The tart ones can be oooh just so tart.another way to appreciate life.

Thanks,
--Chris
301-270-6524



 for christ sake group..not all strawberries are sweet..depends on the
conditions under which they are grown..sweet, sour bitter salty all psrt
and parcel of life...merle


Chris,

Exactly. The man with no Zen would be so enveloped in regret/hope that he
wouldn't be able to experience Suchness in that moment. I fail to see how
this koan could be irrelevant.

Mike


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 ------------------------------
* From: * Chris Austin-Lane <[email protected]>;
* To: * <[email protected]>;
* Cc: * <[email protected]>;
* Subject: * Re: [Zen] Re: Advaita
* Sent: * Fri, May 17, 2013 5:14:39 AM


The man in the story got sweetness when he was probably expecting fear and
wanting a way out, but he was able to experience the sweetness. May I be so
open to what is.
Thanks,
--Chris
301-270-6524
 On May 16, 2013 10:10 PM, <[email protected]> wrote:



Edgar,

Sensation (chewing) comes before perception (sweetness). To attach to the
perception of good/bad leads to suffering. But what of the man on the
cliff? He _exclaimed_ that the strawberry tasted sweet! Not Zen?
Irrelevant? I don't think so. What of the man in the last ox-herding
paintings - looks like a happy chappy to me. I'm surprised (or maybe not)
that you're taking this perspective because you always argue that when
illusions are seen as illusions that is enlightenment. Or do you never
enjoy anything?

Mike



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 ------------------------------
* From: * Edgar Owen <[email protected]>;
* To: * <[email protected]>;
* Subject: * Re: [Zen] Re: Advaita
* Sent: * Fri, May 17, 2013 1:33:14 AM


Mike,

Again you fail to understand the meaning...

Edgar


On May 16, 2013, at 9:05 PM, [email protected] wrote:


Merle,

Well it seems on this forum that if you've ever tasted sweet strawberries
you weren't practicing Zen... Talk about blind dogma!

Mike



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 ------------------------------
* From: * Merle Lester <[email protected]>;
* To: * [email protected] <[email protected]>;
* Subject: * Re: [Zen] Re: Advaita
* Sent: * Thu, May 16, 2013 10:33:24 PM



lucky you mike...sweet strawberries... the sweetest i ever tasted was in
helsinki finland in may 2005.. have yet to find any to compare..merle


Edgar,

Yet it _does_ taste so sweet...

Mike


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 ------------------------------
* From: * Edgar Owen <[email protected]>;
* To: * <[email protected]>;
* Subject: * Re: [Zen] Re: Advaita
* Sent: * Thu, May 16, 2013 2:11:24 PM


Mike,

All the forms of the world are Buddha Nature and that includes
strawberries...

However the taste of the strawberry is in your mind, it's a form carrying
information about how your biological organism relates to the form of the
strawberry...

Edgar



On May 16, 2013, at 9:27 AM, [email protected] wrote:


Bill!

Yet the strawberry tastes so sweet! I just feel that your description of
Buddha Nature just doesn't seem to engage with life (and yet I know that as
'Bill!' you do!). I think it goes back to the feeling I have that what you
say about Buddha Nature, although correct, only focuses on the Absolute.
Life is recognising both the relative and absolute as truth. Who wouldn't
want to enjoy the taste of a strawberry!

Mike


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 ------------------------------
* From: * Bill! <[email protected]>;
* To: * <[email protected]>;
* Subject: * [Zen] Re: Advaita
* Sent: * Wed, May 15, 2013 8:18:46 AM



Mike,

What you are asking about is the very essence of zen, IMO.

Non-dualistic (holistic) experience  is the very essence of shikantaza and
Buddha Nature as far as I'm concerned.  All zen teaching techniques
(counting breaths, koans, chanting, bowing, samu, kinhin, etc...) are
employed to do one thing:  stop your intellect from creating the illusion
of duality.

When you are able to do this, to wipe away all illusions, what is left is
Buddha Nature or just holistic experience (sensual).  There is no
subject/object split.  There is no observer/observed,
no experience/experience.  There is Just THIS!

For example when you bite into a lemon there is no you/lemon split, no
taste/smell split, no sour/sweet split, no lemon/other fruit split.  There
is Just THIS!  It's later when your intellect kicks in and you start
perceiving (rather than just experiencing) that you start assigning
categories like lemon, yellow, sour, etc...

That's what I mean by 'no observer' and that's what 'shikantaza' means by
'just sit', and 'clear mind' or 'no mind'.

If you'd like to read in more detail what I think about this you can go to:
 The Origin of the Illusion of
Self<http://www.billsmart.com/writing/zen/self/self.htm> which
is about the dualistic illusion of self/other.

...Bill!


--- In [email protected], uerusuboyo@... wrote:
>
>
Bill!,

I'm interested in your point that there is no observer when sitting
shikantaza. If so, are all sensations in the body-mind not experienced? If
they are experienced, who or what is experiencing them?

I'm also interested in other member's perspectives on this when they get
passed the "He said - she said" current thread..

Mike

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>













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