Archive for December, 2007

Excellent Interview Over At FallingFruit.tv


07 Dec

Check it out – How Do You Sell the Dharma?

Solid stuff!

One aspect that caught me was the concept of “being a 4th grade student, teaching 3rd grade dharma.”  I really like that.  For me it calls to mind the idea of Sponsorship in 12 Step programs.  The only qualification for sponsoring someone is to have more experience with the program than they have. No tests, no title, just “I’ve been doing this longer than you have.”  The additional twist is, when coaching the specific steps, you only coach someone up to one step before the last one you completed.  I think that applying that model to passing on the Dharma would go a long way.

Bouncing Around The Interblag


06 Dec

I was just cruising through my RSS feeds yesterday, and came across some gems.

I am in the process of taking a serious look at how I handle my personal finances, my long held fears about money, and looking for ways to live with less anxiety about bills & more frugality. I can across a great post over at ZenHabits.comThe 10 Key Actions That Finally Got Me Out of Debt; or, Why Living Frugally is Only Part of the Solution. Check it out, it’s full of some solid advice.

Also, FrugalForLife.com has 11 Simple Steps to Living on Less.

Over at StevePavlina.com there’s a good piece about prioritizing your own priorities. You Are Self-Employed. This concept first struck me while reading The War of Art, and it’s very useful. Too often I find myself taking the projects at work very seriously, and my personal goals get shoved to the wayside. That is not a balanced way to live, and the Libra I am chafes at the behavior.

I have mentioned before that I took up a regular meditation practice a few months back. The results have been phenomenal. For those of you interested in meditation, but who are not sure they have the time, check out the offering over at DumbLittleMan.com, Meditation Techniques for the Busy or Impatient.  The tip I would add is that throughout the day you can get in touch with the point of meditating, which is realizing the universal simple truth that you are.  You do that by taking a moment, stopping your activity (including looking for the truth) and point your awareness at the simple feeling of being.  (For more on this check out John Sherman, over at riverganga.org.)

Okay, back to the grind stone!

A Great Free Resource: Sacred Texts Online


05 Dec

Just wanted to put out a quick note about a couple of excellent sites for anyone wanting to study up on religious/spiritual writings who doesn’t want to spend lots of cash or clutter up their book shelves.

SacredTexts.com is a huge site with more writings than I have future days.  From their About section, it is “a freely available archive of electronic texts about religion, mythology, legends and folklore, and occult and esoteric topics. Texts are presented in English translation and, where possible, in the original language.  This site has no particular agenda other than promoting religious tolerance and scholarship.”

Celextel’s Online Spiritual Library is an enormous repository of all things Vedantic & Hindu.

And, for those of you with iPods out there, there is the iPod eBook Creator, a labor of love from Daniel Duris which converts text files into iPod notes files.  Never has it been easier to get your spiritual study groove on!

Cheers!

The Only Unmediated Experience You Ever Know


03 Dec

Unmediated

Main Entry: un·me·di·at·ed
Function: adjective
Date: 1648

: not mediated : not communicated or transformed by an intervening agency

Every experience you have, every feeling, every emotion, every impression is mediated. When you touch a cool piece of smooth metal, all information regarding that experience is passed to you through your sense of touch and a comparison between the state of your flesh and the state of the object. That sensation then passes through a layer of filters composed of your past experiences, and knowledge. Before anything gets to your conscious awareness it has been filtered, digested, categorized and defined by some set of mediating agencies.

Even the thoughts in your head have their origins, and interpretations, within the mediating circumstances of your past experiences, psychological back drop, and current situation.

The actual you, the pure awareness of all objects, never receives any impressions without passing through, and being mediated by, your central nervous system at the very least. Most experiences will also pass through your checkpoints of cultural definitions, past knowledge, learned reaction, and gut instinct. Nothing gets into your awareness unless it has passed through this host of mediators, and the distinct experience is changed & interpreted by each along the way.

There is only one thing, one experience that occurs for the basic awareness that you are, that ever comes to you without mediation. The one thing that is purely known, without filters, without alteration, is that you are. Everything else is changed to one degree, or another, before it gets to your conscious awareness. The only pure sensation available to you, ever, is the raw fact that you exist. You know that purely, without doubt, and previous too all occasions which arise. You are. That simple truth is the only truth you have.

In the path of Self-Inquiry it is said that all problems in life, whatsoever, have as their origin a mistaken identification with something other than the actual self. In other words, taking a mediated experience to be what you truly are. The act of getting in touch with the unmediated experience of being, whenever possible, slowly erodes the mistaken identification with any experience, or ideal, that is outside of the pure awareness that we really are. To put it another way, anything which you can find, and identity, is categorically an object (because you can see it) and therefore not the pure subject, which is you.

By the simple act of repeatedly stopping all activity, and turning awareness at the raw experience of being, the disease of false identification is eroded, and finally cured. It is akin to taking a medicine. We don’t necessarily know all the ins & outs of what the medicine is doing to us, we just know that it works. By taking a few seconds, whenever it occurs to you to do so, and turning full attention to what it feels like to be, all false identification will fade over time. And then, you will still have all of your mediated experiences, but just without being invested in their outcome by the mistake of thinking that you are them.

That is the path, and the aim, of self-inquiry.

Whew! I Won!


01 Dec

nano_07_winner_large.gifWith one minute to spare, I won the National Novel Writing Month for the third year running. I crossed the line one minute before the midnight deadline, with a first draft of Special Delivery, with a word count of 50,068.

Several things were different about this year’s novel. It was my shortest by 6,000+ words. This was the first year I started the first year I had a false start. I got 400 words into a novel I had planned on writing for a whole month before the contest, doing a good deal of research and outlining. I got those 400 words down very slowly, like pulling teeth, then realized I would never make it. I cared too much about getting it perfect. So, I bailed and blazed into a story I had been thinking about telling for the last two years. Everything just rolled on great, this story was the first of my efforts where I really feel like I might have a book worthy of a full re-write and filling out. The words flowed out, and the ideas came bursting out of their own accord.

Then, I typed “The End.” That was at 46,000 words. It was too short. I added an epilogue, which was a hoot to write, then a prologue, which was also fun. That brought me to about 48,200. An interview of the team (it’s a super hero story), an interview for the position of base receptionist, and a battle with one of the super villains I had passed over in the first pass finally got me over the line. Just as I typed in the last witty line I looked down at my computer clock, saw the time was 11:58pm and flipped out. I got the file onto the NaNoWriMo website’s validation widget with 60 seconds to spare.

Each year has been a different experience. I had a great time this year, but I hope that next year I remember to not go so last minute. Definitely not good for my stress levels.

Travis Eneix

Dedicated to looking at the self.