voyageur said:
Buddy said:
Quote of the Day
[quote author=SOTT front page]
When we talk about compassion we talk in terms of being kind. But compassion is not so much being kind; it is being creative [enough] to wake a person up.
- Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoch
Whoa. I really like that!
Ditto; noticed this on SotT when it was put up..
Trungpa Rinpoch is featured here (was sent this link):
_http://suniemianne.blogspot.ca/2011/07/kalachakra-2011-this-is-not-review.html
also includes a link to a film about him (have not seen it) called 'Crazy Wisdom'. This Rinpoch was not the traditional sort. Alcohol, drugs, sex were much apart of his final days to 1987. As many 'Guru's' seem to do, he maintained sexual student relations outside his marriage.
Being on the Kalachakra path, it say's here (same link):
The kalachakra path in Tibetan Buddhism is one in which the practitioner needs steady teachers because you play with fire. You don't renounce the world in its entirety, you move bravely into it because there is no time to waste. You can be in it but not completely of it as some esoteric traditions say. This requires a mental discipline different from what we normally conceive of as mental discipline. Kalachakra is a part of the yogic tradition -- which means yoking yourself to life in order to learn from it. Mind in Tibetan Buddhism is like a field-- it is I would venture to guess literally the field of our attention. It is where we give and receive impressions and it our original state in a way and our gateway to the world and one another. So understanding that and maintaining clarity in the field ensures receptivity to the world as it is. Not as we might wish it to be.
[/quote]
Wow, that's all new to me. Thanks!
This part:
Mind in Tibetan Buddhism is like a field-- it is I would venture to guess literally the field of our attention. It is where we give and receive impressions and it our original state in a way and our gateway to the world and one another. So understanding that and maintaining clarity in the field ensures receptivity to the world as it is. Not as we might wish it to be.
...is especially interesting considering that "field of our attention" is what I think of, not as
my mind, but as Nature's mind that people share on some level (if that makes any sense). Related to this, it has always seemed somehow an important part of survivability in some terms, that no matter what happens, no matter how much pain, anguish or whatever, I must not close my eyes (become unconscious, as it were, since disorientation may be equal to forgetfulness).