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Magoo48

(5,548 posts)
Mon Jan 9, 2012, 02:31 PM Jan 2012

Been attempting to follow the Eight Fold Path for some time now.

I find the an element of humor in Buddhism's practioners and teachers that is attractive to me. Mostly have been exposed to the Tibetian and Western forms of practice. I am lazy, but attempt to read and/or practice a little every day.

I would love to hear how it's going for others.....peace

Edit for spelling

I must learn to type mindfully....

18 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Been attempting to follow the Eight Fold Path for some time now. (Original Post) Magoo48 Jan 2012 OP
Zen DryHump Jan 2012 #1
Nice to meet you, DryHump. silverweb Jan 2012 #3
Yes, welcome and thanks for the words. Magoo48 Jan 2012 #12
Wonderful to have this new group! silverweb Jan 2012 #2
In this experience tama Jan 2012 #4
"my girlfriend says that a Leo can't never get rid of ego..." ellisonz Jan 2012 #7
I agree with the Leo assessment. silverweb Jan 2012 #8
That multipurpose thingie tama Jan 2012 #9
Oh my, yes! silverweb Jan 2012 #10
I know many such people tama Jan 2012 #11
It's great that you know all those people! silverweb Jan 2012 #18
Right On DryHump Jan 2012 #16
You're so lucky to have room for all those animals! silverweb Jan 2012 #17
A pleasure to meet you as well silverweb. Magoo48 Jan 2012 #13
My life has been changed by my practice. oxymoron Jan 2012 #5
Sitting DryHump Jan 2012 #6
Yes, Magoo48 Jan 2012 #14
Just type mindfully ... Newest Reality Jan 2012 #15

DryHump

(199 posts)
1. Zen
Mon Jan 9, 2012, 05:07 PM
Jan 2012

Keep at it, Magoo. Good on you and your practice. I'm mostly attracted to the barren simplicity of Zen Buddhism. Fierce practice to constantly keep stepping out of the subjective mind stuff and practice awareness (mindfulness). As the little self disappears, you glimpse the utterly serene ONE. Yowzer.

silverweb

(16,402 posts)
2. Wonderful to have this new group!
Mon Jan 9, 2012, 06:20 PM
Jan 2012

[font color="navy" face="Verdana"]Nice to meet you, Magoo. I'm about where you are -- trying to read/practice a little bit every day, and also to practice mindfulness during mundane activities.

I've always been strongly drawn to the idea of living as simply as possible, appreciating things for their beauty/functionality without wanting to own them, and enjoying the wonder of just being a part of the flow of life. Developing a more constant and universal spirit of namaste is a major goal (and challenge).

It's also difficult sometimes to eliminate things that I'm accustomed to but don't truly need. The "room" in my mind is simple and bare, except for one end of it crammed full of "stuff" that I haven't let go of yet.

A work in progress....

 

tama

(9,137 posts)
4. In this experience
Mon Jan 9, 2012, 07:57 PM
Jan 2012

letting go of attachments happens best by itself, without effort, and trying hard to force one self to let go is just another attachment. Of course this "slackers path" is also an excuse to keep on holding to those attachments and needs and addictions that still remain... and give me character and personality (my girlfriend says that a Leo can't never get rid of ego... ).

There's a Zen story I like a lot about a Buddhist monk, who practiced hard but then Karmically "errored" somehow, don't remember, and had to reborn 500 hundred times as an fox. His moment of Zen was when he after that was born again as a human and a monk, and realized: 500 GLORIOUS years as a fox!

The Way of the Heart teaches us that we can only let go of attachments we learn to dearly love... and thus accept <3



silverweb

(16,402 posts)
8. I agree with the Leo assessment.
Tue Jan 10, 2012, 07:13 PM
Jan 2012

[font color="navy" face="Verdana"]My kids and I have our birthdays within a span of 10 days in August and call ourselves the "Leo Trio." We get along well because we learned early on to give each other lots of space and to tread carefully around any ego-sensitive issues.

Love the Zen story. I can't say that I "try hard," but I have found that following an impulse to let go of something has always been a good decision. So far, I've mainly been delighted with simplifying my life, reducing the number of "things" I rely on by replacing them with multi-purpose substitutes. Every time I can replace 2+ items with 1, it makes me happy.

My "practice" consists mainly of learning to just be in, nurture, and love the moment, whether actually sitting or engaged in mundane activities, connecting with the sacred that permeates all. The cats that have chosen to live with me are constant examples of how to just "be."


Asher, about 4 mos old, just "hanging out" in his favorite cool spot on a hot August day.

 

tama

(9,137 posts)
9. That multipurpose thingie
Tue Jan 10, 2012, 08:32 PM
Jan 2012

is also a fundamental guiding principle of permaculture philosophy. Which is just a new name for reinventing the wheel (pun intended), but anyways: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permaculture

I'm a bit dismayed at finding new aspects of the hoarder in me, life was lighter when I had not much more than a rucksack of possessions...

silverweb

(16,402 posts)
10. Oh my, yes!
Wed Jan 11, 2012, 05:01 AM
Jan 2012

[font color="navy" face="Verdana"]Permaculture is a whole wonderful way of looking at things.

The aquaponics picture on the page you linked has been one of my huge fantasies. Imaging being able to provide for oneself and others through such a simple, logical, and wonderfully self-sustaining fish tank/greenhouse! It's not feasible in my present location, which is just as well because I've got quite enough projects going at the moment, but I'd love to see aquaponic greenhouses everywhere.

One of my favorite people is Starhawk, who is very invested in permaculture projects and calls much of her work "earth magic." I'm not much into ritual, but feeling a part of the web of life energy that is our Earth is a profound experience. Then looking beyond into the universe that we are part of, as well, (whatever it is, because we really don't know, do we?) is so mind bending that I just have to go dig in the dirt and play with my worms for a while. LOL

I do know what you mean about feeling lighter with fewer possessions. A certain amount of "things" and "stuff" are necessary for basic functioning, though, even for the most simple of lives. It's amazing how much excess we manage to accumulate without even trying, though.

Recently, I read about a young man who's been traveling around the country for a few years with little but the clothes on his back. He's been mending those with bright threads and colorful patchwork, and accepting whatever is freely offered in terms of food and shelter. Someone called the police because he was "acting erratic and saying 'I love you' to traffic," which made me laugh. He was polite and cooperative with the police, who took him to the local psych ward. Staff there could find no evidence of mental disorder, and the psychiatrist who interviewed him actually seemed a little awed. He was released back to the streets the next day, where he happily returned, calling himself an "Infinity Filter" and "Free Spirit," and saying he loved the world.

I found his story incredibly attractive, a bit of a modern-day St. Francis perhaps, and I wish there was some way to keep track of his travels and experiences. Most of us can't live that kind of life, but we can adopt (and perhaps spread) some of his joyful, free-spirited, cosmic outlook, free of tethers and attachment to a lot of "stuff." (Reference the immortal George Carlin for appropriate commentary on "stuff.&quot

 

tama

(9,137 posts)
11. I know many such people
Wed Jan 11, 2012, 07:43 AM
Jan 2012

have been with the ecovillage movement, Rainbow and similar gatherings, etc. where the word 'grounded' is used a lot, and physical labor in the garden, digging shit pits etc "earth magic" does a lot of good to balance hippies and seekers who often fly in higher spheres...

One of the most important and fascinating concepts of permaculture etc. is the importance 'border zones', e.g. a shore, an area between woods and field, etc. where there is most variety and fertility, places of power. One practice of "mindfulness" or sumfink that's been useful to me is to feel the border zones of this body (spirit/matter/space/time/etc)...



silverweb

(16,402 posts)
18. It's great that you know all those people!
Wed Jan 11, 2012, 08:41 PM
Jan 2012

[font color="navy" face="Verdana"]Very nice to know that the instincts I've been following are consistent with the ecovillage/permaculture lifestyle. I've thought many times of seeking out an ecovillage, but am very content where I am and love living alone.

That's also very interesting about border zones. I live about 8 blocks from the ocean, can see it during the day and hear it at night, but 8 blocks is still a bit of distance to call a "border." There's also very little actual earth exposed in my yard. It's all paved over except for a tiny strip about 2 x 3 feet in size that only gets any sun at midday; I'm thinking now that perhaps I should put it to some special use.

The idea of border zones of the body is also something well worth exploring; must learn more about this.

Thanks!

DryHump

(199 posts)
16. Right On
Wed Jan 11, 2012, 03:27 PM
Jan 2012

Asher's beautiful!!! My wife and I have a house full, and a pen full, of rescue animals - 6 cats, 3 dogs, 3 llamas, 10 goats. Our service, I guess, is taking care of these folks. I'm a sucker for cats - great company and a great opportunity to ground, LOVE.

silverweb

(16,402 posts)
17. You're so lucky to have room for all those animals!
Wed Jan 11, 2012, 08:17 PM
Jan 2012

[font color="navy" face="Verdana"]Or rather, those animals are lucky to have you.

I'm in the city, with an enclosed driveway for my "garden," and any more animals are out of the question per the landlord. You can see a bit of the fencing and the fiberglass enclosure in the picture with Asher. That's to keep the cats safe in the yard while still allowing them outside to chase bugs, lay/play in the sun, and watch activity on the street.

Of the 4 cats that live with me, 2 were found as kittens and brought to me by neighbors, 1 was an adult stray I'd been feeding outside the enclosure that decided to move in one night, and most recently, Asher "appeared" inside the enclosure in May. He was just a kitten and couldn't have gotten in by himself, so someone had to put him there.

Like you, I'm a sucker for cats, and for all the same reasons.



oxymoron

(4,053 posts)
5. My life has been changed by my practice.
Mon Jan 9, 2012, 08:56 PM
Jan 2012

I am in the Order of Interbeing, which is the mindfulness community that follow Vietnamese Buddhism in the tradition of Thich Nhat Hanh. The best advice I ever received was to sit. Just sit. Don't expect anything, just sit and focus on your breathing. With time, it becomes a very lovely place to be and you will want to sit as much as possible.

DryHump

(199 posts)
6. Sitting
Tue Jan 10, 2012, 11:17 AM
Jan 2012

Amazing how many teachers are proponents of simply sitting and practicing awareness. Westerners are not used to the technique at all. Have had lots of criticism in the past from friends who perceived my "non-action" as laziness. No. The work, unseen from the outside, is an ongoing, patient discipline of bringing the mind to attention over and over and over. It's work; it's hard work that requires persistence but gets easier with practice.

Magoo48

(5,548 posts)
14. Yes,
Wed Jan 11, 2012, 08:41 AM
Jan 2012

I have a mental tape that has to play thru my thoughts. When I am patient and let it play, the projector loses interest and leaves me with a bit of serenity. Breathing and being aware that I am breathing is a great gift for me.

Newest Reality

(12,712 posts)
15. Just type mindfully ...
Wed Jan 11, 2012, 11:49 AM
Jan 2012

When you "must learn to", consider mindfully "must learn to", also. Is that how it goes?

One finds that simple, easy and direct are useful markers of approach to what one already is. It is all perfect from the very beginning? Buddhism can be seen as one mandala, so one looks from this end, that end, this ring, that ring
... oh, the center that we are as Awake as our Original Nature. All hail!

How is it going? Just as it is. Can it be anything other right now?

Enjoy your journey in one moment.

Peace and well-being, happiness and liberation to you instantly.

In the stream.

Thanks for posting.

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