I wasn't really referring to the case when people with a lot of aware
experiences of buddha nature trivialize it - that seems like a non-problem
to me.

I was referring to the tendency of [my, i.e. US] culture to trivialize
everything, especially stuff from other traditions, e.g.
http://zeninamoment.com/  or http://www.kenwilber.com/blog/list/1
http://bigmind.org/genpo-roshi

People want to think that there is some simple fix that they can acquire,
rather than that there is no problem, and nothing to fix but their own
tendencies to blindness, irritation and wanting stuff, which is extremely
non-trivial to lay down, and that the process of laying down these
tendencies is so profoundly satisfying that one can't find it trivial; it
is as trivial as singing in the rain while feeling happy.

In my experience, people in the US are apt to paper over the most profound
moments with silly thin ideas, turning away from the suchness we have a
chance to share in and turning towards some paper-thing abstraction.

Do I think that substituting "seeing God" or "seeing the face of God" might
help someone understand "Just This!" or "experience Buddha nature"?  I find
it likely enough to be worth discussing.


--Chris

Thanks,
--Chris
301-270-6524
 On Jun 16, 2013 1:47 PM, "Joe" <[email protected]> wrote:

> Chris, thank you taking the care to translate.  All copied.  ;-)
>
> "Silly thin ideas"?  Are those thumb-pressed keys really making OK contact?
>
> Is there anyone here new to Zen who you will help?  I hope so.
>
> Happy Day,
>
> --Joe
>
> > Chris Austin-Lane <chris@...> wrote:
> >
> > I reread my paragraph and the garbled bit is "so then I am not really
> > addressing you" rather than "do then I am really addressing you."
> >
> > I am not addressing you because you seem to have some idea of one mind is
> > God seeing and no mind is superior.
> >
> > I am trying to make a point about using rhe language "to meet God"
> instead
> > of "experience Buddha nature" so that Westerners new to Zen will not
> > mistake silly thin ideas for experiencing Buddha nature.
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------
>
> Current Book Discussion: any Zen book that you recently have read or are
> reading! Talk about it today!Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>

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