About Me
- Rafael
- I am just trying to make my way in the world without causing any harm while I am here. It is a noble task that I hope to get better at with each passing day. I currently write several blogs. NoThinker is my social activist blog. Running for CRSF is a blog I started when I wanted to track my training for my first half marathon race which I ran in Sept‘08. I also used this experience to raise money for an orphanage in Sri Lanka. My Meditation Journal is where I chronicle my thoughts and experiences with meditation. I hope that something here touches you and enriches your life. I learn best when I learn from others so all comments are welcome.
Thursday, November 29, 2007
Catching it Now and not later
I retreated and locked myself in a room knowing I was in no shape to talk to anyone without saying something I would regret. If I even came close to saying what I was thinking It had the potential to cause permanent damage to any relationship.
After a while I replayed all the events in my mind and better understood what happened and was better able to see how these angry thoughts and feelings effected me. In the future I need to fight to be more in the present moment instead of reflecting after the fact. I need to not only see what is happening while it is happening but learn to let it take its course without being affected by it. The New Testament says that believer are to be in the world but not of the world. The Buddha says we are to be the spoon in the curry pot. The spoon is in the curry but does not keep the taste of it.
This is Certainly easier said than done, but I have to start being more aggressive in my mediation on the cushion and how I apply that insight in my daily life.
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
Difficult it is to attain a peacful state of mind
Friday, November 23, 2007
Why Autumn is so appealingingly beautiful
We all know, weather consciously or subconsciously, that Autumn is the season when all the living green leaves of the trees turn to the most beautiful shades of dying and death. We all know the leaves are dying but the beauty of their death makes the change and dying of summer acceptable and is necessary for the rebirth of Spring and Summers to come in the future.
Autumn brings dignity to an event few of us can bare or understand and it is nature's way of showing us how to die with grace, dignity and beauty. We all know that death is inevitable, there is no way to escape the demise and eventual destruction of the human body. As the seasons change the cold and frosty air that proceeds the final death that winter brings upon us is difficult and full of discomfort. No part of death is easy but understood in the context of being part of the cycle of life brings understanding tot he process.
We should learn to live to die. If we did we would live better lives. Living with the understanding that we are going to die and could die at any moment can lead us to live our alive moments like nature lives Spring and Summer. When our season comes to an end we can transition in a manner that inspires beauty and grace in the hearts and minds of those who observe our demise.
Wednesday, November 21, 2007
Give the other car some room
As I struggle to be a more patient person I find that this act of giving people room helps me not to jump to conclusions or get so angry. It also helps me to learn to slow down and not be in such a rush; I'll get there.
As Thanksgiving is upon us I am thankful for loved ones and family and will try to give them room as well. Sometimes I can treat family worse than a stranger so I'll try to leave the lane open for any one that needs to pull ahead, including those I may not want to.
Happy Thanksgiving,
May you be well, happy and peaceful!
Saturday, November 10, 2007
The fire that rages
When will I ever be able to say, "Today I was angrier than I have ever been! I have received all there is to get from anger and I am satisfied. I should never have the need for anger again." I have never once said, "That sexual experience was so satisfying that I will never need to have sex again." I have never said, "That girl's body looked so nice in that two piece swim suit I will never have to lust again, my lust has been fully satisfied." It is quite the contrary, the complete opposite. It is the nature of unsatisfactory life. Desire feeds on itself and even when I think I'm tired of something I just go find something else or another version of it. Thus the fire burns and burns and burns and no amount of gratification or suppression will quench it.
I know through what I have read and studied what the source is to all of this burning and what must be done to eliminate it. But my purpose of this post is not to discuss the cause which is ignorance. This post is my documentation of a break through in my practice. I have seen it, I realize the nature of this unsatisfactoriness of existence and seeing it drives me toward freedom.
Friday, November 9, 2007
The 4:00 am fog and the bull horn of random thinking
But I continue to struggle with trying to stay awake while sitting cross legged with my eyes closed. So I often find myself walking the thin line between the dream world and being awake. Many times, more often than I'd like to admit, I easily cross over into dream land. I know this is one of the hindrances to mental cultivation and I am noticing where and how I am making progress. Mindfulness is the most powerful tool to overcome this hindrance. Being aware prevents the onset of drowsiness. When awareness slips it is awareness that gently brings me back. Awareness/Mindfulness is a difficult state of mind to attain but so very powerful.
Another challenge is how loud the thoughts in my head can be. When there is no external noise the internal noise can be defining. It has a heavy and burdensome characteristic. The best way I have found to deal with this is not to try and tune it out (it just gets louder) and ignoring it is like whacking a hornet's nest with a stick. instead I walk toward the noise, curious but disinterested and most important Mindful. I want to know where this is coming from and the true nature of it(insight) but the trick is not to grab on to the thoughts(craving). I liken these out of control random thoughts to getting on and off a million escalators which represent thoughts. All you have to do is step on the escalator, this action of steeping on represents craving, and the escalator or thoughts will do the rest. They just take you for a ride and once you get to the top you get on the next one. On the way up or down you pass through all kinds of crazy scenes and re create reality through fantasy. You imagine all kinds of things and then act them out when you get back to the real world.
So what I try to do is to observe the escalator and the experience without getting attached which is far, far easier said than done! I read the directory and find out where this escalator is going. "Top floor: Lust. passion, hate, desire, anger." Now here's the thing, I have been training my mind for years to ignore reality and see life the way I think it should be instead of how it really is. Therefore figuratively speaking I really never get off the escalator!But with mindfulness I see what is happening a little better. The mindfulness leads to insight. It's almost how Neo was able to see bullets being fired at him in the movie the Matrix. I see them coming and I am better equipped not to attach myself to them. I see the true nature of those thoughts. They are not real the are impermanent and manufactured by my ego. They come and go but, when one comes along that is particularly appealing that is when Mindfulness gets thrown out and where ego, alternate reality, and delusion fill the void. Only mindfulness can bring me back.
This post is getting long so I'll pick this up again next week. Have a good weekend.
Thursday, November 8, 2007
All Things to All Men
Paul's process is certainly one to be admired because he made a strong effort to become one with the people and to meet them where they are. I think this is a certainly a good way to approach world peace and unity. One should, in a sense, become all things to all people in order to help them understand, or to see the light if you will, that we all can learn something from each other.
When asked if he was a Hindu Gandhi put it this way "Yes I am, I am also a Muslim, a Christian, a Buddhist, and a Jew" and regarding the Muslim faith he said "The sayings of Muhammad are a treasure of wisdom not only for Muslims but for all of mankind"
My point in writing all of this is that I consider my spiritual development the same way. I know it drives religious hard liners insane to think of all religions being viewed as equal. After all there can only be one true religion right? I once shared the view that I had the only true religion so I know how upsetting it can be when others do not share that view point. As I go along on my spiritual journey It becomes more clear to me that all living beings are bound by the reality that we all must and will die. This is something we all share, from the insect to the human. We all have fear and worry about our mortality and many find comfort in their faith that tells them there is a better place when life ends. However, If we thought about our mortality a little more often and realized how it binds us we may be less eager to make war or cause pain to any living thing. We will leave the after life to the one or ones who decide or do not decide such things.
I'm sure to some this sounds like I've been a little too long on the peace pipe and it's easy to write off such ideals as just hippie or new age talk (although there is nothing "new" about new age thought). However, examining the reality of mortality and how delicate life is can reveal a truth that leads to compassion and universal loving kindness toward all living things.
I can say like Gandhi that I am Hindu, Muslim, Christian, Buddhist, Jewish etc. On the surface this may seem like a contradiction but I have slowly come to realize how this is possible. It is because I am nothing that anything and everything is possible. Because there is no permanent self that I can locate I am free not to be and that allows me in essence to be whatever is there. I am never the same person, being, or entity for one moment. I may have memories of childhood, my first kiss, when I lost my virginity etc. but no physical part of me that existed then currently exists now. For me to be attached to the experience and the memory is what causes my suffering, regret, anxiety, but the reality is that all of what I thought was me during those experiences no longer exists.
This does not mean that I escape the consequences, good or bad, of my actions but it makes you certainly wonder if you can. One can't help but rethink the nature of reality and what one thought it was. This is enlightenment. To see things as they are leads to letting go and no longer grasping at things that no longer exist.
Mentally it is difficult to grasp because my mind wants to hold on to something that is permanent. I tell myself I am set in my ways and that I'll never change but this is not true. And not simply from a philosophical point of view but because it is impossible for anything living to remain the same for one moment.
This can be a pretty hard pill to swallow for so many reasons. For anyone who has been abused it is hard to imagine that the body that was once violated no longer exists in the same way it did at the time of the abuse. The mental scars are ever so real and the mind keeps saying "I", "me", 'myself" and if the abuse was something that mutilated the body than it can be nearly impossible for one to grasp because the evidence of a self that suffered is so overwhelming. This concept is not something that sits on the surface. It takes a great deal of digging because the mind has spent all its life constructing an alternate reality of permanent ego, an eternal I and a special and different unique me concept.
This is what I am learning and it may not be for everyone. Now back to the topic of other religions.This view of non self allows me to understand that only an ego would promote the idea of acceptance or tolerance. By promoting tolerance of other religions I essentially say I am somebody above the experience of life and the dynamics of life and somehow above others and when I give my blessing to a particular religion or point of view then it somehow is OK. I am nothing. I am just a mass of every evolving and changing phenomena. Who and what am I to say what religion is right or wrong, good or not as good, acceptable or unacceptable? There are points of view that are comfortable saying this way or that way is the only way and what happens is division, unrest and eventually loss of life. Realizing this non self is what is special. The realization is what is solid, real and eternal not the thing that realizes it. There is no thinker behind the thought; the thought is the thinker.
This is the road my meditations and examining is taking and the less me I find the more peace there is in this experience.
Wednesday, November 7, 2007
It's hard to hate when this could be your last breath
This sutra then goes on in great detail how one is to practice understanding these four areas. This month I have been practicing the awareness of the body which the Buddha addresses in six categories. 1. Awareness of breathing 2. Body postures, 3.Clear understanding, 4. impurities of the body, 5. elements of the body, 6. the nine stages of a corpse.
I began this month reading and meditation on the first of the four satipatthanas which his the awareness of the body. So far this has been a powerful experience. It is difficult to become angry or upset by petty things when I am aware that this body is impermanent, not a permanent self but only a combination of various events. That not only my body but others body as well. We all share the same make up and the same eventual fate of death. It's hard, dare I say impossible to have ill feelings for either myself or others when I am aware of this fact.
The thing I find so powerful about this is that you do not experiecne this through someone else. You can't grasp this through blind faith it must be experienced first hand through practice and experience. This practice is truly one of those, "you'll have to see for yourself" experiences.