Saturday, May 27, 2006

Zaadz

I came across a lovely new online community initiative, called Zaadz. Nice to see people doing something pro-active for the cause!

I must admit that I am well steeped in cynicism, after having gone out to change the world and fallen flat on my face. But, that great disillusionment led to my discovery of zazen, so it's all good.

There's a new meme that I'm happy to propagate. The idea is to open your favourite spiritual book of the moment, turn to page 35 and post something inspiring.

Here goes, I've just finished reading "The Path of Practice: a woman's book of Ayervedic healing" by Bri. Maya Tiwari.

On page 35 she's speaking about 'maya' - her namesake
"Often mistranslated as 'illusion,' the Sanskrit word 'maya' also means the manifestation of the one God as the multiplicity of forms in the material universe, the ignorance that draws a veil over the face of the One Reality so that all we see is diversity, and the wisdom that ultimately leads us to pierce the veil and see the One beneath the many."

God is dreaming and the dream is beautiful...;)

Monday, May 22, 2006

Zen and emotion

It seems that many people, when faced with the dharma, and the dissolution of the conditioned world, lose touch with the emotional side of practice.

Emotion is maya, illusion, conditioning. But then so is your hand, when it comes down to it, and yet you pay attention to your hands all day. What I'm trying to say is that although zazen allows one to see through the illusion, it is still usefull and often neccessary to have other ways of working with the world. Practises that are founded in the dharma, but that don't cut as deep as zen. Then surface level work can be done.

Why bother with surface level work when you could just dissolve the entire structure? Well, one reason is that it's fun. I like to work (consciously) with maya. Brahman is dreaming, and the dream is beautiful. Also there are times (like on my last retreat) when I make a decision not to zen my way through, but rather to backtrack and sort out the pieces slowly.

Disillusionment is great. The clearing away of the illusion allows clarity of mind and clear sight, focused intention. And zazen as a practice is the most direct way to disillusionment and self-realization. But, while walking the path of self-realization, there is much to explore! This is why I study psychology, philosophy, anthropology, theology etc. This is why I follow in the footsteps of the shamans through the ages who have been mapping the paths of the subconscious mind. The sights and sounds of the astral realm may be illusions, but they are illusions which tell us more about ourself and our journey. Couple that with a deep grounding in dharma, and a strong zen practice, and you have a rather special recipe for success and personal happiness.

Friday, May 19, 2006

Rainer Maria Rilke



My life is not this vertical hour
in which you find me in such haste
I am a tree in front of my own background
I am only but one of my many mouths
and the one which is the first to close
I am the silence between two sounds
that only with difficulty grow used to one another
for the tone of death also wishes to be heard
but in the darkness of the interval
they make peace with one another, trembling
and the song remains beautiful

Rainer Maria Rilke



A few weeks ago, on my webfriends blog, I discovered a poet by the name of 'Rainer Maria Rilke'. He wrote in Germany at the end of the 19th century, and his work has been translated into English for the rest of us. It's awesome stuff, really moving, cutting, honest work. This guy was zen all over.

His work inspired me to music, so I composed a piece around a one of his most moving verses. If you can play mp3's on your computer then you can listen to it by clicking here: rainer.mp3

Another home recording, I'm using a better microphone these days, but its still pretty rough. Hope you'all enjoy :)

kids!!#@*

AAargh! Had a huge blow up with my daughter this morning, before school. Whenever we knock heads she becomes a rock and I become a hammer. Not pretty. And then my husband got involved, even worse, a whole house of angry people before 8am in the morning! Poor Alex (my son, age 5) he just kept very quiet, eyes wide...

My daughter has a bit of a wee-wee problem, she's 8, so she should have grown out of it by now, but I suspect it mat be beyond her control (weak bladder muscles?) anyway, her school clothes were smelling like wee, and I told her to change. That's when the sh*t hit the fan. She has a very strong will (gee, I wonder where she gets that from) and she decided that she couldn't smell the urine, so I must be making it up.

Well, to cut a long story short, Ant ended up taking my son to school while I stayed home with Micaela who by now was in absolute hysterics. I was almost in tears myself, what to do with a child who just catagorically will not listen to reason? I had a choice between thrashing her (which would have made things worse, believe me) or bailing out and phoning my mom. Thank God for Grans! If I was a hammer to Micaela's rock, my mom was warm water, and my little girl melted, calmed down immediately. She then changed into clean clothes and could eventually be driven to school.

Of course I'm left feeling absolutely shattered. Isn't it awful how as a parent you end up taking full emotional responsability for almost everything?

One thing I do know is that when Micaela starts to harden and get obstinate its completely useless to use anger or force to try and change her will.

So I must look at my base reactions, and try remind myself in time not not lose it. Parenting is sooo difficult sometimes.

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

From what I can gather Theravedan Buddhism predates Zen Buddhism. In fact the zen patriarchs were men who rebelled against the Theravedan traditions. Theravedans elavate the teacher, putting him on a dias above the students. The original zen masters refused the dias, sat on the floor with everyone else, and basically thumbed their noses at any form of "precious tradition" which had grown up within Buddhism.

I am way more comfortable within the zen school. Flagrant disregard of the norms. Although even the Zen schools are open to being dogmatised by people who need dogmas. I guess there will always be those who need others to direct them. I can't think of anything worse! That's why I stopped practicing Christainity, you have to leave everything up to Jesus! I'm almost sure that is not what he intended while he was teaching. He was teaching empowerment, but I guess due to the Jewish conditioning there is still the overtone of evil human/omnipotent God - and never the twain shall meet.

But that's a whole other story, and I definately don't want to get into any apologist debates, so I'll leave it right there.

Just want to say that flagrant disregard for the norms does not equal lack of respect for discipline. Any serious practice needs discipline, thrives on it. In fact when you are disregarding the norm, discipline is even more essential to practice, because you become fully responsible for your own progress.

My husband's Buddhist name is 'Fa Chao' which means 'trancending the Darmha'. I think that about sums it up.

Thank God for Zen ;)

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

after vipassana

The vipassana meditation technique: a ten day course

The first day is begun in noble silence; no speech, no eye contact, no touching. I arrive at the course the day before, for registration. We are assigned to small, shared cabins situated within walking distance from a meditation hall where we gather to practice for hours each day. The initial practice is to sit in a comfortable position (usually on a pillow with crossed legs) and close your eyes. Breathe through the nose and be aware of each breath. Be aware of the breath coming in and going out, note which nostril it passes through; left, right, or both simultaneously. When the mind wonders, gently bring it back to the concentrated awareness of the breath. Don't regulate the breath, just observe the natural breathing pattern.

I practice zazen (another form of Buddhist meditation) so I expected the vipassana technique to be relativly easy to master. Both forms of meditation are founded in the dharma, both teach enlightenment. But zazen is open-eyes meditation, and vipassana is closed-eyes. The rationale is that having open eyes can be distracting to the meditator, but I passed the visual hurdle ages ago in my practice. With my eyes closed, on the other hand, I resort to agitated monkey mind. The inside of my head is infinitely distracting. I spent the day concentrating hard to focus on the natural breath (turns out I'm a control freak when it comes to breathing - as soon as I am aware of my breath I begin regulating it.) The technique calls for one to focus on the natural breath, the breath the body breathes without conscious intent. That way we become slowly aware of the subtler sensations, and we begin to fine tune our perceptions.

On the second day the practice deepens a little. The next technique taught is to be aware of the touch of the breath, in the triangular space between your upper lip and the bridge of your nose, and the inner and outer walls of the nostrils. I spent that day patiently focusing my awareness of the feeling of the air as it passed into each nostril, and the feeling of it being exhaled again. I was particularly distracted by my posture and my aching limbs. Sitting on a pillow for many, many hours has it's toll on the body. I was shifting positions constantly but still diligently trying to maintain the focus on feeling the touch of the breath.

Third day: the practice is to be aware of any sensation at all which occurs in the triangular space between your upper lip and the bridge of your nose, and on the inner/outer walls of the nostrils. The subtler the sensation the better. Itches, tickles, throbbing, moisture, heat, cold, numbness...any sensation at all, but only in the little area around and inside the nose. This way mind is focusing on ever subtler perceptions, being fine tuned to a point of high sensitivity. We still maintain noble silence. All other sensation from the rest of the body must be ignored.

Day four, we finally get to the nitty gritty of vipassana. Up until then we had been practising anapana, which is the fore-runner for the full vipassana technique. But of course I wasn't there to learn it, having left sobbing on day three. More of that later, back to the technique. (I looked up the next step on the internet when I got home, and then carried on the meditation sessions in my study.) After three days of intense, continual focus on ever subtler sensation, living and eating in silence, my senses are heightnened, despite the emotional trip home from the meditation center. The technique is now to be aware of the body, starting from one tip and traveling to the other, and then back again. The same high awareness that has been generated in the nasal area now travels slowly through the body, and while practising this I felt the sensations of the internal organs - very strange. The awareness seemed to travel in a ball, about the size of the area of the initial triangle of awareness. I think its called body scanning.

So that's the practical aspect of the meditation, all fine and dandy. What wasn't so dandy at all was the emotional aspect. During my zen practise I often find that emotional issues rise to the surface of my consciousness. As the mind quietens, so the inner thoughts and feelings become easier to percieve. But I have never sat for that long before, and I was completely unprepared for the emotional breakthroughs. Due to my marijuana use, psychedelic explorations, and daily zazen practice, I am already particularly sensitive. So sitting in such a pristine and encouraging environment, for such long periods of time, was a highly potent recipe for major emotional upheaval.

By the end of the first day I had realized that I'd never really processed my parents divorce. The little six year old who watched her family disintegrate is suddenly right there. I cry quietly on the way to the the dormitory, disturbing the other meditators is taboo at a meditation retreat. I carry on the meditation practice and I gain emotional equilibrium again, the going becomes easier for a while.

The second day I spent physically uncomfortable, and also a little bored with all the nose focus. My mind raced through plans and aspirations, and I stated clearly to myself all the things I want to achieve, imagining them vividly over the hours I sat. I still followed my breath, trying to focus on the touch of the air, but as my mind wondered I let it, not feeling too guilty if 5 or ten minutes slipped by in happy constructive planning.

On the third day, as I lay in my cabin, flat on my back and breathing deeply, the pain I still carry from my abortion hit me like a mental sledgehammer. This is an issue that I know I haven't processed properly, so it shouldn't have come as a surprise. I think it was the intensity of the emotion which threw me completely off balance.

I had spent 3 days in almost solitude, without any recourse to my usual processing tools (talking, writing, making art, making music). I desperately wanted to be home, with people who loved me, I didn't want to experience all these emotions alone. On the afternoon of the third day I requested a private interview with the teacher, and in tears I told him that I wanted to leave. He was adamant that I 'weather out the emotional storm' at the retreat centre. He advised me that if I could just keep bringing my awareness back to the breath, I would pass through this bout of emotional discomfort and so transcend it. Well, he was right, I did pass through the storm, but I sure as hell didn't do it there. I know how much I am willing and able to process at a time, and I have no masochistic desire to push myself past breaking point. I think the teacher considered me weak minded, unable to push through to the other side. This doesn't bother me as much as it would have in the past. I'm no longer all that swayed by other people's opinion of me. I know my own mind and I knew that the time had come for me to stop the meditation practice, and go home.

I left despite much protestation, and the relief was astronomical. Don't get me wrong, the technique is amazing. It works. "If you patiently and diligently practice you are bound to succeed" - that's one of the phrases quoted often by the teacher, and it's true. But quite honestly, I'm not ready for too many fireworks at once, and i'd rather push further in a safe and loving space, at my own pace.

I'm still practicing, in fact my practice has tripled since I've been back (it's only be a day, but hey, maybe it will last :) I'm alternating between zazen and what I have learnt of vipassana.

I've also uncovered a hotbed of controversy surrounding the SN Goenka Vipassana Course, which is the one I attended. Mr. SN Goenka is a world leading vipassana teacher, and he runs meditation retreats all over the world to teach the technique. All very well, but it seems a lot of people have a problem with his particular approach. if you're interested in reading more see this article. Very interesting observations about the apparent dangers of the retreat as structured by Goenka. Also in all his years of teaching, he has never fully initiated a student, and hence he is the only qualified teacher of his particular approach. All the retreats all over the world are taught using video footage and audio tapes of his teachings, and facilitated by his assistants, who are not quailfied to discuss the darmha. This proves to be a big problem, often an assistant teacher is out of his depth.

Anyway, all said and done I am pleased I went. I like what I learnt of this new technique, and I loved the taste of the fruits of hard practice.

Slowly does it, gently, carefully, with much awareness.

Bhavatu sabba mangalam (may all beings everywhere be happy and at peace)

Friday, May 12, 2006

Vipassana

Well i'm back in the land of the blogging, for better or for worse :)

Leaving today for a 10 day Vipassana retreat. Vipassana is a form of meditation that comes from Theraveda Buddhism, it's all about mindfullness and self awareness. I've been practising zazen for almost 2 years now, so it'll be great to learn a new sitting style. I think the two are closely related.

I need this retreat. For ages now I've known that I have to make some changes to my lifestyle. My eating habits suck, I am so unconscious about what i put into my body (or rather, i'm really consious of how awful it is yet I continue with absolute disregard)

Also, I could really do with a week of hectic discipline when it comes to my meditation practise. I usually sit zazen with Ant for 20 minutes in the mornings after I've dropped the kids off at school. And then for the rest of the day I use chemicals to maintain a semblance of normality (caffeine, TCH, sugar). It's a silly way to live considering that I know better.

So this retreat is going to help reset all my patterns.
Yum.