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Hello and Vows in Buddhism (Read 6611 times)
vajra
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Hello and Vows in Buddhism
May 28th, 2007 at 6:24pm
 
Hi all, I've new and looking forward to some interesting exchanges. I hope you don't mind my leading off with a new and probably highly obscure topic on first visit.

My path has for many years as a semi detached Tibetan Buddhist - I have a stable meditation practice going and have found the teachings to be incredibly accurate and practical. That said don't consider myself a Buddhist per se - I read much more widely.

The issue of vows has recently reared its head.

After many years of anticipation I finally did the TMI Gateway Voyage in Europe last Autumn. It built very nicely on my meditation practice, and popped me very nicely into other states of consciousness - more stably than was the case on meditation alone.

The effect has to been to deliver some rapid emotional opening and acceleration of insight in the months since. To the point where it's been a bit painful at times. I somehow started writing a little poetry too - quite spontaneously, it started while dropping back from F15 when having connected with my mind again I asked the question 'how do i explain this?' (a bit of a shock for a totally non literary guy) Most of the communication happening I should say at the subconscious non-verbal level - I get the odd explict communication in words or whatever but very little.

My question relates to this because having experienced from Gateway how powerful connecting with the higher selves is as a means of driving opening I've gotten interested in the Vajrayana/Mahamudra or Tantric path in Tibetan Buddhism which involves applying methods for working in this space. (terminology aside the system of bardos or after death realities described in the Tibetan book of the Dead is by the way remarkably similar to Robert Monroe and TMI's descriptions of the focus areas)

Trouble is acess to the Vajrayana teachings involves taking vows - the Mahayana vow to be reborn in this reality to help others until all escape samsara or this existence, and another of obedience to a teacher. It also involves an extremely heavy workload and commitment to practice, and is apparently not risk free.

Which presuming a trusworthy and capable teacher is fine except that (a) I don't feel competent to take such vows - helping others is what it's about, but it's not clear how this is best done. Transitions between focus areas and rebirth seem to involve a degree of automation (we are at best driven by aspects of our probably collective consciousness we're not conscious of) and (b) surely the wisdom, compassion and the like arising from working on self should lead to the right behaviours when needed anyway.

So I can't help feeling the vows are also about protecting the institution, and maybe to put off those inclined to use the resulting capabilities for nefarious purposes - they specify karmic catastrophe in the event they are broken. I'm not too keen either on the possibility of locking myself into a mistaken commitment which presumably would influence what happens in the afterlife too.

So I guess I'm wondering what if anything you guys may think, have heard or better still know from experience. Is there stuff out there which from the TMI perspective says positive or negative things about the Tibetan Buddhist path, or indeed about the place where realised teachers end up? Which is presumably locked into repeating re-birth into this reality until all sentinent beings escape, but as realised persons armed with powers which mean they are not driven by Karma or conditioning while this is going on.

Robert Monroe mentions coming across a group of realised beings in his explorations, but didn't say a lot about them as best I remember. Are they for example some of Bruce's 'big fish?'

It's possible to take the 'why bother' position on it, but I guess twelve years have shown me that Tibetan Buddhism is a very valid and highly practical tradition. All I've heard taught so far far has stood up in practice, and more to the point has proven highly effective as a means of raising consciousness. Your average Tibetan Rinpoche is a very lovely gentle smiling (albeit very powerful) gent and an excellent advertisment for the tradition..

So my thanks in advance. My thanks to Bruce too for creating this site and forum which provides such an opportunity to discuss the big issues.....


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LaffingRain
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Re: Hello and Vows in Buddhism
Reply #1 - May 28th, 2007 at 10:52pm
 
hi there and welcome to this friendly board Smiley  we do have a resident zen Buddhist I believe, he should be along some time to say hello perhaps. this Buddhist has non/physical helpers/friends himself.

I think u are drifting towards not taking the vows and it's such a personal decision that I don't think any of us here, other than the Buddhist I mentioned, would be able to say much about it, whether it is necessary for you.
just conjecturing that the taking of vows is necessary for some, to remain one pointed, focused on spiritual priorities of getting off the wheel of incarnation perhaps, or I like as you say, staying until all are able to wink out or wake up. then I would assume taking vows are not necessary either for some, who have no trouble and are not distracted by the material aspects of living here, they can achieve it with their personal helpers and guides and life will present those opportunities where we can do our part.
so it seems like 6 of one, 1/2 dozen of the other in your case, just so long as they would not be engendering a fearful aspect to do this thing, as the best possible approach to any situation I feel is "you will know them by their love." or I should say my creed is that we are here to conquer every fear, or realize fear is False Evidence Appearing as Real.

this affirmation alone if realized might go a very long way in one's spiritual growth plan as to be love realized is to be god realized, and the opposite of fear is love, so listen to your heart, where you can hear it's sound.
Smiley

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Re: Hello and Vows in Buddhism
Reply #2 - May 29th, 2007 at 11:51am
 
Hi Vajra,

Every so often we muse on one thread or another about why anyone would want to come back.  I suppose if one is truly enlightened from a Buddhist perspective, it doesn’t make any difference and to help others is always a worthy goal.  However, to require you to come back again in order to teach you how to break the cycle of rebirth doesn’t make sense to me.  Personally, I’d be hesitant to take such a vow even if I assume I have a number of lifetimes to go. 

Some folks here have been talking about starting a discussion on The Tibetan Book of the Dead.  I’m looking forward to that but hope it doesn’t start too soon because I have to read it first.  From what I understand there are similarities to Monroe’s focus levels.  Here’s the URL for that thread:  http://www.afterlife-knowledge.com/cgi-bin/yabb/YaBB.cgi?num=1178752449/2#2 .

I look forward to seeing you around,

Rob
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Re: Hello and Vows in Buddhism
Reply #3 - May 29th, 2007 at 3:28pm
 
Hello Vajra:

I used to be involved with Eastern teachings including Buddhism. I've found that it isn't necessary to have a guru of some sort. It is better to rely on your higher self. I've experienced much more growth by praying to God and making contact with my higher self, than I did when I hung around a guru. I've also received guidance from Christ.

Regarding discipline, here's an experience I had that relates. I was meditating one day and suddenly I found myself at the back of a church.  A young lady was trying to decide whether she should get married. She decided to do so and I found myself at the front of the church but still inside. I was standing in front of two big wooden doors. One was partly opened. I could see white light behind it. I heard a voice ask, "Do you want to make the change?" I answered: "yes."  The voice asked very firmly: "Are you sure?" I answered yes.

I've found that the demands of such a committment can be quite challenging at times.  You have to be willing to question everything and deal with whatever issues might be troubling you.  If you make the choice to be guided by a light being, you have to be willing to do whatever is necessary, otherwise you completely waste your time and the time of the being or beings who help you.  You have to be willing to let go of all that binds you with both hands.

I'm not suggesting that spiritual growth and guidance has to be an all or nothing thing. However, if you're considering taking vows, it makes me think you're really serious about growing spiritually.
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Re: Hello and Vows in Buddhism
Reply #4 - May 29th, 2007 at 3:29pm
 
Regarding vows, I wouldn't vow anything without being sure I really know what I'm doing. And when I know what I do, well then I don't feel like I have to vow, as I do it anyway. I would consider if there is maybe a difficulty in translation, maybe "vow" isn't matching what was intended originally very well. A different thing of course are affirmations. Basically it are statements, declarations for yourself. They are powerful as well, but easier to correct.

Spooky
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Re: Hello and Vows in Buddhism
Reply #5 - May 29th, 2007 at 5:01pm
 
Hi Vajra-
Welcome to the forum. Hope that you stick around with us.

If I might, I suggest on stepping back a bit to review what is actually bothering you from a little different angle.

Vows were initially intended to quiet unruly people who needed restraints before they could become serious. Obviously, if you make a vow and break it, you will suffer whatever you feel is necessary or appropriate. Conversely, if you are already on the path, then vows intended to help you get there are superfluous. Recall Marpa who was a criminal and murderer and was enlightened almost at the moment of death. (At least I think it was Marpa, name might be wrong.)

There is another purpose to vows - making money for the monks who administer them. It's just as good to donate the money. Probably better for the monk too.

The only really important vow that Buddhism suggests is the Bodhisattvic Vow. It runs roughly like, "So long as time and space remain, I shall not accept the highest nirvana, but I shall return to help reduce the suffering of others."  As the Dalai Lama said, this is not necessarily taken in a formal manner, nor does it need a properly ordained teacher to administer it - it is a vow you make in your heart, to yourself and to all sentient beings over all time.

The Bodhisattivic Vow looks scary because it says that you are willing to abandon yourself to the welfare of others - an attitude called bodhicitta. As Jesus put it, "No man hath greater love than to lay down his life for his friend." Sounds really holy, irrevocable and eternally binding. And it is. And it is intended to be that way.

BUT - look at the top end of the creation sequence and you'll notice that there is only one reality there, often called "Mind", the initial impulse of existence within beginningless time. (I usually use the term "God" instead of "Mind", much to the distress of formal Buddhist friends who miss the point of the Anatta Doctrine.) Ultimately, your nature arose out of that initial Thingamajig. It is your own personal nature. Sri Ramana Maharshi called it "the True Self". In ultimate fact, everything is actually everything else, and eah of us is everyone else as well. So when you accept the Bodhisattvic Vow it does two things - (1) it means that you will return to help yourself get through samsara with less suffering - although parts of you might be in other bodies. Until this is done you have no access to the "ultimate nirvana" so acceptance or rejection of i is actually moot. (2 When you die you will be without a roadmap unless you have built one into your life. The Bodhisattvic Vow guarantees that you will have a predestination to a life infused with bodhichitta, and oriented toward enlightenment. That way you keep on moving in the proper direction, and have the best possible start. (There's more, but this is to the point of your question.)

The risks of studying Mahayana involve all the usual risks of psychic development, which mostly are that you get to work off all your accumulated karma. Once you dedicate yourself, there is a "bucket of sh!t effect" in which all the stuff that's been on hold suddenly dumps on you. That's also because now you're ready for it. So keep at it, and have faith, the bucket does not refill - unless you mess up, in which case you know what happens. There are also the pitfalls of siddhis - seductive side trips into psychic powers, which are ultimately useless.

I recall the story of two monks who studied together, and then parted. Many years later they again met, and one asked the other what he was up to. "Oh, I've had a wonderful practice. It took years to master the ability, but now I can walk on water."  The other monk smiled. "That's nice, but it only took me a few minutes to learn that if I give the boatman a coin, he'll ferry me across."

Most of the dangers lie in learning to "walk on water", a material situation that does no spiritual good, but it binds you to the everyday world. Stick to reducing the suffering of others and you'll go farther and faster.

You might find it useful to look into the Prajnaparamita Sutra - The Dalai Lama presented it in San Jose some years back, and there might still be copies of the presentation available. Try
www.medicinebuddha.org.  The reason is that this focusses direcly on the idea of "Mind" and what it is - and it will give you something on which to meditate for a few months.

dave





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Re: Hello and Vows in Buddhism
Reply #6 - May 29th, 2007 at 5:41pm
 
Regarding what Dave wrote about the Bodhisattva vow, I believe there is more flexibility than is generally assumed.

Certainly the goal is for all beings to abide in perfect oneness with each other. I don't believe this is someting that happens within the context of linear time as we know it. I believe that the spirit beings I communicate with already abide in this perfect oneness. When I wake up I'll find that all others have also woken up, because in truth there is no separation from my moment of awakening and the awakening of all others. This doesn't mean that there isn't work to do in order for everybody to wake up. It just means that manner in which things are worked out aren't limited by the constraints of linear time.

Regarding the Dalai Lama, I saw a show with him, he was asked if he's enlightened, and he answered no. Going by what I've seen and read of him, I believe this is true. Nevertheless, I believe he is a good humble man. His physical person didn't ask to be the Dalai Lama. That role was assigned to him. Going by what I've seen, he didn't let it get to his head.

It would be really interesting to see how things work on the spirit side when it comes to reincarnating lamas. If an order for a lama is put in down here, I guess the spirit World has no choice but to comply. I doubt the same Soul reincarnates as a particular lama over and over again. This wouldn't be productive to a Soul's growth. What probably happens is that the spirit World looks for a Soul that would do a good job, and would benefit in some way by taking on such an incarnation.

My feeling is that complete enlightenment is a rarity on this planet. Those who have become enlightened probably aren't well know. I also believe that it isn't necessary for most Souls to become completely enlightened while here in the physical.  Some growth is accomplished here, and the finishing touches are completed in the spirit World.
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Mr. Nobody
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Re: Hello and Vows in Buddhism
Reply #7 - May 30th, 2007 at 3:29pm
 
A wonderful Nyingma lama offers the inner-most teachings to anyone who walks in the door, without asking for anything in return.  He feels they should be available and given freely to anyone.

He said to me: " All spiritual practice is about Bodhicitta (awakened heart). It is the path underneath your feet and at the same time it is the goal. Underneath all the words and images, there it is. There is nothing more important"

The vow of vows is non-verbal. It is an open heart.

Take your stand there.

(And then look around. I'll be standing next to you, along with many other friends)



Hey Vajra,

welcome!

Love,
        Tim F.
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Mr. Nobody
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Re: Hello and Vows in Buddhism
Reply #8 - May 30th, 2007 at 4:22pm
 
And...

Nancy-Lee aka "Scooter" ( one of Robert Monroe's daughters) had/has a strong connection to Zen Buddhism.

An old friend of Mr. Monroe's (who was on the board of directors for TMI) was a student of Trungpa Rinpoche.

In one of ( I think Bruce's books, but maybe Monroe's)  there is a lotus made of light that was put in place by subtle beings to honor the place of arising of their teacher and friend. I've always felt their (and my) friend was Padmasambhava (the lotus-born) the founder of Tibetan Buddhism.

TMI programs and Bruce Moen's art of retrieval work wonderfully well with tantric buddhist practices.

Where do buddhists end up?

Dogmatic believers of any kind end up (temporarily) in a like-minded dogma realm.

Buddhists who realise the fruit of the Buddha's teachings, wake up out of Buddhism and end up in 27 and beyond.

See you There!

Love, Tim F.
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vajra
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Re: Hello and Vows in Buddhism
Reply #9 - Jun 9th, 2007 at 9:54am
 
Hi all. Pardon my delay coming back, and thank you very much for your generous and considered replies. It's good to find a group in a similar this space.

There's nobody saying 'do it'. (on the vows that is)

Which is fine. Seems on reflection like it's clear that vows are one of those things to be parked unless at some time itcomes to feel very right and clearly the thing to do. So it becomes a case of seeing how things play out. It's on reflection a kind of a non-issue anyway  - until you have developed enough trust in a potential teacher to seriously consider doing it  acting would be delusional. Would be driven by a mind made concept, or grasping or whatever.

My own path has (in as much as this is only an appearance) been self determined so far, with a strong resistance (possibly for reasons to do with my own past) to committing to traditions and belief systems.

What got me going was the bind the idea of vows produced. The sense that Vajrayana seems as it says to be 'the  diamond vehicle'. But that to avail of it requires signing away all egotistical self determination in a teacher student relationship. ('Dangerous Friend by Rigdzin Dorje from Shambhala Books gives an insight into the realities of this)

I'd not rule out by the way that that's not one of the reasons why it's set up that way - it forces a crisis and you either drop or don't drop the credibility you give to ego.

You caught the link  that led to my feeling that Vajrayana is important in the last post Tim. Tantric Buddhist practices and TMI do seem to lead to the same place. Our opening accelerates if we can start to connect with our wisdom/compassion/higher selves/I there/past lives/Yidam/whatever and use this to help us to move towards a broader emptiness/God/higher mind/Rigpa consciousness. As in the Heart/Prajnaparamita Sutra....

Opening can bring a lot of pain and trouble too as Dave said. The 'bucket of fecal' effect has in my own case been very evident - it seems to have brought illness, angst, the lot. I've pasted in some of my own verses (for personal use - not sure how they read) in this vibe below.

Vajrayana is maybe for this reason reckoned to be quite dangerous  - they talk of the individual student as a snake in a bamboo tube. The options are to go either rapidly upwards, or rapidly downwards with no in between. Point being I guess that with greater opening and capability there arises all sorts of potential for getting badly off the rails. Perhaps for karmic disasters that go far beyond simple angst or whatever.

They say the teacher student relationship must extend through successive lives until realisation, that stepping away is not really an option.

It's hard to know where it all ends up, but I can't help feeling that in the end it's maybe all a circuitous argument.

Vows (be they to a teacher or the bodhisattva variety to be reborn until all others achieve enlightenment) maybe  only matter if you are not capable of acting correctly, are likely to be driven by ego. Yet if you you have gotten to the right place you do the right thing naturally.

There's for sure a hard question around requiring vows in a tradition that emphasises faith only through personal experience, and ultimately the dumping of the belief system.

Yet there's a conventional logic around having a teacher of greater wisdom and compassion than yourself around in a very close relationship to advise you too when for sure you can't see the forest for the trees.

But there's also a possibility that it's just a self serving monastic tradition trying to corner Vajrayana for it's own ends since it was it seems originally primarily a path followed by individual yogis or practitioners.

Maybe in the end it doesn't matter. That as Richard Rose said 'the cows all get to the barn just the same'. That we all eventually wake up.

That Grace, our natural wisdom and compassion or whatever lead us to awaken. But that beyond that all choices made while in the grip of ego simply cause a circling in the goldfish bowl. As in the first poem below.

The question may only be what if any is the best route to jump start our 'progress'. If jump starting is possible, it often seems like we can only go places when we are ready to do so. And if progress is what it is - in the big view where we are now is only problematical because of how our egotistical so-called self relates to it.......


Life unfolds
As time rolls out
While certain we decide the script
We circle endlessly in ego’s grip

The dream
Leads ever deeper into pain
Self reinforced but made from fear
Sees only what it deigns to see

And yet
Though blind resisting every step
Bathed in light all but ignored
Our path somehow revealed unfolds

Until
At last in retrospect
We dimly can discern the sign
That through life’s detritus spirit’s called

***

Yearning
We walk
Deluded and alone
Yet drawn by spirit
Self burns in light’s clear flame
Towards emptiness
Impending doom
An end
And yet
Awakening

***

The light
Creeps in
This multicoloured dawn
Brings joy
With pain

***

Care worn,
Love lorn,
Lost,
Yet not.

All wise,
Big heart,
Awake,
Not yet.

Still caught,
‘Tween views,
Torn,
Raw heart.

***

This path
Brings light
Makes space to see
Mind’s chatter eased
The view makes clear

This path
Brings calm
Relieves the angst
Wakes love that knows
And sight renewed

But sight
Brings pain
When all that’s seen
Seems wrong to mind
Brings only fear

But sight
Brings light
Shows beauty too
Makes all so right
So very clear

So life
Goes on
Midst fear and joy
Whilst day by day
The onion’s peeled

© ian
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Re: Hello and Vows in Buddhism
Reply #10 - Jun 9th, 2007 at 10:38pm
 
Hi Vajra-
The basic thrust of Sidhartha's teachings was to do it all for yourself because that's the only way it gets done. All the rest is smoke and mirrors, hearsay and idle opinions.  Christmas Humphreys wrote a neat little book called "Concentration, Meditation and Contemplation" which tends to give the basic ideas without requiring your belief or faith. In fact, unless it works for you, discard it. Further, as the old Zen masters used to tell people, "If you meet the Buddha on the road, kill him immediately."

The Bodhisattvic Vow is an excellent compass by which to guide your life. If you don't like it, then try the Christian equivalent which is "He he would seek to save his life shall lose it. He who seeks to lose his life shall save it. ... take up your cross and follow me" It means the same thing.

To clarify a bit more, the only reason that you are not, at this very instant, fully aware of yourself as the Creator Mind that thought up the Universe, is that you have attachments to other ideas, definitions of self and so on.

When these are overcome by giving them up - literally, by relaxing them away - then you reach the state of no attachments, which is called "nirvana", meaning "snuffed", like a candle. What is going to be left after you snuff out all your present definitions of self and reality, and all the other attachments, will be the core dynamic which is YOU.

Since everything originated from a single instant, and the act of origination is what keeps on projecting itself as you or me or the tree in the garden, then by virtue of sharing that basic dynamic as its ultimate nature, everything continues to be that same dynamic. Which means that you are directly manifesting the creation of the cosmos even at this moment.

Incidentally, hat awareness is unmistakable, when you get there, you'll know it. It's called nirvastarka samadhi (or nirvakalpa samadhi - depends on whose book you read to get the Sanskrit words) and it seems to be something that all the saints and sages encourage their pupils to experience. That suggests that it's OK. And I haven't heard any objections or complaints yet.

However, you'll have to start with a leap of faith that  you are willing to become enlightened, and willing to learn and involve until you reach the end of the road.  The Bodhsattvic Vow is one tool invented to help people do this. If you keep the Bodhisattvic Vow it essentially means that you have agreed to become a buddha, and the Vow will help you stay on track. - BUT it is not necessary.

Guru puja, worshipping your teacher, is a Vedic tradition that you can also ignore if you'd like.

"So I guess I'm wondering what if anything you guys may think, have heard or better still know from experience. Is there stuff out there which from the TMI perspective says positive or negative things about the Tibetan Buddhist path, or indeed about the place where realised teachers end up? Which is presumably locked into repeating re-birth into this reality until all sentinent beings escape, but as realised persons armed with powers which mean they are not driven by Karma or conditioning while this is going on."

Keep in mind that all true paths, which means the paths followed by sincere mystics, yogis and idiots, have billions and billions of beginnings - but only one conclusion. At the top of the mountain all roads come together. To criticize Highway B versus Highway X simply means a lack of insight into either.

dave
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Re: Hello and Vows in Buddhism
Reply #11 - Jun 10th, 2007 at 12:00am
 
Hi, Vajra and Dave seem to say the same thing: Vajra said: Maybe in the end it doesn't matter. That as Richard Rose said 'the cows all get to the barn just the same'. That we all eventually wake up.
____

this may sound crazy but I claim to be of all faiths and paths in my soul, so I strongly relate to the above that Richard Rose said. I used to do faith healing of laying on of hands which now is basically obsolete practice unless they are doing it somewhere where I'm not. so my path has been to always be looking at what a miracle is. especially as concerns JC, those kinds of miracles, not walking on water or levitation, but healing of the body mainly, and "your faith has made you whole" idea.
Thinking about what a miracle is, is valid without interacting with a group or church.  you're always waiting because you know the miracle will show.  During the laying on of hands, this was the requirement (of self) to draw the healing energy into the recipient, that you simply "wait." Also a certain merge into their field and the drop off of ego, or mind chatter and the glad acceptance that you could do this if they would let you.

I learned through A Course in Miracles 50 principles of miracles, one of which relates to what Richard was quoted to say above.  ACIM is a self study course btw, and to make a church out of it, would possibly ruin the intentions of it being a self study course, which is why I understand if you meet the Buddha on the road, kill him. although there are many groups of ACIM teachers/students. the premise is: All of us are teachers, teaching others who we are, and all of us are students at the same time, which includes the teacher, as illustrated by this principle of what a miracle is and explains that all cows will make it to the barn: (also miracle workers hold the vision for this)

#8 Miracles are performed by those who temporarily have more for those who temporarily have less. (we live outside of linear time)

#1 There is no order of difficulty in miracles. One is not "harder" or "bigger" than another. They are all the same. All expressions of love are maximal.

#18 ..In performing miracles you recognize your own and your neighbors worth simultaneously. (this is important)

35. Miracles are expressions of love but they may not always have observable effects. (what they may receive is none of your business, their gifts are held for them until they can receive what was given)

21. Miracles are natural signs of forgiveness. through miracles u accept gods forgiveness by extending it to others.

42. a major contribution of miracles is their strength in releasing you from our false sense of isolation, deprivation and lack.
43. Miracles arise from a miraculous state of mind or a state of miracle-readiness.

basically, we all deserve a miracle or as many miracles as it takes to find our way home like the other cows that already found the barn. so I discovered with the laying on of hands, the healing would occur if I saw the other person as being the same as me, we were one, and then I emptied out the ego.

however, as I go thru life I find ego cannot be snuffed out. it has it's usefulness to teach us we are godlings and all are One sharing the barn. The ego can taught to self correct through the observance of the miracles it places itself to perform.

we are all still in the heart of god as we never truly left but now we dream of exile from our home. we will all get there in the twinkling of an eye sometimes.


then the course goes on to say miracles are a mere tool. we will all transcend the need for miracles and enter direct revelation, where we hear only the voice for god at all times.
whatever path you take, Buddhist or Christian or whatever, we will all be on focus 27 or higher. and we can still have a beer.
love, alysia

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vajra
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Re: Hello and Vows in Buddhism
Reply #12 - Jun 10th, 2007 at 3:54pm
 
Thanks guys. Seems like we're fairly much in the same place.

I asked opinions on Vajrayana because while there are clearly multiple valid  paths not every path you encounter is valid. And the Vajrayana by it's very shape begs some tough questions.

I've spent a little time on ACIM Alysia, and found it so profound. Especially the positioning (hope I've got it right) of love or compassion as forgiviness. And the broadening of forgiveness to be a general term applicable to everything that comes up in our consciousness. That no matter what you think or feel, or what happens in your external world you don't judge. That whatever it is it's OK.

Which actually is very much what Vajrayana seems to be about - the entering into a relationship which involves suspension of all judgement of the guru. It's in a sense not so much about the guru as what's going on in your own mind. To the point where it's said that many have achieved realisation with false or egotistical gurus. This by the way the is not worship, just acceptance or setting aside of self.

Which kind of brings me full circle. An insightful lady helped me enormously in the past few days by showing me how much of the pain I've suffered flows from a life structured from birth around my tendency to judge (or in ACIM terms fail to forgive, or in Buddhist terms be compassionate towards  myself) It's a long story involving buckets of poop as above, but suffice to say that the insight or seeing of what I'd been doing was like switching a light bulb on.

Which confirmed some messages being pushed towards me in the past year or so too, but which I'd not been able to figure out due to some blocking pre-cnceptions about myself.

But which maybe explains why Vajrayana has surfaced among other practices involving compassion with such regularity in recent times.  Roll Eyes 'They' must be doing their nuts at my intransigence and deafness....

Realisation of the principle of forgiveness in the general sense ACIM uses it surely is a miracle, the end of self, realisation...
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vajra
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PS: Hello and Vows in Buddhism
Reply #13 - Jun 10th, 2007 at 4:49pm
 
....Oops. On their 'doing their nuts'. They of course don't judge.  Wink
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LaffingRain
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Re: Hello and Vows in Buddhism
Reply #14 - Jun 11th, 2007 at 3:52am
 
Hi again Vajra. I wonder if compassion is a learned thing? possibly. I'm sure it's part of what we call PUL here. pure unconditional love.

Not to long ago I took a closer look at Monroe's tenets and enjoyed the practical nature of them: in relationship to this topic discussing pathways of variance, here's a good one!

"there is no bad, there is no good, all just is."

what I think Bob meant, imho, he's attempting to describe a state of nonjudgment, a state of non-duality, a state of mind. the way I think about this is, from another time, there were always the same words we have now, but we would have said something like "He sees the sparrow fall"  so, we wouldn't say it was bad that the sparrow fell, if Bob was here I think he would just say, "the sparrow fell." It just is. It's not good or bad.

so all paths are valid to someone, as you mentioned, I found intriguing, you said some achieved enlightenment with an egotistical guru..food for thought. this suggests if the party found enlightenment with an egotistical guru
1) the guru was using a method of prodding the cow, so to speak
or: 2) the student was ready and called for the master that fit him, as when the student is ready, the teacher always appears. or even this: 3) With such a guru, the initiate still ends up doing all the work, which we all have to do the work ourselves anyway, even with a good guru, they can only lead to the water, but its us who drink.

heres some simplicity Monroe wrote down for us:

There is no beginning, there is no end,
   There is only change.
There is no teacher, there is no student,
   There is only remembering.
There is no good, there is no evil,
   There is only expression.
There is no union, there is no sharing,
   There is only one.
There is no joy, there is no sadness,
   There is only love.
There is no greater, there is no lesser,
   There is only balance.
There is no statis, there is no entropy,
   There is only motion.
There is no wakefulness, there is no sleep,
   There is only being.
There is no limit, there is no chance,
   There is only a plan.

my best wishes for your smooth synchronized journey Rajra
... oom mone padre oom  (an old chant I learned) I don't know what "doing their nuts" means if u want to explain.
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