Self Defence


 

We are not to understand thinking and doing, as the form of spoken and written language suggests we should, as a one-thing-at-a-time string of awarenesses but as a multi-dimensional experience that is not writing about apples but walking in an orchard and eating them.

Anyone who thoughtfully uses language should
realise
that words are not a replication of experience but a representation.

(Ray Grigg)

Linear perception

The danger with words is that they do not represent reality.

Consider: a verbal description of an event...

You walked into the room and you took the coffee cup off the table, drank some and then noticed that Mike, Anthony and James were also in the room watching television.

The verbal description gives the illusion that these events occurred sequentially.

Consider: what happens in the very instant you enter the room...

As you enter the room you simultaneously see the coffee cup/the television/the images on the television/Mike/Anthony/James/what they are all doing/ how and where they are seated/what they are wearing/the layout and configuration of the room/the distance of things relative to another and to you/the weather outside/the bird on the branch eating red nuts from the green plastic feeder/the decor of the room/the quality of light, smell the coffee/other aromas, hear the ambient noises inside and outside the room/television/Mike/Anthony/James/your own thoughts/interpretations/suggestions/impressions/memories, feel the texture of the floor covering/your clothing/the air circulation/temperature of the room.

Words cannot render the complexity of that first instant but you probably get the idea.


Koan


Koan serve to demonstrate the folly of words.
You cannot box reality into words and hope to have a healthy, functional relationship with it.

Words can shape and twist and warp your perceptions of things, but reality itself is unchanged.
The problem lies with the fact that we experience reality in our minds.
If we interpret sensory data in a distorted way, then our relationship with reality and the choices we make will be questionable
.


Monkey mind

The human mind is not to be trusted.

Few people are logical, clear and internally balanced.
Decisions are reached and actions taken without any rational thought taking place.
It like rummaging through an old box of junk and pulling something out at random.

A choice is justified by the ego, but seldom considered at length.
Contemplation is not popular these days. It takes too long and people fail to understand the benefits.
Rather than examine the consequences, the relationships involved or the variables present - people simply blunder forward and then express surprise when things fail.

Our minds are a rampaging mess of thoughts, feelings, emotions, opinions, memories, received knowledge, rules, codes, symbols and influences.

Meditation is the beginning of sorting out the mess. The aim is to empty the box completely.

More...




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Page created 16 April 2005