way of looking at this is to say that a Zen practitioner tries to be completely aware in the activity of any particular moment -- to the extent that they are one with what they are doing. So, for example:

  * when they eat they focus totally on the food and on the act of eating;
  * when they meditate they open the mind to the reality of the
    moment, not allowing thoughts, feelings or sensations to preoccupy
    them, not even thoughts about enlightenment or Buddhism;
  * when they work, they only work;
  * when they brush their teeth, that's all they do -- they don't
    think about other things at the same time.

Zen practice is to realise that thoughts are a natural faculty of mind and should not be stopped, ignored, or rejected.

Instead, thinking, especially discursive thinking, is to be acknowledged but then put to one side so that the mind is not carried away by worries, anxieties, and endless hopes and fears.

This is liberation from the defilements of the mind, the suffering of the mind, leaving the truth of this vast, unidentifiable moment plain to see.


      Stilling the mind

In Zen Buddhism the purpose of meditation is to stop the mind rushing about in an aimless (or even a purposeful) stream of thoughts. People often say that the aim of meditation is "to still the mind". <snip> "

http://www.bbc.co.uk/religion/religions/buddhism/customs/meditation_1.shtml#h3

--- In [email protected], "Bill!" <BillSmart@...> wrote:
>
> Grinding a brick to make a mirror? Well, I'll have to reflect on that...



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