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Vince's awakening
www.vincenthorn.com/files/VinceHorn_Story_of_Awakening.mp3
-- tomo
-- tomo
-- tomo
- Posts: 2340
- Posts: 2340
www.consciousnessexplorersclub.com/about/
"Our Mission
The CEC is an attempt to rescue spiritual and meditation practice from dour fundamentalists of all persuasions. Our mission is to approach practice in a spirit of exploration, play, and service in order to deepen our understanding of self and world. We don’t push worldviews; we investigate them. Our ambition is global; our community is local. We sit, we dance, we act. We fall asleep during long lectures. We wake up refreshed."
- Posts: 2340
Here are some important confusing principles to keep in mind.
- Be fearless.
- Be generous.
- Admit you don’t know. Explore anyway.
- Help other explorers when they’re tired. Lean on them when you are. Point them towards the source when they’re lost.
- Throw parties.
- Un-fixate. Everything passes. Even you.
- Learn to enjoy paradox.
- Create opportunities to help, but don’t tell anyone about it.
- Practice handstands.
- Never miss a Halloween.
- Be kind to animals and shrubs.
- Meditate every day. Or get very curious about geology – anything that expresses your wonder at being part of this whole existing.
- Cultivate equanimity, a behavioural and sensory smoothness.
- Try not to take anything personally (thanks don Miguel).
- Fight war, because, really, what’s it good for?
- Call yourself on your own shit so other people don’t have to.
- Stop boring people with your absolutist theories of reality, especially if you are nondual.
- Plant a tree.
- Disregard all rules."
I like it!
Russell wrote: ....I stand with Vince and now realize that EVERYONE is different. There is no one way. If you would have asked me that a year ago I would have told you otherwise.
Russell, I wonder what's happened in the last year to change your take on that? Thanks, Mark
Mark Peacock wrote:
Russell wrote: ....I stand with Vince and now realize that EVERYONE is different. There is no one way. If you would have asked me that a year ago I would have told you otherwise.
Russell, I wonder what's happened in the last year to change your take on that? Thanks, Mark
A year ago all I knew was the Mahasi models. Now something resonates with all kinds of various traditions in various religions that lines up so much with some of my experience. I am on a plane right now. I can go more into it later if needed.
Ona Kiser wrote: tom, every time all the 'no retreats' people tell you they did no retreats, you say 'yeah, yeah'. and then a 'lots of retreats' guy speaks up and you say 'see? i'm doomed.'
I wonder if there is any basis (worth talking about) for hypothesizing what the proportion is? I live in a town where there has been a fairly big hard-core Rinzai style Zen center for 45 years, which must have generated a lot of results data by now. It would be fascinating to know what the teacher's view on that is. I know that their model has been that if you really expect awakening you commit your life to as much daily sitting as you can responsibly arrange and likewise as many week-long intensive retreats, such as ideally 4 per year for a busy householder. And you expect to commit to this for several years, maybe even decades. Just from a handful of people I know well enough that I used to commiserate with them about having a hard time getting anywhere despite practicing, those that kept plugging away with going to retreats (likely driven by insight disease) eventually started to get it, or lose it, whatever. I know even more also-rans who stopped going to retreats and poked along sitting for stretches every now and then, but mostly relating to formal practice as a Starbucks chat topic or something to get depressed about, who never got it. And I know some people who have integrated a modicum of ongoing practice into their lives and obviously have better lives for it, but would tell you they don't feel even close to awakened. Even though it's hard core here, it's somewhat mushroom in that you're not supposed to talk about your experiences/attainments/levels etc. I've been trying to fit in a lunch date with a friend who I'm sure is awakened after 40 years of continuous retreat practice with vipassana, zen, tibetan and other teachers, and ask him right out his observations on this.
The thing that 1st got me looking for a way to do vipassana again, when I always lived places with only zen centers, was 10 years ago reading Shinzen who described when he originally started out as a new zen teacher at the International Buddhist Mediation Center of L.A. mostly with Asian teachers of Chan, Vipassana and Tantric if I remember. He said the teachers compared notes and noticed that the vipassana students generally made faster and more reliable initial progress than the zen students, and that's what influenced Shinzen to start getting into vipassana teaching. So it could be that non-mushroom pragmatic Dharma is just a lot better with short-to-intermediate term results than Zen and it's retreats model.
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Mark Peacock wrote: He said the teachers compared notes and noticed that the vipassana students generally made faster and more reliable initial progress than the zen students, and that's what influenced Shinzen to start getting into vipassana teaching. So it could be that non-mushroom pragmatic Dharma is just a lot better with short-to-intermediate term results than Zen and it's retreats model.
It is my experience that Vipassana/Noting is like Turbo boost in the beginning. It really got my momentum going until I sort of understood what was going on then shifted to "just sitting". But I still use Noting from time to time if I think things are getting to "mellow" or I'm slacking in practice.
Kate Gowen wrote: Hmm-- were you aware that Jeff Warren is in Toronto, and up to some interesting things, Tom?
www.consciousnessexplorersclub.com/about/
"Our Mission
The CEC is an attempt to rescue spiritual and meditation practice from dour fundamentalists of all persuasions. Our mission is to approach practice in a spirit of exploration, play, and service in order to deepen our understanding of self and world. We don’t push worldviews; we investigate them. Our ambition is global; our community is local. We sit, we dance, we act. We fall asleep during long lectures. We wake up refreshed."
No, I didn't know that Kate. He did an amazing two-part show on sleep on the CBC a couple of years back (that I have mentioned several times elsewhere on this site), but it was on a radio program that will often syndicate from other broadcasters, so you can't assume they are all locally grown. But I will check this CEC thing out for sure. And I think I mentioned this at the outset (and agree with you fully): easily half of the amazingness of this interview was the way Jeff and Vince interacted, with just the right questions, and double-clicking on details that would have otherwise been left behind.
-- tomo
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Another thing I noted with interest is that both guys have studied (quite a bit, I gather) with Shinzen. WHO DOES REMOTE-ACCESS RETREATS-- if I remember right. (hint, hint)
I believe he also teaches regularly somewhere near Toronto.
ETA-- also, if I heard right, Vince was referencing well over a decade of seeking and practice, with the advantage that, on the job, he received massive dharma exposure. If you're gonna make comparisons, you should give yourself credit for progress achieved under far less conducive circumstances.
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A great illustration of "contextualization" about 4:00 in.
Otherwise linked just for sheer brilliance!
Kate Gowen wrote: A great illustration of "contextualization" about 4:00 in.
Otherwise linked just for sheer brilliance!
OMG, that is incredible. I don't understand more than 3% of what she is talking about, and I only got 8m in so far but I need to revisit this one. Where do you find this stuff???
-- tomo
- Posts: 2340