Showing posts with label mara. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mara. Show all posts

Wednesday, 18 June 2014

Kings and Queens of Chaos: Borderline Disorder

Ashley Wells, Pat Macpherson, Wisdom Quarterly; Elizabeth Svoboda (PsychologyToday.com)
Pathologize me? Call me a which and a bic'h, but FEMEN means no more patriarchy.
It had been an idyllic day celebrating a cousin's wedding until Steve's wife turned to him during the reception and said she was having a panic attack.

The loud music in the room seemed to be engulfing her, heightening her anxiety. After the main course was served, Steve and his wife got up to go for a drive and get some air. To respect his wife's privacy, Steve did not tell anyone why they were leaving, including his half-sister, Klara, who was seated at their table.
 
I'm wit stoopid. - And I loves him so much!
Minutes after the two left the wedding, as Steve later learned, Klara started approaching family members to claim that Steve and his wife had stormed off over something she did -- and that they'd refused to tell her what she'd done wrong.
 
She marched from table to table sharing the story, adding more drama with each telling. She ended up in the ladies' room a few minutes later, sobbing, and it took Steve's mother, other sister, and several close friends to calm her down so she wouldn't disturb the festivities.
 
While trying to help his wife through her panic attack, Steve had stopped paying attention to his cell phone. When he next looked at the screen, he faced a torrent of messages from Klara, each more indignant than the last:

"I deserve better... What the f*** is wrong with you?... I HATE YOU!... Never call me again; you're dead to me!" Steve still marvels at how quick Klara was to erupt in response to her perception of events. "Despite there being no argument, no unpleasant words exchanged," he says, "our absence was presumed to be a slight directed at her and her alone."
 
I didn't know I was sick. That's part of it.
Klara's spontaneous emotional combustion at the wedding would probably seem totally unremarkable to the 14 million adults in the U.S. who are estimated to have borderline personality disorder (BPD). They make up 2 percent of the general population but 20 percent of psychiatric inpatients. Most are women, and they typically turn the ups and downs of everyday life into a roller-coaster ride of moods. In doing so, they don't just alienate others around them, they subvert their own life trajectory. Explosively reactive, and often struggling to get a grip on themselves, borderlines have difficulty maintaining stable relationships or even holding down a job. More

Why, why, why?
The Epidenic of Rape
The Epidemic...in the U.S.
The roots of mental disorders and addiction-cravings (for self-soothing) are explained by Dr. Gabor Mate as early childhood trauma, which sets us up for a great deal of suffering and dysfunctional relationships and coping strategies. The answer? Don't add drama to the trauma. The first 20 minutes of "Zeitgeist: Moving Forward" explains it beautifully.

Don't think it's an "epidemic"? Just Diana Russell and Rebecca Bolen, who can answer in the abstract: This book is the long-awaited follow-up to Russell's landmark Sexual Exploitation. It examines the many -- and often conflicting -- findings of studies that have since been conducted on the incidence and prevalence of rape and child sexual abuse in the United States.  The wide variation in prevalence rates obtained by these studies -- for example, rape rates ranging from 2.6% to 44% -- has led many hostile critics to attack the high rates as misleading and alarmist. More

Sunday, 18 May 2014

Distortions of the Mind (sutra)

Dhr. Seven and Amber Larson, Wisdom Quarterly translation (Vipallasa Sutra, AN 4.49)
The "distortions" (vipallasas) can be called the hallucinations, perversions, inversions.
 
Candy eye (lilminx16/deviantart)
Earlier we asked, What is art? Is it a cartoon, an illusion... or an attempt to see things the way they really are? 

Art can sensitize us even as it distorts and emphasizes. Perception is how we look at the world we create every moment without realizing we're creating as we're choosing what to notice or how to interpret (cognize) it. Art, like meditation, may sensitize and teach us to clear our mental perception -- our preconceptions and distortions. (See sutra and explanation below).

"Meditators, there are four distortions of perception, distortions of mind (heart), distortions of view. What are the four? 

Saara sees (Arkiharha/weekday-illusion)
"To regard as 'permanent' what is actually impermanent is the distortion of perception, distortion of mind, distortion of view.
 
"To regard as 'fulfilling' what is actually disappointing...

"To regard as 'personal' what is actually impersonal (anatta)...

"To regard as 'attractive' what is actually unattractive is the distortion of perception, distortion of mind, distortion of view. These are the four distortions of perception, distortions of mind, distortions of view.
 
The Undistorted
The Buddha distorted to reflect iridescent colors on drilled metal surface
 
Psychedelic (-william/flickr.com)
"There are four non-distortions of perception, non-distortions of mind, non-distortions of view. What are the four? 

"To regard as 'impermanent' what is actually impermanent is the non-distortion of perception, non-distortion of mind, non-distortion of view. 

"To regard as 'disappointing' what is actually disappointing...

"To regard as 'impersonal' what is actually impersonal...

"To regard as 'unattractive' what is actually unattractive is the non-distortion of perception, non-distortion of mind, non-distortion of view.
 
"These are the four non-distortions of perception, non-distortions of mind, non-distortions of view."
    
"Perceiving permanence in the impermanent, fulfillment in the disappointing, self in the impersonal, attractiveness in the unattractive -- beings, brought to ruin by wrong-view, become imbalanced, go out of their minds.
 
Mara has his eye on us (lilminx16)
"Bound by Mara's noose, from that noose [snare, threat of death] they find no rest. Instead, beings continue wandering on, going to rebirth and death.
 
"But when Enlightened Ones arise in the world and bring light into the world, they proclaim the Dharma [the path to liberation] leading to the cessation of disappointment (dukkha, suffering).

"When those with wisdom (insight) listen, they regain their senses and see the impermanent as impermanent, the disappointing as disappointing, the impersonal as impersonal, and the unattractive as unattractive.

"Undertaking right-view, they go beyond all disappointment and unhappiness."
The Perversions explained
Ven. Nyanatiloka, Buddhist Dictionary
What is art? (Saara/flickr.com)
The "perversions" or "distortions" are four, which may be either:
  • of perception (saññā-vipallāsa)
  • of consciousness (citta-vipallāsa)
  • or of views (ditthi-vipallāsa).
What are they? The four are seeing or regarding:
  1. what is impermanent (anicca) as permanent;
  2. what is painful (dukkha) as pleasant (or happiness-yielding);
  3. what is without a self (anattā) as a self;
  4. what is impure (ugly, asubha) as pure or beautiful'' (A.IV.49).
Ah, is that how I was seeing things?
"Of the distortions, the following are eliminated by the first path-knowledge (stream-entry, sotāpatti): the distortions of perception, consciousness, and views, that the impermanent is permanent and what is not a self is a self; further, the distortion of views that the painful is pleasant, and the impure is pure.
 
By the third path-knowledge (non-returning, anāgāmitā) are eliminated: the distortions of perception and consciousness that the impure is pure.
 
By the fourth path-knowledge (full-enlightenment, arahatta) are eliminated the distortions of perception and consciousness that the painful is pleasant" (Path of Purification, Vis.M. XXII, 68).

Friday, 9 May 2014

LA "gangs" spread to Buddhist Thailand (video)

Pfc. Sandoval, Ashley Wells, Dhr. Seven, Crystal Quintero, Wisdom Quarterly; co-hosts A Martinez, Alex Cohen; Leo Duran, photographer Zanya Tanantpapat (Take Two/SCPR.org)
"LA" Los Angeles gang hand sign or mudra by Thai fake neo-cholos (scpr.org)

(Coconuts TV) A curious phenomenon - Mexican-style gang motifs and monikers rise up in the most Theravada Buddhist country in the world.
  
We graffiti and no one knows what we're doin'!
For anyone who has visited Los Angeles, cholos are a welcome sight -- bald, in white tee shirts and prison-issue baggy pants, sporting corporate logos of all their favorite shoe brands and sports teams, the Raiders in particular.

Wait till Cypress Hill* arrives in music stores
It's a menacing sight, like riding through a wildlife park. We snap photos and speed away. These lions mean no harm to drivers, but the park rangers -- gun happy Sheriff deputies and LAPD Crash Squad -- will not tolerate gangsters or wannabes. Looking a certain way will daily get you harassed, arrested, and accused of felonious acts. And if you have a face tattoo, it's even worse.

The ink is real, the meaning completely lost
We're talking to you, Mara/MS-13 (Mara Salvatrucha Trece, the El Salvadoran version of exported L.A. culture; see "Sin Nombre" (Spanish, literally "Without Name," figuratively "Without Hope") for one of the scariest portrayals of gang life that viewers will have to interpret as pure fiction but it's real. Buddhists will certainly see the influence of the ancient demon MARA, the gang's nickname). Now imagine that same look, that very ethos, that barrio creation in Buddhist Thailand.

We continue the exposé below, but first let's talk about the two cities in which this phenom is spreading.

Wait, is this bustling Los Angeles or busy Bangkok? (Gift-of-Light/flickr.com)
 
There are similarities between Los Angeles and Bangkok (although lately Bangkok is bloodier and more dangerous for tourists), two places most of the world is likely to visit at one time or other.

For one, they have the same name, "City of Angels" (Spanish, Los Angeles, Thai Krung Thep).
 
Both are built along polluted rivers close to world-famous beaches -- Santa Monica for L.A. and Pattaya for Bangkok. And both are getting to be like Mexico City -- three hot megalopolises, endless expanses of breaking concrete, conspicuous consumption alongside shantytown blight.
 
Now each has costumed (uniformed) "gangstas" of the same stripe. They are hot Latin "thugs" envied by boys, admired by girls. Cypress Hill seems much to blame for this typecasting and American export. The cities are getting to be a lot like chaotic Calcutta in India (Kolkata on the Hooghly) that was old when the colonial British arrived as immortalized by Rudyard Kipling:

A Tale of Two Cities
[T]he midday halt of Charnock -- more's the pity!
Grew a City.
As the fungus sprouts chaotic from its bed,
So it spread --
Chance-directed, chance-erected, laid and built
On the silt --
Palace, byre, hovel -- poverty and pride --
Side by side;
And, above the packed and pestilential town,
Death looked down.
But the Rulers in that City by the Sea...
Bhumibol Bridge in beautiful Buddhist Bangkok, like the City of Los Angeles by the bridge over our concrete-lined and graffiti-ridden Los Angeles River (HappySUN/flickr.com)

Protesters wave Thai flags in Bangkok
BANGKOK is a city of extremes and superlatives, a city one does not react to with indifference, says Thailand at a Glance. Recently declared the world's hottest city by the World Meteorological Organization, it also boasts the world's longest name: Krung-thep-maha-nakorn-boworn-ratana-kosin-mahintar-ayudhya-amaha-dilok-pop-nopa-ratana-rajthani-burirom-udom-rajniwes-mahasat-arn-amorn-pimarn-avatar-satit-sakattiya-visanukam. Not surprisingly, only a handful of Thais use that mouthful, preferring the abbreviated version: "Jeweled City of the deva Sakka (India's Indra)." However, most Thais refer to it simply as Krung Thep, "City of Angels." Bangkok wordsmith Theppitak Karoonboonyanan separates the words of K161t and translates them:
  • Bangkok temple, muddy river
    Krungthep mahanakorn
    The great city of angels,
  • amorn rattanakosin mahintara yutthaya mahadilok phop
    the supreme unconquerable land of the great immortal divinity (Indra/Sakka),
  • noparat rajathani burirom
    the royal capital of nine noble gems, the pleasant city,
  • udomrajaniwes mahasatharn
    with plenty of grand royal palaces,
  • amorn phimarn avatarnsathit
    and divine paradises for the reincarnated deity (Vishnu),
  • sakkatattiya visanukam prasit
    given by Sakka and created by the deva of crafting (Visnukarma).
"Latin Thugs" (South Gate to Hollywood)
*Gang-member/hip hop artists Cypress Hill are the USA's most famous "gangsta" rappers -- one Swedish, one Black, one Mexican -- from Los Angeles with more than 18 million in CD sales and many hits like "Insane in the Brain."

"Latin Thugs" featuring Tego Calderon
Spanish to English translation by Wisdom Quarterly editors
LYRICS: [WARNING: violent, graphically sexual, and gang-affiliated references! Bad karma.]
  • This song is slang, which is impossible to translate satisfactorily. But one gets the idea of extreme daily, run of the mill violence. These are the "teachings of the vicious" the Buddha warned about. People are4 getting caught up in endless reprisals and troubles, where hate is never able to end hate. All available lyric sites are incomplete and misleading, so we are depending on our own ears on what to translate the studio track
Don't be like, uh, a [stuck up] Cuban./ Be like in Rio, a real stoned [easygoing] pothead./ This kingpin ping-ping [gunshots]/ Swing is here with the force of a machete./ Kick mad lingo [slang] from Spain to Tijuana./ Real son of a b, homeboy; ask your momma./ I don't care [about] gunshots, my girl./ All I wanna know is, How good was it singing [sexing, seeing ya]?/ Don't be scared, get over here./ What's the play, dawg, homeboy [what's] goin' on?/ Ni**as, O.G., straight veteran[s of gang warfare]./ Master the Spanglish-style mad-crazy./ Y'all fools know that right here we don't play around./ Don't act a fool, and don't break the rules./ We [are] real crazy ass'sassins./ Get your guns ready; here comes danger!/

[Chorus: Tego Calderon] Come out [party] with Tego./ They've arrived, the main main ones./ Cuba, Borinquen [Puerto Rico], Mexico, all of Los Angeles./ It's like up-up, go on:/ Light up the weed, but what I want is *ss./Cypress with Tego,/We've arrived, the main main ones./ Cuba, Borinquen, Mexico, all of Los Angeles!

Racist neo-Nazi skinhead with US prison tattoos
[B-Real] They call me sweet daddy./ You know I'm pure [complete, refined, a fully "made" man, a Mafioso]./ I never fade away [I will never be forgotten]./ You see me comin, [better] get your *ss runnin./ I know you hate away./ Hit the take harder than most tough-guys you idolize./ Get it started quicker, and hit you before you try to hide!/

[Sen Dog] Latin thug, roll deep, gangster [gang member]/ Purely Los Angeles [style], southside [South Gate, the city next to Watts, their hometown] ghetto:/ Carpet, car black, and crazy [pet] dog./ Keep an eye on that fiend, because I will grab it for myself [pick it up, take it from you, steal it]./ A mofo [pinger, shooter], [you] slight little-girl,/ I will take out my ping [pistol] and [make it] sing [double entendre, make my ping sing is also make my beer (bottle) whistle; taking a shot is taking a swig]./ Can't get enough of them L.A. sluts [skunks, hoodrats, stinkers]./ Get a little wild and I eat [sex act] that [stuff]./ Listen up, good friend [companion, godfather], the big Cypress Hill/ [is] Still right here, and it still controls./ This ain't no Telemundo [Latin TV] special [spectacular]./ The homies that I roll with for real will come wet [bloody] you./[Chorus]


For anyone critical of our coverage exploring this "fringe" topic, we ask, How fringe could this violent song, this band, this movement be? Just look at it being performed live for non-Latinos.

PR rapper Tego Calderón
[Tego Calderon] Hey, who the f is that?/ Another black [dark] crazy, daddy [and nickel-plated]./ So hang one [wring his neck, give him a bad necklace a noose] of the bad-ducks [a "gay," the worst insult in Spanish in that those who hear it grow feathers and lay eggs on the spot]./ A lotta lotta shots for the rats [finks] to knock 'em out [cause to faint, make dizzy, make to lose heart, discourage]/ [So] That they die for sure, without fail./ I ain't never scared, you heard?/ Another idiot is harassing, I will control him [emasculated to a she]./ Go manly, go easy, stay alive./ However you want me to put it to you, what there is is punishment [castigation]./ I'm a lively Latin [double entendre, also a Latin who's still alive], [with] pistol, [and] knife/ To defend against enemies./ These are malignant; they don't have a ticket nor singing [sex],/ But they say so anyway./ You bet, the Tego, the one with the messed up [a]fro, that one who sure is a [horny] goat,/ A major [Jewish], blastin' all these mofos,/ Envious, toads and testes./ Aim for his head! If he goes, he won't be returning./ So his gang will know it [para que su pandilla lo sepa]./ Another one, by turning [what comes around goes around] there goes the father./ And I won't cry nor the mother [that is, I won't cry nor even when the mother goes, or I won't cry for him nor will his mother]./[Chorus]. More
OUR EXPOSE CONTINUES
I also like Star Trek; live long and prosper!
Well, no need to imagine. It's arrived. But as in Japan, which has a startling array of Americana (Harajuku-style as Gwen Stefani teaches us) from Marilyn Monroe to Marilyn Manson, it's only fashion, a style, an homage. These guys, cholos, straight up eastside gangsters, have never been to L.A. or U.S. prison.

They've never been jumped in (beaten in a hazing induction), they just look that way. And they're loving it. And where there are gangsters, oh yes, can gangsterettes be far behind? (One is show at far right of second photo above). Where are all the cholas? Betty Boop stickers and hairstyles will be skyrocketing on the streets of Bangkok -- once the Red Shirts and Yellow Shirts settle their differences, now that the radicals have deposed the corrupt government and the conservatives are licking their uber patriotic wounds. Take Two investigates.

Real Gangs (from El Salvador to L.A.)
THE REAL THING: MS-13. Fear, fear, be afraid, it's a human "virus" and we need a police state to protect us because what we give up when we give up civil liberties is everything. "Who trades liberty for security deserves neither," explained Ben Franklin.
 
Latinos leaving Catholic Church
It's an old All Boys Club of sexist clerics and old child molesters. What are the young to do?
  
Interestingly, Latinos are leaving the Catholic Church. There has been a 12% loss to the Vatican Corporation's numbers. Some have gone on to evangelical Christianity, but many have gone to that favorite category of Census takers "unaffiliated." That includes Buddhist or "spiritual but not religious," which often includes Buddhist meditative practices of mindfulness and loving-kindness (metta), compassion and insight (vipassana). 

Oh, there was that Spanish Inquisition
Attend a group meditation in your area and you are bound to see disaffected Catholics in large numbers. People need a spirituality the corrupt Church has simply not been able to provide. It's not that Catholic priests molested our children, no, we're not mad about that.

Dia de los Muertos making a comeback (npr)
We just could no longer relate to the official and hypocritical teachings of Imperial Holy Roman Catholicism.
 
If it were up to us, we would go Charismatic -- an authentic dance with "spirit" and speaking in tongues -- rather than remain in a backward, hypocritical gay child molesting factory.
 
And the Catholic Church knows it, at least in the Latin American community of L.A. because it allows the Charismatics to use its basements, and their numbers are growing as the numbers attending mass dwindle.

Wednesday, 30 April 2014

Love, Sex, and Death (video)

Pat Macpherson, Dhr. Seven, Amber Larson, Ashley Wells, Wisdom Quarterly; Jeff Walker, the "Carneous Cacoffiny" of Carcass; Nancy Updike (ThisAmericanLife.org, 4-25-14)

Oh the Occupy hippies of Claremont (B/W)
April, of course, is National Poetry Month in the US. Happy birthday, Shakespeare/Edward de Vere. And Wisdom Quarterly did an in house call for submissions. The rules were easy: "Repurpose something fun that tells a higher truth." Lately, we have been listening to a lot of grindcore, an extreme genre of death metal from Earache Records most people cannot swallow.
 
"Do it, do it, do it, you know you want to"
Three British vegans invented it (because vegans rock harder), and it changed American music. It was Occupy Los Angeles close to the end, before the literally "jackbooted thugs" of the LAPD Riot Squad stormed the peaceful encampment to cheering LA Times reporters sitting in the sidelines, after the "American Spring" was subvert by police state spies. And if Aleksa, the "face of the movement," can be a Cradle of Filth fan and a great kisser, why wouldn't Wisdom Quarterly have been listening to Carcass?

Then MARA [the personification of death in Buddhism] said to me:
 
Selena G. listens to more than Justin B. (wwtdd)
"Strike up
The discordant underture,
This carnal cacophony,
Perversely penned,
Transposed and decomposed
On strings fashioned from human twine."
 
I ask why,
But Mara carries on:
 
"Lovingly wound and fretted upon my bow,
Garishly incinerated.
All the dead resonate
In final death-throes."
 
I was vibrant as I thrashed
In movements scripted for the dead...
Orchestral horrors Mara vehemently conducts.

My corpus concertos were cordial.
I was disinterred and detuned,
All six feet below
In harmony with the deceased.


D.I.Y. (store.thisamericanlife.org)
In our pre-teens we walk around every day with the knowledge that our body is about to change. We don’t know exactly when or how. All we know is that it will happen and we will come out the other end a different person. This American Life hears from kids who are reluctantly facing puberty...any minute now.  Producer Nancy Updike takes some personal questions about death and dying to a place where they are happening all the time, the hospice. LISTEN

Golden King Tut the teen pharaoh (ancient-egypt.co.uk)
Mara explained:

"My inspiration is your disintegration.
You're my latest masterpiece!
The score creeps your flesh."
 
All my notes seeped from sinewy frets.
 
"But, no, don't hold your breath," Mara added,
"As you wait for your God, or The Void, or the
Abyss of Nothingness."

Mara knew, Mara knew, and said:

We live our lives in blue bras and wretchedness.
"Your usefulness is not through.
Your productivity will resume
In sordid, soiled handicrafts."
 
It was my afterlife's handicap.
The corrupt crescendos
Leaving me out on a limbo
And down on my knees.
I could not rest in my piece, rest in my piece.
 
Christian terrorists in Egypt (us.msn.com)
With deadly dynamics
I'm dead, buried, and barred,
My remains dampened and fingered,
My mortal coil barbed.
 
The death-bells are peeling
Ringing out as I flake
Shrieking out their recitals
In celebration of my wake.
 
Egypt my Egypt (nocaptionneeded.com)
Enter my funereality
My world two metres under
A curious habitat
A muddy trench to plunder.
 
Pass on to ethereality
Churned out under the sextant's blade.

We live our lives in wretchedness,
And death is no escape.
And Death is no escape.

Another good poem was based on Boxxy and Carlie Rae Jepsen's "Call Me Maybe," the bestest song in the history of music...except for Katy Perry's pre-girl kissing Christian rock. But it's X-rated, so let's just remind readers who "Boxxy" is, the most beautiful girl on the WW Web.

Saturday, 4 January 2014

Heroic Journey: The Bridge of Death (video)

Dhr. Seven, Amber Larson, CC Liu, Wisdom Quarterly; Monty Python, "Holy Grail"
Avian (Garuda) guards on the temple of Emerald Buddha, Thailand (Zennn/flickr.com)

Monty Python's Flying Circus comes to the Bridge of Death (Holy Grail)

Devi (Travis Charest/michaelmay.us)
When a heroine/hero is on a heroic journey, the road is treacherous. One must stay in possession of one's wits. There are rivers to ford, bridges to cross, and tricky questions to answer.

Every moment is imperiled. We teeter on the edge of ruin. We are staring into the gaping chasm... and loving it, of course. Just so those brave European Crusaders conquering and enslaving the world.

Warrior (cronesmagicalcrafts)
Camelot was comfortable, but not so the forays into the territories of "enemies" the Knights Templar Crusaders made. Their avarice and religious fanaticism, motivated more by greed for personal glory and riches than favor with their tribal Jewish God now co-opted to a nominal "Christian" one in Greco-Roman form.
 
Coming to a bridge at the end of life is not unusual. There is the River Styx to cross, the Cerberus to navigate, and in Asian mythology the idea of a very fragile rope bridge which can bear no extra weight -- and, bad karma being very heavy, it frequently gives way.

Asian deva watcher, Burma (Dondoc-foto/flickr)
What is "bad" karma, then, and how do we avoid accruing it? Any word, thought, or physical deed motivated by greed, hatred/fear, or delusion is demeritorious. Not all desires are ethical issues compromising one's virtue. There are wishes for good, for liberation, for helping others, for wisdom, for compassion, and so on. Not all aversion is misplaced. There is an aversion to harm, to coarse and harsh things, to base and destructive habits. 

All delusion is harmful, though not knowing somethings at some times (and being at peace with that) can be a relief, a respite, an opportunity to strengthen our mettle and grow prior to having to deal with the raw truth, which itself is not bad. Truth is good. But our deluded reactions to it, our misunderstanding of it, lead us to harm. If we knew more, we would hurt less -- in the long run. Every single step does not get easier along the rocky and narrow road.

Garuda guards close up Emerald Buddha temple, Thailand (Zennn/flickr.com)
  
Euro deva (Joe Temmel/flickr)
What is "good" karma that lightens us for "crossing over" at death? The three opposite categories: nongreed, nonhatred, and nondelusion or, taken at their broadest, the categories of unselfishness, compassion, and wisdom. How can we not be selfish in this selfish world? 
 
Wisdom helps. If we begin to grapple with the idea that things, ultimately, are impersonal, it is easier to let go. Giving externally while clinging internally is painful and likely to strengthen our ego as the "great giver." Giving rooted in wisdom is likely to foster more wisdom and a joy of release, of letting go, of being unburdened. That wisdom is a beginning. It culminates in the first stage of enlightenment with the arising of the insight (vipassana) that the ego -- the essence of any "thing" -- was a flawed view of reality, not a reality.
 
When we begin to see that IT IS NOT REALITY but the illusions, the fantasies, the hallucinations we are enduring that are the problem, we see that the truth is the answer. Let's ESCAPE to reality.

Friday, 6 December 2013

What can we expect when we die? (video)

What can we expect after we die?

Adios, mijita.
Host Lilou Mace talks to Dr. Raymond A. Moody, M.D., P.hD. about the phrase he coined, "near death experience," and discusses his astonishing bestseller Life After Life, a book that offers real experiences of people who were declared clinically dead and returned.

The descriptions they give are similar, vivid, and usually so overwhelmingly positive that hearing about them changes our view of life, dying, and spiritual survival beyond death. The Buddha frequently speaks of karma carrying experience beyond "death after the dissolution of the body." One can mystically see beings re-arising ("again-becoming") according to their deeds, the fruition of a karmic act that serves as the "rebirth-linking consciousness."

It's okay. I'm not staying dead (zenmotion.com)
Is it the same being surviving death or wholly another? Both views are mistaken and rooted in ignorance of the impersonal process. Conventionally speaking, it is the same person. But ultimately speaking, there is no identity from one moment to the next even while alive. (Materiality, sensation, perception, mental formations, and awareness are not identical from one submoment to the next but rather are constantly in flux, giving rise to different subsequent replacements).  Therefore, Buddhism uniquely teaches the doctrine of not-self or not-soul (anatta). This does not mean that there is nothing that lives, dies, and is reborn.

Instead, the "ghost," "spirit," or subtle body involved is called the gandhabba.* The Buddha meticulously described and explained the process-of-consciousness (viññāa). These phenomena exist, and their nature is radically impermanent, impersonal, and unsatisfactory, and therefore they cannot ultimately be called an immortal or permanent self or soul. A superficial grasp of Buddhism leads to the wrong view that Buddhism is materialistic like science, contradictory, or that it denies or is ignorant of subtle-forms commonly reported in mystical experiences. The Buddha was perfectly aware of the dying process, the rebirth-linking process, and life continuum in any state of existence.
 
*Gandhabba (Sanskrit, gandharva) refers to a being (or, strictly speaking, part of the causal continuum of consciousness) in a liminal state between death and rebirth.

Death can prompt us to live well
We almost never want to think or speak of our own death, but it can be more difficult to deal with the death of a loved one. This is a source of great grief the Buddha called "suffering" (dukkha, unsatisfactoriness). In this long course of rebirths, we have lost uncountable loved ones -- children, parents, spouses, relatives, and friends. Loss and separation are inevitable in wandering life after life. Even heavenly rebirths, which are often incredibly long, eventually come to an end.

When Loved Ones Die
HOW TO CONTACT THE DEPARTED: Anyone can use the Psychomanteum, a chamber developed by Dr. Moody. He was inspired by ancient Greek techniques used for 2,500 years at the Oracle of the Dead in Ephyra, Greece. A visitor to a psychomantium (mirrored room) often experiences contact with departed loved ones. How? The process takes several hours of sincerely and emotionally speaking of the departed while gazing into a specially lit mirror tilted so as not to reflect oneself. This is explained in the doctor's DVDs Through the Tunnel & Beyond and Reunions.