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- "Detachment"
"Detachment"
This led to a comment by Kate about how the whole popular concept of Buddhists and Hindus being "detached" (or the goal of their practices being detachment) seems to be off base, since in her experience also things seem only to get more intensely felt. (My words, she said it better.)
Since that was just a brief exchange, and a tangent, i thought I'd add to it here for broader discussion.
The idea of detachment is not just Eastern, as monastic type spiritual training guides in Christianity encourage cultivating "resignation" and "indifference": indifference is letting go of your own desires and preferences and accepting things as they are; resignation is accepting God's will in whatever happens, without any preference. St. Teresa says "nothing disturbs me"... I think this common theme in many wisdom traditions points to a common experience, that of not being all tangled up in life's dramas. If you consider how much effort is expended being outraged, upset, freaked out, over-excited, etc. just being present and not tangled up in stuff could be called detachment or indifference easily enough. I mean, I sympathize with a friend who is having a family drama - I feel how painful that is for her. But I really don't care, in terms of the details of the story. It doesn't matter, and I don't feel outraged on her behalf or jump in to a "most egregious offense" story telling session. All things that used to be part of my life. So am I "indifferent" - to social drama, relatively so. To the pain this situation is causing my friend - no. But I also don't need to do anything about it. It's just felt. It's like co-participating in her unhappiness, but it's not mine, it's just sincerely felt-with, being-with, giving her a hug and a smile and moving on.
There seems to be this deeply felt connection to everything, so that I feel for other people more intimately than ever. I may have lost most of my own inner agonizing and soap-opera or wanting everything to be a certain way that suits me and then being pissed off when it isn't. But I feel the pain and joy of the world in general quite deeply, as if it were my own. No boundary, no separateness. And no need to fuss about it - it's okay, not a problem.
Other thoughts on this theme?

Yup, you're right on. When you aren't sucked into other people's story, you can hear/understand their situation. But if you get sucked in, then it's really >your< story you're reacting to. I think that's the point.
That said, I have no idea why the kind of naturally ordered happening of some things (rain, leaves falling, branches in the wind) are so compelling, but they really are. Seeing movement beyond my control is both humbling and beautiful.
shargrol wrote: ... When you aren't sucked into other people's story, you can hear/understand their situation. But if you get sucked in, then it's really >your< story you're reacting to....
Bingo, yes. It seems that way to me.
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Then, when the Blessed One had passed away, some bhikkhus, not yet freed from passion, lifted up their arms and wept; and some, flinging themselves on the ground, rolled from side to side and wept, lamenting: "Too soon has the Blessed One come to his Parinibbana! Too soon has the Happy One come to his Parinibbana! Too soon has the Eye of the World vanished from sight!"
But the bhikkhus who were freed from passion, mindful and clearly comprehending, reflected in this way: "Impermanent are all compounded things. How could this be otherwise?"
And the Venerable Anuruddha addressed the bhikkhus, saying: "Enough, friends! Do not grieve, do not lament! For has not the Blessed One declared that with all that is dear and beloved there must be change, separation, and severance? Of that which is born, come into being, compounded and subject to decay, how can one say: 'May it not come to dissolution!'?"
What part struck you and why?
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Another beautiful and interesting passage in the story is the grief of Ananda, the Buddha's devoted disciple throughout his life, who, unlike the other major disciples, has still not attained Arahantship at this point (he gets there shortly after the Buddha's death):
Then the Venerable Ananda went into the vihara[50] and leaned against the doorpost and wept: "I am still but a learner,[51] and still have to strive for my own perfection. But, alas, my Master, who was so compassionate towards me, is about to pass away!"
And the Blessed One spoke to the bhikkhus, saying: "Where, bhikkhus, is Ananda?"
"The Venerable Ananda, Lord, has gone into the vihara and there stands leaning against the door post and weeping: 'I am still but a learner, and still have to strive for my own perfection. But, alas, my Master, who was so compassionate towards me, is about to pass away!'"
Then the Blessed One asked a certain bhikkhu to bring the Venerable Ananda to him, saying: "Go, bhikkhu, and say to Ananda, 'Friend Ananda, the Master calls you.'"
"So be it, Lord." And that bhikkhu went and spoke to the Venerable Ananda as the Blessed One had asked him to. And the Venerable Ananda went to the Blessed One, bowed down to him, and sat down on one side.
Then the Blessed One spoke to the Venerable Ananda, saying: "Enough, Ananda! Do not grieve, do not lament! For have I not taught from the very beginning that with all that is dear and beloved there must be change, separation, and severance? Of that which is born, come into being, compounded, and subject to decay, how can one say: 'May it not come to dissolution!'? There can be no such state of things. Now for a long time, Ananda, you have served the Tathagata with loving-kindness in deed, word, and thought, graciously, pleasantly, with a whole heart and beyond measure. Great good have you gathered, Ananda! Now you should put forth energy, and soon you too will be free from the taints."
Bhante Sujato, who is one of the monks I most admire, suggests somewhere that Ananda and Maha Kassapa (the most formidable and austere of the major disciplies) essentially represent archetypes, rather than complete human characters, with Ananda as the soft, gentle, loving, feminine aspect (of course, the nuns themselves are the feminine aspect of the sangha, but in the context of the culture at the time the stories were recorded). This also seems relevant.
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"The world of dew
is a world of dew--
and yet...
And yet!"
It's all there: the acknowledgement of our fragility; and the acknowledgement of our capacity for deep emotion. And no facile reaching for a pat "solution" to the human condition.
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It's not about detaching from anything. It's about being with everything.
However, at certain points my practice was about detaching. I had to gain a distance from experience to be able to see it and investigate thoroughly, so this is not a simple binary issue. It appears to me to be complicated by the "place" in which we found ourselves at any given moment.
There are also phases of practice where one feels an inclination to solitude, introspection, a lack of connection, loneliness, alienation from things that used to be part of ones life, and so on - so there can be passing periods of spontaneous detachment that arise.
Just riffing along, not intending any grand conclusions.
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Most pragmatic dharma practitioners have done the former, the micro level, I think. Zen and other direct seeing methods might work at the macro level. I'd be interested in hearing from someone like Gozen, Kate, or Jake on this issue.
Or, I may just be imagining an artificial dichotomy.
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"There seem to be practices that work with both levels and that seem to lead to the same sort of "results." One can detach from experience by seeing the pixels and grokking that process over and over again. One can detach by seeing their macro experience for what it truly is and accepting that - letting go, as it were."
"My gut is it's not a strict dichotomy, but rather that the two approaches overlap and intersect, such that even if a person is focused more on one or the other, the other will become apparent (at least to some degree), too."
Haha! Seems we agree...

But seriously, I had in mind as an example someone I know who has never done "micro looking" practice, only macro practice. And yet on occasion he has expressed a sudden recognition of the micro process (such as noticing the way that an emotion layers up from body sensations into thoughts). Does he see micro like Dan Ingram sees micro? No one sees micro like Dan!

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I don't think of that as "micro" quite in the sense that i meant the term. Micro would be seeing how every sensation is pixelated and the product of dependently originated phenomena - the body sensations, the thoughts, and so on, for all objects.
That said, I do think these things all overlap at some point, so there is a suspected intuitive understanding of the micro by macro practitioners and vice versa, at least in my dim little pea brain version of this


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(I agree it's probable that if someone trained me to look for pixelation, I would in all likelihood begin to notice it, and then it would become part of my experience.)
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Of course, all of this leads to a discussion about who or what is experiencing "this?" There is a lot of "stuff" that goes on that "I" react to and am exposed to in some way but that is processed in some less-than-conscious manner. Do we call those things part of our experience? We are a vastly complicated, inter-connected organism and I'd argue that what we usually call "experience" is only a small part of the whole.
Sorry, probably too much topic drift...
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The theory of pixelation we're discussing here reminds me a lot of Abhidhamma - a system which wants to concretize a fundamental and incontrovertible ontology, which in this case relates to the 'pixelated' view of reality that certain types of practice bring about. And it seems to me that this counteracts the theory of impermanence (of course not everyone finds impermanence a valuable notion).
Also, I'm not sure how the 'pixelation' thing relates to physiology - what's the similarity to, e.g., the idea of neurons firing in the brain? In discussing that divide I'm reminded of the distinction between Kenneth's claim, on the one hand, to not believe in or value the 'woo-woo' stuff, but on the other, to affirm astral projection...
I know we're off the 'detachment' topic but this is interesting stuff...
(I have no interesting follow-up statement.)
(oops, slightly drunk posting. One mint julep, delicious on a hot Chicago evening!!)
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But seriously, I get what Chris means about seeing things deconstruct themselves-- and I'm prone to that sort of thing, too. And it seems logical that Ona doesn't; because she's more of a 'constructionist' who's good at visionary practice, which is completely beyond me.
This exchange is making me interested in digging up the concise guide to abidharma I've got somewhere, and finally reading it.
Ona Kiser wrote: the whole popular concept of Buddhists and Hindus being "detached" (or the goal of their practices being detachment) seems to be off base
Yes. I'm thinking that "detachment" is the wrong word. It's a shorthand that's too easily misinterpreted as a "thing" to be acquired or an attitude to be adopted. It would be better to express it as "absence of attachment."
Ona Kiser wrote: The idea of detachment is not just Eastern, as monastic type spiritual training guides in Christianity encourage cultivating "resignation" and "indifference": indifference is letting go of your own desires and preferences and accepting things as they are; resignation is accepting God's will in whatever happens, without any preference.
The classic Christian work on this subject is Jean-Pierre de Caussade's Abandonment to Divine Providence.
www.amazon.com/Abandonment-Divine-Provid...resent/dp/0978479963
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So I hate to add to the topic drift but... I will

Rowan, the "pixelated" noticing of the process of perception can lead directly to a realization of impermanence. It is, actually, a very direct experience of impermanence. And, just to get this out there, those folks who see little value in impermanence cannot call themselves Buddhists, can they? It is one of the three characteristics of existence, which is as core to Buddhism as anything I can think of.