Joe,<br/><br/>I just got this from tree leaf.org. It's the second line from the poem with a commentary below it and supports my point about the truth of the absolute and the relative.<br/><br/>"When you reflect it you become vast, where you embody it you are spiritually uplifted".<br/>Vast without boundaries, uplifted yet securely grounded in one's seat.<br/><br/>In other words, this vastness (absolute) experienced in shikantaza is brought into the relative when it is embodied. How else could the universe play if not thru us!<br/><br/>Mike<br/><br/>Sent from Yahoo! Mail for iPad
- RE: [Zen] Re: Advaita uerusuboyo
- [Zen] Re: Advaita Bill!
- RE: [Zen] Re: Advaita uerusuboyo
- [Zen] Re: Advaita Bill!
- RE: [Zen] Re: Advaita uerusuboyo
- [Zen] Re: Advaita Bill!
- RE: [Zen] Re: Advaita uerusuboyo
- Re: [Zen] Re: Advaita siska_cen
- [Zen] Re: Advaita Joe
- RE: [Zen] Re: Advaita uerusuboyo
- RE: [Zen] Re: Advaita uerusuboyo
- [Zen] relatively absolute Merle Lester
- RE: [Zen] relatively absolute uerusuboyo
- Fw: [Zen] relatively absolute Merle Lester
- [Zen] Re: Advaita Joe
- RE: [Zen] Re: Advaita uerusuboyo
- [Zen] Re: Advaita Joe
- RE: [Zen] Re: Advaita uerusuboyo
- [Zen] Re: Advaita Joe
- [Zen] Re: Advaita mike
- [Zen] Re: Advaita Joe
