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emptiness
 

offline darkpromenade from Australia on 2007-12-30 02:17 [#02159124]
Points: 2777 Status: Regular



I went on a three day meditation retreat at the local
Tibetan Buddhist center, with my wife.

I met ordained buddhist dudes and dudettes for the first
time (cool people).

On the third day, during a guided meditation, I had my first
experience/realisation of no-self/emptiness. It was
strangely comforting.

:)


 

offline J198 from Maastricht (Netherlands, The) on 2007-12-30 02:21 [#02159125]
Points: 7342 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



well done!

:)

any chances of getting in that state again without
guidance?
i cant even imagine how difficult it must be.


 

offline darkpromenade from Australia on 2007-12-30 02:29 [#02159127]
Points: 2777 Status: Regular



It wasn't that hard, really. I was surprised.

I don't know what it was. The nun who lead the meditation
new just what to say at the right times, and perhaps it has
a bit to do with the attitudes you bring to the table, but
it was relatively effortless.

I'm not sure if I could do it without guidance again.... I
would probably get a bit tied up with my expectations.


 

offline J198 from Maastricht (Netherlands, The) on 2007-12-30 02:33 [#02159129]
Points: 7342 Status: Lurker | Followup to darkpromenade: #02159127 | Show recordbag



have you by any chance heard of or read anything by
gurumayi?


 

offline darkpromenade from Australia on 2007-12-30 02:34 [#02159130]
Points: 2777 Status: Regular



no, I have not (googling)


 

offline darkpromenade from Australia on 2007-12-30 02:37 [#02159131]
Points: 2777 Status: Regular



ok, looks interesting. looks like an interesting dude.


 

offline J198 from Maastricht (Netherlands, The) on 2007-12-30 02:41 [#02159133]
Points: 7342 Status: Lurker | Followup to darkpromenade: #02159131 | Show recordbag



it's a she :)

i suppose it's a different kind of yoga from the one you
practice.

but yeah i have heard some pretty fascinating stories about
her meditation retreats/gatherings.

yoga + meditation is on the agenda for 2008!


 

offline PS on 2007-12-30 02:45 [#02159134]
Points: 1876 Status: Lurker



vipassana can be done with very little guidance. the
methods are extremely simple, it's the things that pop up
that sometimes aren't. to get a taste, i'd recommend
looking into shinzen young, his lectures and writings are
great!


 

offline darkpromenade from Australia on 2007-12-30 02:48 [#02159135]
Points: 2777 Status: Regular | Followup to J198: #02159133



oh, right, I found the website of her guru....... rather
than her.

yeah, i practice the asana (postures) side of yoga, rather
than concentrating on meditation. We do some meditation,
but it's hard to find a yogi who has trained in those
aspects. Thats why I go to the buddhists for meditation.

Good luck with your yoga/ meditation. Look around for a
teacher that you connect with. Try a few out before you
commit. There are all sorts of teachers and practices out
there. Everyone has diffrent needs/ tastes.


 

offline darkpromenade from Australia on 2007-12-30 02:51 [#02159136]
Points: 2777 Status: Regular | Followup to PS: #02159134



I found vipassana to be very powerful, but I found the
practitioners lacked loving-kindness. They had the
detachement side of things sorted out, but they missed out
on the compassion. That was my experience of the group I
sat with. I'm sure it's not universal.

I have always been attracted to Theravada, but I aftter my
last retreat, I think maybe the Tibetans have something
going on.


 

offline J198 from Maastricht (Netherlands, The) on 2007-12-30 03:00 [#02159137]
Points: 7342 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



thanks for the advice. i will go to kundalini yoga first,
but there are two other options in my city.


 

offline PS on 2007-12-30 03:02 [#02159138]
Points: 1876 Status: Lurker



it's strange that you say that, at times i think vipassana
meditators can be too compassionate, at least verbally. i
know that's not really possible, i'm just drawn to the more
extreme bare-bones stuff. evil healing humour. hopefully
everything leads to the same place and i heard one method
can make another stronger. good luck!


 

offline darkpromenade from Australia on 2007-12-30 03:35 [#02159140]
Points: 2777 Status: Regular | Followup to PS: #02159138



I think I understand your attraction to the "bare-bones"
approach. That is what drew me to vipassana. Perhaps I
just came across a group that was quite on the path.

That is why I was surprised that the mahayanis had such a
profound affect on me over the last three days. It showed
me the difference between an intellectual understanding of a
concept and an actual realisation.

And you are right when you say they all lead to the same
place. Everyone has a teaching that is right for them. As
long as you avoid charlatans you should be right.

Anyway, namaste and love, light and peace to you.


 

offline Barcode from United Kingdom on 2007-12-30 05:17 [#02159150]
Points: 1767 Status: Lurker



Meditation is ridiculous. You are fooling yourself. There is
no "higher state", no such thing as "spirituality". Your
body has its own natural intelligence, it "meditates" while
you are asleep and there is no value in enforced meditation
while you are awake.

The Buddhists are as ignorant and stupid as the Christians,
Muslims and Jews with their holy books and traditions. There
is no "awakening", you are already awake. Instead of adding
to the religious shit you put in your head, drop it, only
then your thinking will become clear.

You are playing a childish game with yourself, convincing
yourself that you have discovered some sort of inner-piece
or other such nonsense.

If you want peace, go sit in a library, it will have much
the same effect, except you probably won't feel the
necessity to boast about it to your friends. That's what
this is all about after all.


 

offline Mum_Ra from LOL (United States) on 2007-12-30 12:50 [#02159214]
Points: 296 Status: Lurker



"Anyway, namaste and love, light and peace to you."

LMFAO. Sounds like you done got brainwashed.

I don't understand how these pseudo-religious cult-y forms
of Buddhism can promote greater symbiosis with others whilst
requiring you to things like "namaste and love, light and
peace to you."

That's not a way of blending in or coexisting with your
surroundings. That is, however, a sure way to sound like a
few too many bad trips, and get laughed at by friends and
acquaintances.

Some of the spiritual ideas are really cool, but I'd
recommend against inundating your speech with corny crap
like that unless you REALLY know what you're doing.

And if you're going to go on a rant about how we've no right
to stifle your spiritual growth or something, then don't
post on this messageboard about these things. It's totally
inappropriate, and warrants some picking over.

Sorry, man. This just rubs me the wrong way.



 

offline Mum_Ra from LOL (United States) on 2007-12-30 12:54 [#02159215]
Points: 296 Status: Lurker



And the pre-emptiveness of my last post is also unfair.

but...

don't drink the kool-aid lol


 

offline FlyAgaric from the discovery (Africa) on 2007-12-30 13:02 [#02159217]
Points: 5776 Status: Regular | Followup to Barcode: #02159150



your mind doesn't meditate while you sleep. it's constantly
active while you're dreaming. meditation is basically
turning of the sub-conscious, clearing the mind of all
thoughts. that's not pseudo. i'm not sure about
higher-states of consciousness or whatever (in-fact i
skipped most of this thread), but not thinking about
something for a few minutes can be quite liberating.
although i don't think i've managed to do more than ten
seconds and even then i'm not sure whether i'm fooling
myself into believing i've managed it.


 

offline Mum_Ra from LOL (United States) on 2007-12-30 13:07 [#02159218]
Points: 296 Status: Lurker



I like the idea of awareness meditation...

It's just that most people who practice this stuff tend to
go all out and do things like get vanity plates that say
"Medit8", change their clothing style, and say things like
"namaste" when it's completely inappropriate.

Cars, clothes, and how you greet people has no bearing on
your mindfulness. I wonder why more people don't practice
meditation more humbly.

If you've ever found yourself in "the zone" while making
music or whatever... when time becomes meaningless... then
that's a pretty potent form of meditation.

Lots of people do it.


 

offline FlyAgaric from the discovery (Africa) on 2007-12-30 13:08 [#02159220]
Points: 5776 Status: Regular | Followup to Barcode: #02159150



while meditation may have spiritual over-tones, the concept
alone does not necessarily imply any connection with
spirituality and the following of a certain creed or
whatever. it's quite simple really, i hope i spelled it out
there in the previous post. you assume too much, barcode.


 

offline rad smiles on 2007-12-30 13:10 [#02159221]
Points: 5608 Status: Lurker



i often find myself in a p'zone from pizza hut. shit is
dope!!!


 

offline FlyAgaric from the discovery (Africa) on 2007-12-30 13:12 [#02159222]
Points: 5776 Status: Regular | Followup to Mum_Ra: #02159218



yeah but not all people see it as a fashion statement. those
who do probably only practice for it for a short while as a
phase in their life. and maybe there are others who keep on
doing it and see it as lifestyle and assume some kind of
identity, and that's fine too. why do you think it bothers
you so much anyway?


 

offline Mum_Ra from LOL (United States) on 2007-12-30 13:18 [#02159225]
Points: 296 Status: Lurker



It strikes me as fake, and thus undesirable.


 

offline Mum_Ra from LOL (United States) on 2007-12-30 13:20 [#02159226]
Points: 296 Status: Lurker



I mean, whatever floats your boat, but if it's something
that constantly gets in the way of "real" interaction, then
I'm inclined to talk to other people.

It's kind of like being friends with someone who is in AA
and talks about it constantly. It can get irritating.


 

offline Mum_Ra from LOL (United States) on 2007-12-30 13:26 [#02159227]
Points: 296 Status: Lurker



Also: "yeah but not all people see it as a fashion
statement"

I know. Thats exactly what I posted.

Lots of people reach meditative states without even knowing
it, or labelling it as meditation as well...

Grr.

I try not to interfere too much with how people conduct
themselves, but for a group of people whose values transcend
the worth of material possessions, some of them can be
awfully possessed by materials.

And the namaste stuff just bothers me. I don't like amen
either.


 

offline Mum_Ra from LOL (United States) on 2007-12-30 13:27 [#02159228]
Points: 296 Status: Lurker



and by that I mean the amen break.


 

offline FlyAgaric from the discovery (Africa) on 2007-12-30 13:35 [#02159230]
Points: 5776 Status: Regular



Namaste...that's what the Dharma initiative say to each
other in Lost.

Anyway,

I don't see how "Lots of people reach meditative states
without even knowing
it, or labelling it as meditation as well... "

is anywhere near to saying "not all people see it as a
fashion
statement".

but forget it anyway. that's fine if it gets up your nose. a
lot of shit pisses me off too.


 

offline w M w from London (United Kingdom) on 2007-12-30 13:35 [#02159231]
Points: 21452 Status: Lurker



All i have is years and years of sadness. That is my
future.

I'm constantly suffocating on myself.

I'm so sick of trying. Trying never works.

You died before I met you.


 

offline FlyAgaric from the discovery (Africa) on 2007-12-30 13:39 [#02159234]
Points: 5776 Status: Regular | Followup to Mum_Ra: #02159228



i love the amen break.


 

offline CS2x from London (United Kingdom) on 2007-12-30 13:40 [#02159235]
Points: 5079 Status: Lurker | Followup to Mum_Ra: #02159218



I would be nice to be able to get "in the zone" at will, I
must say. Normally it seems to come to you. Not from
anything magical, of course; it's probably a combination of
the days events, the food you've eaten, the weather,
atmospheric conditions, other things going on in life, etc.
that produce a sudden creative spurt or "feeling".

It's annoying how out of control that can seem, though,
especially when there's collaborative work and you really,
really need to be inspired.

Not sure if meditation would do the tick, though. David
Lynch thinks it works, but what he's talking about sounds a
bit hocus-pocus, as great as his films are.


 

offline Mum_Ra from LOL (United States) on 2007-12-30 13:42 [#02159236]
Points: 296 Status: Lurker



I'm saying, you don't have to devote your car, house,
clothing, and pubic haircut to meditation in order to reap
the benifits of it.

I love David Lynch, but honestly, the way he talks about TM
now gets in the way of lots of insight into his character.

If he wasn't so clouded by all of this unified field
bullcrap, maybe he'd figure out for himself how he creates
his ideas, and would write an actual book, not some heap of
dung like "Catching the Big Fish".


 

offline Mum_Ra from LOL (United States) on 2007-12-30 13:46 [#02159237]
Points: 296 Status: Lurker



BTW CS2x I was in the process of writing that when you
posted your Lynch comment.

Anyway, judge for yourself:

Maharishi Yogi, and Transcendental Meditation

The pictures on the right hand side show the GLOBAL sort of
effects TM can have on an individual. Yes, YOU can create
world peace.


 

offline Mum_Ra from LOL (United States) on 2007-12-30 13:46 [#02159238]
Points: 296 Status: Lurker



Hi, I'd like a Big-Mac, a small fry, and some world peace.


 

offline darkpromenade from Australia on 2007-12-30 14:15 [#02159245]
Points: 2777 Status: Regular | Followup to Mum_Ra: #02159214



wow


 

offline darkpromenade from Australia on 2007-12-30 14:18 [#02159248]
Points: 2777 Status: Regular | Followup to Barcode: #02159150



I disagree with your position.

My experience of meditation is not the same as sitting in a
library.

I'm sorry you felt I was boasting. I was just sharing an
experience. I know some people on xlt are interested in
such things.

Now, back to the threads about Hanals cats.


 

offline J198 from Maastricht (Netherlands, The) on 2007-12-30 14:35 [#02159254]
Points: 7342 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



mum_ra, he wasn't boasting about anything. He was sharing an
experience, something everybody on this board does. If you
don't like meditation that's fine. Make your own thread
about stuff you hate instead of insulting one of the board's
kindest members, you fucking prick. What's the matter with
you?

barcode, since you want to approach everything from a
scientific viewpoint, or 'common sense' as you say, how
would you explain the extreme and obvious changes in
brainwave patterns that can be measured while one is
meditating? Saying 'there is no higher state' shows how you
choose to make everything as simple as you can. Please,
enlighten us and tell us what reality really looks like. I'm
sure you can draw a picture of it.


 

offline cx from Norway on 2007-12-30 14:52 [#02159260]
Points: 4537 Status: Regular



but what are the concrete specifics of meditation?
how do you know when you have achieved it, and could people
come in trances all the time naturally from outside things
like music, drugs, rest or whatever?



 

offline rockenjohnny from champagne socialism (Australia) on 2007-12-30 15:08 [#02159263]
Points: 7983 Status: Lurker



ive also returned to meditation in recent weeks .. im
pleased to say that its becoming easier even after a few
years on and off.

i had a brief encounter with the outer nimitas a few
mornings ago. basically i got to the point where i had
signed off my physical sensations and thoughts.

i felt an expanding, rushing sort of sensation, while i
watched or sensed a mass of unfolding white threads across
the space. when this happens, it feel it supports the
concept of a mind beyond the body and the mental contents.

as it usually happens, the thoughts return out of curiosity,
asking what the sensation is. thats when i get dragged back
into thought and away from the mind.

i understand the trick is to maintain focus upon that moment
of stillness. its just such a delicate thing when that
stillness lies below thought in itself!

as its said, one cant force jhana. only by relinquishing all
control can it be possible ..


 

offline J198 from Maastricht (Netherlands, The) on 2007-12-30 15:12 [#02159264]
Points: 7342 Status: Lurker | Followup to cx: #02159260 | Show recordbag



if you are really interested in it, you should buy a book
about it, visit a website, keep an open mind and just try
it.

try sitting on a pillow, turn off the music, the lights and
just focus on breathing, and nothing but that. Set a timer
and see if you can just sit there for 5 minutes.

the fact that this is extremely hard tells you how much your
mind is racing all the time. You might think this is ok, or
you might not. I'm terrible at it myself, and i don't 'get'
anything from meditation (yet) and might never do. Still
sometimes it feels just great to just do nothing without a
computer screen in front of you and without being asleep.


 

offline rockenjohnny from champagne socialism (Australia) on 2007-12-30 15:24 [#02159265]
Points: 7983 Status: Lurker



ive also been appreciating how we can reinforce no-self
through our conscious actions, and our attitudes toward the
world.

the big stumbling block will always be ego. thinking that we
know best.

our ego forms all of our judgement. from judgement we become
entrapped in the whole problem of labelling things in the
world, characteristic of others, or things within ourselves,
as being good or bad.

from the moment we start judging things in this way, we seek
to control them. an ongoing struggle to control things that
we cannot is the root cause of stress and illness,
disharmony and conflict. we forfeit our freedom.

..

so ive been consciously working backward through these
causes.

my overreaching desire is for happiness and freedom. i know
on a basic level that i must avoid short-term desires to
control the things around me.

that desire to control stems from the judgements i make. we
should always ask yourselves, do we really know what is
best? quickly enough, these judgements appear irrational.

as judgement is deconstructed, i realise where it is all
coming from. my ego, a foundation of craving. now the table
is bare, i can really ask myself, what do i really want?

the answer is freedom. the path returns full circle.


 

offline darkpromenade from Australia on 2007-12-30 16:13 [#02159283]
Points: 2777 Status: Regular | Followup to rockenjohnny: #02159263



I'm glad to hear you are meditating and that you are
benefitting from it :)

I always find the act of sitting difficult/challenging,
however I was surprised how smoothly I was lead to the point
of no-self by the teacher.

I really think the teachers made a huge difference to me. I
had two of the most amazing people I have ever met as
teachers over the three days. I have struggled to find
teachers who expressed a degree of "realisation" in their
actions....... lots of intellectual understanding, not so
much "action". Not so much metta.



 

offline darkpromenade from Australia on 2007-12-30 16:18 [#02159286]
Points: 2777 Status: Regular | Followup to rockenjohnny: #02159265



I'm still murky when it comes to integrating my experiences
with my life, bringing understanding to (all of) my
actions.

To maintain awareness of my thoughts, and to quicky identify
the action of my ego is a goal at the moment.

And to live with forgiveness and patience. Small steps :)


 

offline X-tomatic from ze war room on 2007-12-30 17:43 [#02159302]
Points: 2901 Status: Lurker | Followup to darkpromenade: #02159124



oxymoron


 

offline Mum_Ra from LOL (United States) on 2007-12-30 18:56 [#02159317]
Points: 296 Status: Lurker



"mum_ra, he wasn't boasting about anything. He was sharing
an
experience, something everybody on this board does. If you
don't like meditation that's fine. Make your own thread
about stuff you hate instead of insulting one of the board's

kindest members, you fucking prick. What's the matter with
you? "

I didn't say that I don't like meditation. Meditation is
something that I think a lot of people, including myself,
benefit from.

I just don't get the showiness, or why nice, english
speaking people start adopting sanskrit greetings into their
everyday vocabulary. Some of my "hardcore" buddhist friends
do this type of thing, and it's really irritating. I wasn't
insulting darkpromenade as much as being inflammatory in the
hopes of getting an explaination for that god damn
ridiculous saying.

Also: darkpromenade might be one of the nicest people on
this board, but from most of your posts, I can imagine that
you are not.



 

offline Barcode from United Kingdom on 2007-12-30 18:56 [#02159318]
Points: 1767 Status: Lurker



"your mind doesn't meditate while you sleep. it's
constantly
active while you're dreaming. meditation is basically
turning of the sub-conscious, clearing the mind of all
thoughts."

What I meant was the closest thing those bozos will get to
what they call a state of meditation was by going to sleep.

You cannot "turn off" the subconcious, that's like saying
turn off the heart - you will die. The brain is an organ,
and thought derives from it. You cannot force yourself into
not thinking about something, because thought is the only
instrument you have to put that condition into action. How
can thought not think about thought? The whole concept is
absurd.

Meditation is simply another result of human boredom. The
body doesn't need to meditate and it doesn't want to
meditate - the body doesn't want anything that your thoughts
want. It's only function is to eat, replicate then
reassemble the atoms through death, anything you superimpose
on top of that is meaningless nonsense as far is the body is
concerned.

If you want reality, strip away your bogus philosophies and
ideologies, as all they do is cover up reality. Eventually
you end up a religious retard.

Perhaps reality is not exciting enough for human beings,
they have to dream up alternative ways of existing or
"being" where there is none. Life is very simple indeed. You
are an animal, your body behaves like all the other animals,
the fact that you have consciousness does not give you
license to believe you are better or more important than a
flea or a slug because you're not. They don't need to
"meditate" and neither do you.


 

offline darkpromenade from Australia on 2007-12-30 18:59 [#02159319]
Points: 2777 Status: Regular



"Life is very simple indeed. You
are an animal, your body behaves like all the other animals,

the fact that you have consciousness does not give you
license to believe you are better or more important than a
flea or a slug because you're not."

I completely agree with you. :)


 

offline Mum_Ra from LOL (United States) on 2007-12-30 19:04 [#02159321]
Points: 296 Status: Lurker



I also agree darkpromenade, but I don't think that means
that we shouldn't kill mosquitoes or anything that's alive.
That's idea, but there's no species on earth that doesn't
have some detrimental effect on another species' population.
Or is there? I don't know... Anyway... I'm not going to give
up killing mosquitoes anytime soon.


 

offline Mum_Ra from LOL (United States) on 2007-12-30 19:07 [#02159322]
Points: 296 Status: Lurker



Barcode: How do you feel about trancelike states? Meditative
states don't nescessarily have to come with all this
dogmatic spiritual stuff. There are a lot of reasons that I
agree with what you're saying, though. I'm generally very
skeptical about organized religions.


 

offline Sano on 2007-12-30 19:09 [#02159324]
Points: 2502 Status: Lurker



At the local Tibetan Buddhist center...

It's like going to a Chinese restaurant!

I wish we had some of those centers here that sounds
like an interesting experience.


 

offline Mum_Ra from LOL (United States) on 2007-12-30 19:09 [#02159326]
Points: 296 Status: Lurker



But yeah... Once you get into a "p'zone", time certainly
doesn't work the same way as does in a "normal" (Its hard to
say what this is) frame of mind. It's something thats great
to think about, that subjective compression and expansion of
time.


 

offline rockenjohnny from champagne socialism (Australia) on 2007-12-30 19:28 [#02159328]
Points: 7983 Status: Lurker | Followup to darkpromenade: #02159286



i have great faith in the awareness of the mind. ive gone
from being buried in thought, really at the mercy of it, to
understanding it so much better.

i had a difficult week leading up to christmas, but through
making a point of understanding and forgiving the situation
early on, everyone involved feels a lot better. perhaps even
better than before.

after all, as i heard in a dhamma talk, 'unforgiveness is
like taking poison and waiting for the other person to
die'!

i have to thank my first meditation teacher for showing me
the technique, while i feel like ive been mentored by
ajahn brahmavamso. his talks have been life changing.



 


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