Difference between revisions of "A Rainbow Hiding in the Clouds: Cultivating the Mind of Enlightenment by Peter Morrell"
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{{Centre|<big><big>A Rainbow Hiding in the Clouds: Cultivating the Mind of Enlightenment<br/> </big></big> | {{Centre|<big><big>A Rainbow Hiding in the Clouds: Cultivating the Mind of Enlightenment<br/> </big></big> | ||
by [[Peter Morrell]] }}<br/><br/> | by [[Peter Morrell]] }}<br/><br/> | ||
− | [[Cultivating]] the [[mind of enlightenment]] [ [[bodhicitta]] ] can in many ways be regarded as the main aim of [[Buddhism]]. Yet few realise what it is and what it entails. It means viewing yourself, [[life]] and the [[world]] with the best [[mind]] you can muster, which is the [[mind]] of a [[Buddha]]. What are the qualities of this [[mind]]? The best [[mind]] we have is one of [[tranquillity]], [[happiness]] and great [[joy]]; it is a kind, gentle and [[loving]] [[mind]]. This is the [[mind]] we most often have as children and when in the best of moods and often when waking. To a large extent this is also the [[world]] of [[meditation]]. | + | |
+ | [[Cultivating]] the [[mind of enlightenment]] [ [[bodhicitta]] ] can in many ways be regarded as the main aim of [[Buddhism]]. Yet few realise what it is and what it entails. It means viewing yourself, [[life]] and the [[world]] with the best [[mind]] you can muster, which is the [[mind]] of a [[Buddha]]. What are the qualities of this [[mind]]? The best [[mind]] we have is one of [[tranquillity]], [[happiness]] and great [[joy]]; it is a kind, gentle and [[loving]] [[mind]]. This is the [[mind]] we most often have as children and when in the best of [[moods]] and often when waking. To a large extent this is also the [[world]] of [[meditation]]. | ||
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[[Meditation]] does resemble a [[world]] described by Auden: | [[Meditation]] does resemble a [[world]] described by Auden: | ||
:Returning each morning from a timeless [[world]], | :Returning each morning from a timeless [[world]], | ||
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:The [[senses]] open upon a [[world]] of [[time]] [Auden, 282] | :The [[senses]] open upon a [[world]] of [[time]] [Auden, 282] | ||
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:In a coma of waiting, just [[breathing]] | :In a coma of waiting, just [[breathing]] | ||
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:In a {{Wiki|darkness}} of tribulation and [[death]] | :In a {{Wiki|darkness}} of tribulation and [[death]] | ||
− | :While blizzards havoc the garden and the old | + | |
+ | :While blizzards havoc the [[garden]] and the old | ||
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:Folly becomes unsafe, the mill-wheels | :Folly becomes unsafe, the mill-wheels | ||
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:Rust, and the weirs fall slowly to pieces [Auden, 283] | :Rust, and the weirs fall slowly to pieces [Auden, 283] | ||
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This verse is also suggestive of that [[awareness]] of [[impermanence]] and [[decay]] process that [[meditation]] so often also brings with it. | This verse is also suggestive of that [[awareness]] of [[impermanence]] and [[decay]] process that [[meditation]] so often also brings with it. | ||
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:Around them boomed the [[rhetoric]] of [[time]] | :Around them boomed the [[rhetoric]] of [[time]] | ||
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:The {{Wiki|smells}} and furniture of the known [[world]] [Auden, 305] | :The {{Wiki|smells}} and furniture of the known [[world]] [Auden, 305] | ||
At one's calmest, most contented and most [[joyous]], we see [[people]], [[self]] and the [[world]] as blended boundlessly and indistinguishably with the glow of [[compassion]], [[love]], {{Wiki|empathy}} and [[peace]]. To this [[mind]], [[self]], [[world]] and others are not seen as separated from each other, but as fused into one [[selfless]] and [[egoless]] field of [[experience]]. This is quite specifically and uniquely a [[Buddha mind]]. | At one's calmest, most contented and most [[joyous]], we see [[people]], [[self]] and the [[world]] as blended boundlessly and indistinguishably with the glow of [[compassion]], [[love]], {{Wiki|empathy}} and [[peace]]. To this [[mind]], [[self]], [[world]] and others are not seen as separated from each other, but as fused into one [[selfless]] and [[egoless]] field of [[experience]]. This is quite specifically and uniquely a [[Buddha mind]]. | ||
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:The seamless {{Wiki|continuum}} | :The seamless {{Wiki|continuum}} | ||
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:Of supple and coherent stuff, | :Of supple and coherent stuff, | ||
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:Whose [[form]] is [[truth]], whose content [[love]], | :Whose [[form]] is [[truth]], whose content [[love]], | ||
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:Its {{Wiki|pluralist}} interstices | :Its {{Wiki|pluralist}} interstices | ||
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:The homes of [[happiness]] and [[peace]] [Auden, 240] | :The homes of [[happiness]] and [[peace]] [Auden, 240] | ||
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By contrast, viewing [[self]], others, [[life]] and the [[world]] as separate things with a [[mundane]] [[mind]] often breeds disappointment, [[misery]], separateness, disillusionment, [[despondency]], [[unhappiness]] and many other nagtive and restrictive [[attributes]]. It is a [[view]] full of depressing barriers. | By contrast, viewing [[self]], others, [[life]] and the [[world]] as separate things with a [[mundane]] [[mind]] often breeds disappointment, [[misery]], separateness, disillusionment, [[despondency]], [[unhappiness]] and many other nagtive and restrictive [[attributes]]. It is a [[view]] full of depressing barriers. | ||
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:Compelling all to the admission, | :Compelling all to the admission, | ||
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:Aloneness is man’s real [[condition]], | :Aloneness is man’s real [[condition]], | ||
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:That each must travel forth alone | :That each must travel forth alone | ||
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:In search of the [[Essential]] Stone. [Auden, New Year [[Letter]], 1940, 238] | :In search of the [[Essential]] Stone. [Auden, New Year [[Letter]], 1940, 238] | ||
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[[Meditation]] also explores this [[sense]] of aloneness but deepens our [[familiarity]] with it through engagement with the [[inner world]] of {{Wiki|reflection}} and by exploring our connectedness with all things. | [[Meditation]] also explores this [[sense]] of aloneness but deepens our [[familiarity]] with it through engagement with the [[inner world]] of {{Wiki|reflection}} and by exploring our connectedness with all things. | ||
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− | + | * [[meditation]] [[forms]] the basis of [[Buddha's]] [[enlightenment]] - the whole of [[Buddhism]] can be traced back to the events and qualities of [[Buddha's]] [[enlightenment]] - it [[forms]] the primary {{Wiki|perspective}} of the whole show. The qualities of the [[mind of enlightenment]] are those higher qualities that [[Buddhas]] possess, such as imperturbable [[tranquillity]], unfading [[joy]] and | |
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− | * [[meditation]] gives access to another [[mental]] [[realm]] different from the [[world]] - this is the [[inner realm]] of the [[mind]] and [[peace]], of [[tranquillity]], stillness, of [[joy]] and illumination...a [[realm]] of {{Wiki|reflection}} - gaining access to this [[realm]] is itself an [[illumination]] and an [[empowerment]] for many [[people]] because it means - often for the first [[time]] - a realisation that even in the midst of {{Wiki|chaos}}, frenzy, [[suffering]] and the fleeting [[nature]] of our [[lives]], there is room to be made for [[peace]], self-reflection and the [[development]] of [[spirituality]]. It is through [[meditation]] and [[mindfulness]] that one begins to [[grasp]] [[compassion]], [[tranquillity]] and [[joy]] and so it is through [[meditation]] that one approaches those qualities of a [[Buddha's]] [[mind]], that is the qualities of [[enlightenment]] itself. | + | [[bliss]], profound [[compassion]] and the deep [[wisdom]] that can {{Wiki|perceive}} [[emptiness]] continuously as well as special [[powers]] such as the ability to see the [[karmic]] predispositions and {{Wiki|past}} [[lives]] of others. [[Essentially]], the [[mind]] of a [[Buddha]] is the same as the qualities of the [[mind]] of [[Buddha's]] [[enlightenment]], but for {{Wiki|practical}} purposes it means [[joy]], [[peace]], [[bliss]] and [[compassion]] combined with the deepest [[feeling]] for the [[suffering]] of others and the insatiable [[desire]] to help [[suffering]] [[beings]] in every possible way. |
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+ | :"The true man, the [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] man, the [[inherent]] cultivated aristocrat, who unites the greatest sensitivity in daily [[life]] to the greatest richness of a greater [[life]], is he who most [[desires]] the [[happiness]] of the [[world]], he who seeks his [[own]] [[happiness]] in the [[universal]] [[happiness]], he who succeeds by means of a clear {{Wiki|concept}} of the whole [[life]] of the [[world]], in best occupying, using, and enjoying his {{Wiki|space and time}}." [Juan Ramon Jimenez] | ||
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+ | * [[meditation]] gives access to another [[mental]] [[realm]] different from the [[world]] - this is the [[inner realm]] of the [[mind]] and [[peace]], of [[tranquillity]], stillness, of [[joy]] and illumination...a [[realm]] of {{Wiki|reflection}} - gaining access to this [[realm]] is itself an [[illumination]] and an [[empowerment]] for many [[people]] because it means - often for the first [[time]] - a | ||
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+ | realisation that even in the midst of {{Wiki|chaos}}, frenzy, [[suffering]] and the fleeting [[nature]] of our [[lives]], there is room to be made for [[peace]], self-reflection and the [[development]] of [[spirituality]]. It is through [[meditation]] and [[mindfulness]] that one begins to [[grasp]] [[compassion]], [[tranquillity]] and [[joy]] and so it is through [[meditation]] that one approaches those qualities | ||
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+ | of a [[Buddha's]] [[mind]], that is the qualities of [[enlightenment]] itself. | ||
* a big problem of [[life]] is deciding what [[path]] to adhere most in on'e [[thinking]] -- the {{Wiki|pessimistic}} or the {{Wiki|optimistic}}; the {{Wiki|materialistic}} or the [[spiritual]]; the grim or the [[magical]] -- does [[life]] embrace both, or is one more primary and the other more fleeting? | * a big problem of [[life]] is deciding what [[path]] to adhere most in on'e [[thinking]] -- the {{Wiki|pessimistic}} or the {{Wiki|optimistic}}; the {{Wiki|materialistic}} or the [[spiritual]]; the grim or the [[magical]] -- does [[life]] embrace both, or is one more primary and the other more fleeting? | ||
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* in any [[religion]], it seems that the primary [[view]] taken is the [[spiritual]] and [[magical]] one, and [[suffering]] and hardship are seen as secondary, temporary and fleeting phenomena...that make [[life]] hard. The backdrop chosen is one of [[joy]], [[happiness]] and [[spiritual]] [[illumination]] and this takes precedence over the grim relaities of [[life]], which are borne as a [[burden]] but which are never allowed to extinguish the deeper [[joy]]. | * in any [[religion]], it seems that the primary [[view]] taken is the [[spiritual]] and [[magical]] one, and [[suffering]] and hardship are seen as secondary, temporary and fleeting phenomena...that make [[life]] hard. The backdrop chosen is one of [[joy]], [[happiness]] and [[spiritual]] [[illumination]] and this takes precedence over the grim relaities of [[life]], which are borne as a [[burden]] but which are never allowed to extinguish the deeper [[joy]]. | ||
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* in {{Wiki|politics}} and [[science]], by contrast, the primary [[view]] seems to be the reverse...that [[life]] is a bum deal, is grim and hard - and the primary {{Wiki|perspective}} taken is grim with [[pleasure]] only an occasional, secondary and thus fleeting interruption of otherwise grim [[life]] facts. It is up to each of us to choose which of these scenarios we use to base our [[lives]] upon. | * in {{Wiki|politics}} and [[science]], by contrast, the primary [[view]] seems to be the reverse...that [[life]] is a bum deal, is grim and hard - and the primary {{Wiki|perspective}} taken is grim with [[pleasure]] only an occasional, secondary and thus fleeting interruption of otherwise grim [[life]] facts. It is up to each of us to choose which of these scenarios we use to base our [[lives]] upon. | ||
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* [[meditation]] [ [[cultivation]] of [[mental]] stillness and inner {{Wiki|reflection}}] clearly reinforces the primacy of the [[spiritual]] and [[magical]] [[view]] of [[human]] [[life]] and thus necessarily downgrades into second place all material and [[unhappy]] aspects of [[existence]]. [[Meditation]] is thus not only the basis of [[Buddha's]] [[enlightenment]], but the basis of the benign and {{Wiki|optimistic}} [[view]] all [[religions]] take about the deeper [[nature]] of [[life]]. | * [[meditation]] [ [[cultivation]] of [[mental]] stillness and inner {{Wiki|reflection}}] clearly reinforces the primacy of the [[spiritual]] and [[magical]] [[view]] of [[human]] [[life]] and thus necessarily downgrades into second place all material and [[unhappy]] aspects of [[existence]]. [[Meditation]] is thus not only the basis of [[Buddha's]] [[enlightenment]], but the basis of the benign and {{Wiki|optimistic}} [[view]] all [[religions]] take about the deeper [[nature]] of [[life]]. | ||
− | * to 'keep ourselves going' in the [[sphere]] of [[meditation]] and spiritulaity, we must have some [[faith]] in what we do; and we do this in the daily {{Wiki|light}} of terrible events that happen and about which we become {{Wiki|aware}} through the news media. Our [[attitude]] towards these events is important because it helps us to make [[sense]] of [[life]] itself. No [[religion]] can avoid these difficult questions and they all formulate their own [[views]] on [[causes]] and cures and what we should make of [[sad]] events in the [[world]] around us. | + | |
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+ | * to 'keep ourselves going' in the [[sphere]] of [[meditation]] and spiritulaity, we must have some [[faith]] in what we do; and we do this in the daily {{Wiki|light}} of terrible events that happen and about which we become {{Wiki|aware}} through the news media. Our [[attitude]] towards these events is important because it helps us to make [[sense]] of [[life]] itself. No [[religion]] can avoid these difficult questions and they all formulate their [[own]] [[views]] on [[causes]] and cures and what we should make of [[sad]] events in the [[world]] around us. | ||
:Housman was perfectly right | :Housman was perfectly right | ||
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:Our [[world]] rapidly worsens: | :Our [[world]] rapidly worsens: | ||
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:Nothing now is so horrid | :Nothing now is so horrid | ||
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:Or silly it can’t occur [Auden, 865] | :Or silly it can’t occur [Auden, 865] | ||
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It is from getting excessively bogged down in these doom-laden events that one can so easily become very {{Wiki|pessimistic}} about [[life]] and [[humanity]] and the seeming utter worthlessness of [[life]]. As Auden says, then the [[mind]] can become: | It is from getting excessively bogged down in these doom-laden events that one can so easily become very {{Wiki|pessimistic}} about [[life]] and [[humanity]] and the seeming utter worthlessness of [[life]]. As Auden says, then the [[mind]] can become: | ||
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:...the [[mind]] | :...the [[mind]] | ||
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:A quagmire of disquiet [Auden, 866] | :A quagmire of disquiet [Auden, 866] | ||
− | * [[Thinking]] and {{Wiki|reflecting}} on recent tragic events -- such as the 9/11 attacks, the [[Bali]] bombing, the Madrid bomb attacks and the tragic Beslan school siege -- one is forced to reflect upon and examine the [[nature]] of one's own [[life]] and to really consider whether there is a [[God]] or any [[spiritual]] [[principle]] we should live by to [[guide]] our [[lives]] and how we can give ourselves {{Wiki|comfort}} and solace in such a wicked [[world]]. | + | |
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+ | * [[Thinking]] and {{Wiki|reflecting}} on recent tragic events -- such as the 9/11 attacks, the [[Bali]] bombing, the Madrid bomb attacks and the tragic Beslan school siege -- one is forced to reflect upon and examine the [[nature]] of one's [[own]] [[life]] and to really consider whether there is a [[God]] or any [[spiritual]] [[principle]] we should live by to [[guide]] our [[lives]] and how we can give ourselves {{Wiki|comfort}} and solace in such a wicked [[world]]. | ||
:Dismayed by a wilderness | :Dismayed by a wilderness | ||
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:Of {{Wiki|hostile}} [[thoughts]] [Auden, 800] | :Of {{Wiki|hostile}} [[thoughts]] [Auden, 800] | ||
− | :[[Thoughts]] of his own [[death]], | + | :[[Thoughts]] of his [[own]] [[death]], |
:Like the distant roll | :Like the distant roll | ||
:Of [[thunder]] at a picnic [Auden, 800] | :Of [[thunder]] at a picnic [Auden, 800] | ||
[[Death]] and [[misery]] become the predominant [[thoughts]] when we are oppressed by worldliness, when we lack the [[spirit]] of truly [[enlightened]] [[thinking]]. | [[Death]] and [[misery]] become the predominant [[thoughts]] when we are oppressed by worldliness, when we lack the [[spirit]] of truly [[enlightened]] [[thinking]]. | ||
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* these are the [[essential]], the core problems that any decent [[human being]] must address...or run away from. [[Suffering]] and tragedy can happen to any one of us and will come one day forsure. Our problem then is what to do about this? How should we [[view]] it and how can we best prepare ourselves for that [[sad]] day when it is our turn to [[die]] or [[suffer]] tragic loss? | * these are the [[essential]], the core problems that any decent [[human being]] must address...or run away from. [[Suffering]] and tragedy can happen to any one of us and will come one day forsure. Our problem then is what to do about this? How should we [[view]] it and how can we best prepare ourselves for that [[sad]] day when it is our turn to [[die]] or [[suffer]] tragic loss? | ||
...the [[heart]] | ...the [[heart]] | ||
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:As Zola said, must always start | :As Zola said, must always start | ||
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:Of failure and {{Wiki|disgust}}. Our road | :Of failure and {{Wiki|disgust}}. Our road | ||
:Gets worse... [Auden, 241] | :Gets worse... [Auden, 241] | ||
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Each day we must confront or run away from the {{Wiki|myriad}} frustrations and disappointments that our [[lives]] inevitably contain. All [[lives]] contain them. This is our 'toad of failure and {{Wiki|disgust}}.' In a [[sense]], [[meditation]], like therapy, places us face to face with them all. | Each day we must confront or run away from the {{Wiki|myriad}} frustrations and disappointments that our [[lives]] inevitably contain. All [[lives]] contain them. This is our 'toad of failure and {{Wiki|disgust}}.' In a [[sense]], [[meditation]], like therapy, places us face to face with them all. | ||
The subatomic gulfs confront our [[lives]] | The subatomic gulfs confront our [[lives]] | ||
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With the cold stare of their [[eternal]] [[silence]] [Auden, 309] | With the cold stare of their [[eternal]] [[silence]] [Auden, 309] | ||
− | * in our own muddled way we avoid these issues...preferring not to think of them or to pray that they don't come soon and to lend our own {{Wiki|tears}} to those of the close relatives of tragic events. We [[feel]] this somehow protects us and contributes something towards their [[healing]]. Maybe we kid ourselves... | + | * in our [[own]] muddled way we avoid these issues...preferring not to think of them or to pray that they don't come soon and to lend our [[own]] {{Wiki|tears}} to those of the close relatives of tragic events. We [[feel]] this somehow protects us and contributes something towards their [[healing]]. Maybe we kid ourselves... |
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What Auden calls "the broken ladder of our [[lives]]," [Auden, 309] is a ladder leading where? Probably nowhere but to the grave. That is a chilling [[thought]]. | What Auden calls "the broken ladder of our [[lives]]," [Auden, 309] is a ladder leading where? Probably nowhere but to the grave. That is a chilling [[thought]]. | ||
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:And we must pray for | :And we must pray for | ||
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:[[World]] we are destined | :[[World]] we are destined | ||
:To look on last. [Auden, 762] | :To look on last. [Auden, 762] | ||
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<nowiki>*</nowiki> the [[Buddhist]] [[view]] is that all comes from [[karma]] and so if we {{Wiki|purify}} ourselves, our hearts, our words and our [[actions]], then we can be confident of {{Wiki|future}} [[happy]] [[lives]]. | <nowiki>*</nowiki> the [[Buddhist]] [[view]] is that all comes from [[karma]] and so if we {{Wiki|purify}} ourselves, our hearts, our words and our [[actions]], then we can be confident of {{Wiki|future}} [[happy]] [[lives]]. | ||
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If we are honest with ourselves, then we can see that our [[lives]] are littered and filled with unacknowledged frustrations and disappointments about unattained targets and unachieved [[ambitions]], about [[self]], about certain other [[people]] and even about the [[world]] at large. This is the [[nature]] of [[samsara]] and although from a [[Buddhist]] [[view]] they are all [[trivial]], to us at times they seem overwhelmingly important. | If we are honest with ourselves, then we can see that our [[lives]] are littered and filled with unacknowledged frustrations and disappointments about unattained targets and unachieved [[ambitions]], about [[self]], about certain other [[people]] and even about the [[world]] at large. This is the [[nature]] of [[samsara]] and although from a [[Buddhist]] [[view]] they are all [[trivial]], to us at times they seem overwhelmingly important. | ||
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− | The [[world]] therefore is both [[mundane]] and horrible as well as [[magical]], fantastic and wonderful. Both are true--but which do we want to follow, believe or adhere to as a primary 'map and {{Wiki|compass}}' for our own [[lives]]? The | + | The [[mundane]] [[mind]] is a [[mind]] of such ordinariness and not a special or [[supramundane]] [[mind]] at all. Therefore, as is clearly apparent, viewing the [[world]] and our [[attitude]] towards [[self]], others and [[life]], and what qualities of the [[mind]] we use to look at it with very much determines how we see it...how we see ourselves and others. "[[Life]] is beautiful, if you look at it |
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+ | beautifully." [Shahrdar] A positive, [[calm]] and [[joyous]] [[mind]] primarily sees, the [[beauty]] and [[joy]] in others as primary and the world's [[suffering]] so fleeting and evanescent [{{Wiki|ephemeral}}]. A [[mind]] heavy with [[aversion]] and [[desire]] and negative | ||
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+ | [[attributes]] cannot [[view]] things so because it is so weighed down with [[suffering]] and [[misery]]. In the case of someone focused in {{Wiki|politics}}, then again they tend to see a [[world]] awash with [[misery]] and very little [[joy]] is seen in the [[world]]. A [[mind]] of [[desire]] and [[aversion]] tends to swing wildly between [[pleasure]] and [[pain]], neither of which lead to much [[peace]] or lasting [[joy]]. | ||
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+ | The [[world]] therefore is both [[mundane]] and horrible as well as [[magical]], fantastic and wonderful. Both are true--but which do we want to follow, believe or adhere to as a primary 'map and {{Wiki|compass}}' for our [[own]] [[lives]]? The | ||
choice is for each one of us to make. "[[Life]] is beautiful, if you look at it in a beautiful way." [Shahrdar] and such a sentiment shows that we see mostly what we choose and wish to see. By choosing to see it ugly, so it becomes ugly. The choice is ours. | choice is for each one of us to make. "[[Life]] is beautiful, if you look at it in a beautiful way." [Shahrdar] and such a sentiment shows that we see mostly what we choose and wish to see. By choosing to see it ugly, so it becomes ugly. The choice is ours. | ||
Focus on the [[beauty]] and the wonderful and allow for the horrible too, but focus primarily upon [[love]] and [[beauty]] and the [[inherent]] niceness in [[people]] as primary and the badness as a necessary and secondary intermittent | Focus on the [[beauty]] and the wonderful and allow for the horrible too, but focus primarily upon [[love]] and [[beauty]] and the [[inherent]] niceness in [[people]] as primary and the badness as a necessary and secondary intermittent | ||
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[[defilement]], but an adventitious and curable [[defilement]] nevertheless...a transient feature upon a firmer bedrock of niceness. This may [[sound]] trite, but surely is a preferable [[view]] to its vile opposite? It gives us {{Wiki|hope}}. We want to live on the basis of one, in the {{Wiki|hope}} of the other, or on the basis of one, while looking out for the other as an occasional invasive possibility. | [[defilement]], but an adventitious and curable [[defilement]] nevertheless...a transient feature upon a firmer bedrock of niceness. This may [[sound]] trite, but surely is a preferable [[view]] to its vile opposite? It gives us {{Wiki|hope}}. We want to live on the basis of one, in the {{Wiki|hope}} of the other, or on the basis of one, while looking out for the other as an occasional invasive possibility. | ||
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[[Meditation]] on the [[Buddha mind]] ([[bodhicitta]]) gives us the chance to come to know for real what [[prayer]] and [[purification]] are: [[prayer]] based on [[non-self]] and true [[healing]] of others' woes. It also offers us the chance to realize the [[meditation]] [[experience]] as the core of [[Buddha's]] [[enlightenment]]. | [[Meditation]] on the [[Buddha mind]] ([[bodhicitta]]) gives us the chance to come to know for real what [[prayer]] and [[purification]] are: [[prayer]] based on [[non-self]] and true [[healing]] of others' woes. It also offers us the chance to realize the [[meditation]] [[experience]] as the core of [[Buddha's]] [[enlightenment]]. | ||
− | [[Meditation]] on the [[bodhicitta]] therefore aims to enable us to dissociate ourselves from the {{Wiki|myriad}}, [[trivial]] and [[mundane]] frustrations of our [[lives]] and to cultivate the higher [[view]] of ourselves as represented by [[universal compassion]], [[love]] and a focus upon the positive aspects of [[life]] that can improve it both for ourselves and for [[all living beings]]. This is the true [[bodhisattva]] [[motivation]] that lies behind the [[bodhicitta]] {{Wiki|concept}}. [[Meditation]] on [[bodhicitta]] enables us to transcend the fleeting and transient--the ephemeral--and the badness and to focus on the great and good, the bedrock of '[[permanent]] things,' which are things of a [[sacred]] and [[compassionate]] [[nature]]: "[[Life]] is beautiful, if you look at it in a beautiful way." [Shahrdar] | + | [[Meditation]] on the [[bodhicitta]] therefore aims to enable us to dissociate ourselves from the {{Wiki|myriad}}, [[trivial]] and [[mundane]] frustrations of our [[lives]] and to cultivate the higher [[view]] of ourselves as represented by [[universal compassion]], [[love]] and a focus upon the positive aspects of [[life]] that can improve it both for ourselves and for [[all living beings]]. This is the |
+ | |||
+ | true [[bodhisattva]] [[motivation]] that lies behind the [[bodhicitta]] {{Wiki|concept}}. [[Meditation]] on [[bodhicitta]] enables us to transcend the fleeting and transient--the ephemeral--and the badness and to focus on the great and good, the bedrock of '[[permanent]] things,' which are things of a [[sacred]] and [[compassionate]] [[nature]]: "[[Life]] is beautiful, if you look at it in a beautiful way." [Shahrdar] | ||
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+ | [[Meditation]] means "one must be passive to [[conceive]] the [[truth]]." [Auden, 308] It also means we strive to seek the [[truth]] in a [[form]] of stillness that sees "the shadows cast by [[language]] upon [[truth]]." [Auden, 308] It sees beyond the [[duality]] of [[language]]. As Auden rightly says: | ||
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:What we have not named | :What we have not named | ||
:Or beheld as a [[symbol]] | :Or beheld as a [[symbol]] | ||
:Escapes our notice [Auden, 840] | :Escapes our notice [Auden, 840] | ||
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[[Language]] and giving names to things conspire to dull our bright [[senses]] and lead us away from the simple facts of our [[existence]] that [[meditation]] always attempts to refresh and revitalise. | [[Language]] and giving names to things conspire to dull our bright [[senses]] and lead us away from the simple facts of our [[existence]] that [[meditation]] always attempts to refresh and revitalise. | ||
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"The apple [[tree]] that cannot [[measure]] [[time]]," [Auden, 306] like a {{Wiki|dog}} that cannot speak, loves us dearly but cannot tell us this; it is a {{Wiki|mystery}} and an enigma but arguably is infinitely preferable to the fools whose [[lives]] are embedded in [[wrong views]]. | "The apple [[tree]] that cannot [[measure]] [[time]]," [Auden, 306] like a {{Wiki|dog}} that cannot speak, loves us dearly but cannot tell us this; it is a {{Wiki|mystery}} and an enigma but arguably is infinitely preferable to the fools whose [[lives]] are embedded in [[wrong views]]. | ||
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For as the poet says, | For as the poet says, | ||
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:All real [[perception]] it would seem, | :All real [[perception]] it would seem, | ||
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::{{Nolinking|[Auden, New Year Letter, 1940, 210]}} | ::{{Nolinking|[Auden, New Year Letter, 1940, 210]}} | ||
− | Obviously in the case of [[Zen]], the '[[mind of enlightenment]]' is an [[empty]] [[mind]] that takes all things at face value, questions nothing, judges nothing and detaches itself by enjoying every moment living in the now and thus finding a [[rainbow]] hidden among the clouds...the finding of [[nirvana]] within the [[sad]] wreckage that [[samsara]] is. | + | |
+ | Obviously in the case of [[Zen]], the '[[mind of enlightenment]]' is an [[empty]] [[mind]] that takes all things at face value, questions nothing, judges nothing and detaches itself by enjoying every [[moment]] living in the now and thus finding a [[rainbow]] hidden among the clouds...the finding of [[nirvana]] within the [[sad]] wreckage that [[samsara]] is. | ||
+ | |||
==Sources== | ==Sources== | ||
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{{Nolinking|* W H Auden, Collected Poems, Edited by Edward Mendelson, London: Faber, 1994 | {{Nolinking|* W H Auden, Collected Poems, Edited by Edward Mendelson, London: Faber, 1994 | ||
* Dr Ardavan Shahrdar, MD, DIHom, President of Iranian Homeopathic Association}} | * Dr Ardavan Shahrdar, MD, DIHom, President of Iranian Homeopathic Association}} | ||
+ | |||
{{R}} | {{R}} |
Latest revision as of 18:07, 15 February 2024
A Rainbow Hiding in the Clouds: Cultivating the Mind of Enlightenment
by Peter Morrell
Cultivating the mind of enlightenment [ bodhicitta ] can in many ways be regarded as the main aim of Buddhism. Yet few realise what it is and what it entails. It means viewing yourself, life and the world with the best mind you can muster, which is the mind of a Buddha. What are the qualities of this mind? The best mind we have is one of tranquillity, happiness and great joy; it is a kind, gentle and loving mind. This is the mind we most often have as children and when in the best of moods and often when waking. To a large extent this is also the world of meditation.
Meditation does resemble a world described by Auden:
- Returning each morning from a timeless world,
- In a coma of waiting, just breathing
- While blizzards havoc the garden and the old
- Folly becomes unsafe, the mill-wheels
- Rust, and the weirs fall slowly to pieces [Auden, 283]
This verse is also suggestive of that awareness of impermanence and decay process that meditation so often also brings with it.
The inner and outer worlds do contrast so sharply with each other:
At one's calmest, most contented and most joyous, we see people, self and the world as blended boundlessly and indistinguishably with the glow of compassion, love, empathy and peace. To this mind, self, world and others are not seen as separated from each other, but as fused into one selfless and egoless field of experience. This is quite specifically and uniquely a Buddha mind.
- The seamless continuum
- Of supple and coherent stuff,
- Its pluralist interstices
By contrast, viewing self, others, life and the world as separate things with a mundane mind often breeds disappointment, misery, separateness, disillusionment, despondency, unhappiness and many other nagtive and restrictive attributes. It is a view full of depressing barriers.
- Compelling all to the admission,
- Aloneness is man’s real condition,
- That each must travel forth alone
Meditation also explores this sense of aloneness but deepens our familiarity with it through engagement with the inner world of reflection and by exploring our connectedness with all things.
- meditation forms the basis of Buddha's enlightenment - the whole of Buddhism can be traced back to the events and qualities of Buddha's enlightenment - it forms the primary perspective of the whole show. The qualities of the mind of enlightenment are those higher qualities that Buddhas possess, such as imperturbable tranquillity, unfading joy and
bliss, profound compassion and the deep wisdom that can perceive emptiness continuously as well as special powers such as the ability to see the karmic predispositions and past lives of others. Essentially, the mind of a Buddha is the same as the qualities of the mind of Buddha's enlightenment, but for practical purposes it means joy, peace, bliss and compassion combined with the deepest feeling for the suffering of others and the insatiable desire to help suffering beings in every possible way.
- "The true man, the authentic man, the inherent cultivated aristocrat, who unites the greatest sensitivity in daily life to the greatest richness of a greater life, is he who most desires the happiness of the world, he who seeks his own happiness in the universal happiness, he who succeeds by means of a clear concept of the whole life of the world, in best occupying, using, and enjoying his space and time." [Juan Ramon Jimenez]
- meditation gives access to another mental realm different from the world - this is the inner realm of the mind and peace, of tranquillity, stillness, of joy and illumination...a realm of reflection - gaining access to this realm is itself an illumination and an empowerment for many people because it means - often for the first time - a
realisation that even in the midst of chaos, frenzy, suffering and the fleeting nature of our lives, there is room to be made for peace, self-reflection and the development of spirituality. It is through meditation and mindfulness that one begins to grasp compassion, tranquillity and joy and so it is through meditation that one approaches those qualities
of a Buddha's mind, that is the qualities of enlightenment itself.
- a big problem of life is deciding what path to adhere most in on'e thinking -- the pessimistic or the optimistic; the materialistic or the spiritual; the grim or the magical -- does life embrace both, or is one more primary and the other more fleeting?
- in any religion, it seems that the primary view taken is the spiritual and magical one, and suffering and hardship are seen as secondary, temporary and fleeting phenomena...that make life hard. The backdrop chosen is one of joy, happiness and spiritual illumination and this takes precedence over the grim relaities of life, which are borne as a burden but which are never allowed to extinguish the deeper joy.
- in politics and science, by contrast, the primary view seems to be the reverse...that life is a bum deal, is grim and hard - and the primary perspective taken is grim with pleasure only an occasional, secondary and thus fleeting interruption of otherwise grim life facts. It is up to each of us to choose which of these scenarios we use to base our lives upon.
- meditation [ cultivation of mental stillness and inner reflection] clearly reinforces the primacy of the spiritual and magical view of human life and thus necessarily downgrades into second place all material and unhappy aspects of existence. Meditation is thus not only the basis of Buddha's enlightenment, but the basis of the benign and optimistic view all religions take about the deeper nature of life.
- to 'keep ourselves going' in the sphere of meditation and spiritulaity, we must have some faith in what we do; and we do this in the daily light of terrible events that happen and about which we become aware through the news media. Our attitude towards these events is important because it helps us to make sense of life itself. No religion can avoid these difficult questions and they all formulate their own views on causes and cures and what we should make of sad events in the world around us.
- Housman was perfectly right
- Our world rapidly worsens:
- Nothing now is so horrid
- Or silly it can’t occur [Auden, 865]
It is from getting excessively bogged down in these doom-laden events that one can so easily become very pessimistic about life and humanity and the seeming utter worthlessness of life. As Auden says, then the mind can become:
- ...the mind
- A quagmire of disquiet [Auden, 866]
- Thinking and reflecting on recent tragic events -- such as the 9/11 attacks, the Bali bombing, the Madrid bomb attacks and the tragic Beslan school siege -- one is forced to reflect upon and examine the nature of one's own life and to really consider whether there is a God or any spiritual principle we should live by to guide our lives and how we can give ourselves comfort and solace in such a wicked world.
- Dismayed by a wilderness
- Of hostile thoughts [Auden, 800]
- Thoughts of his own death,
- Like the distant roll
- Of thunder at a picnic [Auden, 800]
Death and misery become the predominant thoughts when we are oppressed by worldliness, when we lack the spirit of truly enlightened thinking.
- these are the essential, the core problems that any decent human being must address...or run away from. Suffering and tragedy can happen to any one of us and will come one day forsure. Our problem then is what to do about this? How should we view it and how can we best prepare ourselves for that sad day when it is our turn to die or suffer tragic loss?
...the heart
- As Zola said, must always start
- The day by swallowing its toad
- Of failure and disgust. Our road
- Gets worse... [Auden, 241]
Each day we must confront or run away from the myriad frustrations and disappointments that our lives inevitably contain. All lives contain them. This is our 'toad of failure and disgust.' In a sense, meditation, like therapy, places us face to face with them all.
The subatomic gulfs confront our lives
With the cold stare of their eternal silence [Auden, 309]
- in our own muddled way we avoid these issues...preferring not to think of them or to pray that they don't come soon and to lend our own tears to those of the close relatives of tragic events. We feel this somehow protects us and contributes something towards their healing. Maybe we kid ourselves...
What Auden calls "the broken ladder of our lives," [Auden, 309] is a ladder leading where? Probably nowhere but to the grave. That is a chilling thought.
* the Buddhist view is that all comes from karma and so if we purify ourselves, our hearts, our words and our actions, then we can be confident of future happy lives.
If we are honest with ourselves, then we can see that our lives are littered and filled with unacknowledged frustrations and disappointments about unattained targets and unachieved ambitions, about self, about certain other people and even about the world at large. This is the nature of samsara and although from a Buddhist view they are all trivial, to us at times they seem overwhelmingly important.
The mundane mind is a mind of such ordinariness and not a special or supramundane mind at all. Therefore, as is clearly apparent, viewing the world and our attitude towards self, others and life, and what qualities of the mind we use to look at it with very much determines how we see it...how we see ourselves and others. "Life is beautiful, if you look at it
beautifully." [Shahrdar] A positive, calm and joyous mind primarily sees, the beauty and joy in others as primary and the world's suffering so fleeting and evanescent [[[Wikipedia:ephemeral|ephemeral]]]. A mind heavy with aversion and desire and negative
attributes cannot view things so because it is so weighed down with suffering and misery. In the case of someone focused in politics, then again they tend to see a world awash with misery and very little joy is seen in the world. A mind of desire and aversion tends to swing wildly between pleasure and pain, neither of which lead to much peace or lasting joy.
The world therefore is both mundane and horrible as well as magical, fantastic and wonderful. Both are true--but which do we want to follow, believe or adhere to as a primary 'map and compass' for our own lives? The
choice is for each one of us to make. "Life is beautiful, if you look at it in a beautiful way." [Shahrdar] and such a sentiment shows that we see mostly what we choose and wish to see. By choosing to see it ugly, so it becomes ugly. The choice is ours.
Focus on the beauty and the wonderful and allow for the horrible too, but focus primarily upon love and beauty and the inherent niceness in people as primary and the badness as a necessary and secondary intermittent
defilement, but an adventitious and curable defilement nevertheless...a transient feature upon a firmer bedrock of niceness. This may sound trite, but surely is a preferable view to its vile opposite? It gives us hope. We want to live on the basis of one, in the hope of the other, or on the basis of one, while looking out for the other as an occasional invasive possibility.
Meditation on the Buddha mind (bodhicitta) gives us the chance to come to know for real what prayer and purification are: prayer based on non-self and true healing of others' woes. It also offers us the chance to realize the meditation experience as the core of Buddha's enlightenment.
Meditation on the bodhicitta therefore aims to enable us to dissociate ourselves from the myriad, trivial and mundane frustrations of our lives and to cultivate the higher view of ourselves as represented by universal compassion, love and a focus upon the positive aspects of life that can improve it both for ourselves and for all living beings. This is the
true bodhisattva motivation that lies behind the bodhicitta concept. Meditation on bodhicitta enables us to transcend the fleeting and transient--the ephemeral--and the badness and to focus on the great and good, the bedrock of 'permanent things,' which are things of a sacred and compassionate nature: "Life is beautiful, if you look at it in a beautiful way." [Shahrdar]
Meditation means "one must be passive to conceive the truth." [Auden, 308] It also means we strive to seek the truth in a form of stillness that sees "the shadows cast by language upon truth." [Auden, 308] It sees beyond the duality of language. As Auden rightly says:
- What we have not named
- Or beheld as a symbol
- Escapes our notice [Auden, 840]
Language and giving names to things conspire to dull our bright senses and lead us away from the simple facts of our existence that meditation always attempts to refresh and revitalise.
...a world
- Antecedent to our knowing, where flowers think
- Theirs concretely in scent-colours and beasts... [Auden, 801]
"The apple tree that cannot measure time," [Auden, 306] like a dog that cannot speak, loves us dearly but cannot tell us this; it is a mystery and an enigma but arguably is infinitely preferable to the fools whose lives are embedded in wrong views.
For as the poet says,
- All real perception it would seem,
- Has shifting contours like a dream,
- [Auden, New Year Letter, 1940, 210]
Obviously in the case of Zen, the 'mind of enlightenment' is an empty mind that takes all things at face value, questions nothing, judges nothing and detaches itself by enjoying every moment living in the now and thus finding a rainbow hidden among the clouds...the finding of nirvana within the sad wreckage that samsara is.
Sources
- W H Auden, Collected Poems, Edited by Edward Mendelson, London: Faber, 1994
- Dr Ardavan Shahrdar, MD, DIHom, President of Iranian Homeopathic Association