tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2173639491415598922.post2628076809185479278..comments2023-12-16T04:21:46.568-06:00Comments on Zen Throw Down: Ordinary Mind Is The Way & Everyday ZenPete Cholewinskihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06638574750732801813noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2173639491415598922.post-59035884708849011022016-05-21T12:06:47.948-05:002016-05-21T12:06:47.948-05:00Thank you so much! I'm happy to hear you find ...Thank you so much! I'm happy to hear you find some of my musings interesting. <br /><br />To answer your question, I do not reject a quiet place for zazen. In fact, I usually sit in a quiet place because, as you say, it is much easier to enter and maintain samadhi in such an environment. That said, I absolutely believe if we can discipline our minds sufficiently then we will be able to enter samadhi regardless of what is going on around us. It would be the ultimate expression of not being pulled by delusion around us. <br /><br />I have been able to reach the proper mindstate in many non-ideal situations...though I am certainly not fully adept at it. Yet. Sometimes the 'impossible' is simply what is out of reach at present. I certainly am much better at entering samadhi than I was at the start of my practice, so perhaps one day my mental discipline will become so strong that my surroundings truly will be irrelevant to practice. <br /><br />The post 'Form and Ritual in Zen' (July 5, 2015) goes into this in some detail. Thanks for reading and sharing your opinions!<br />Pete Cholewinskihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06638574750732801813noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2173639491415598922.post-42188337126939329402016-05-20T14:37:44.029-05:002016-05-20T14:37:44.029-05:00Post: Ordinary mind is the way & everyday Zen ...Post: Ordinary mind is the way & everyday Zen (April 10,2011)<br /><br />Hi again"<br /><br />I have been reading your posts and I find some of them very interesting. My question to this post is do you still reject the idea of a quiet place to practice Zazen. My thoughts are, and I can only go by my own experience is that my deepest insights have only come from a very still.. and quiet environment. I think you are right once you have attained a certain level of expertise. You can become very detached and blissful even in a noisy and distractful environment, but this takes a lot of training. <br /><br />Even with all my training I am still distracted, especially by a beautiful woman.<br />It will be impossible to reach absolute samadhi in a noisy environment. And Absolute samadhi is critical in my opinion to truly understanding Dogen Zenji "Mind and body drop off." You are also right Zen is a very personal practice, and I am still very much a beginner. As I still want to express my opinions. <br />All the best.<br />Kind regards,<br />Mark Jamison<br />jamisonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03890632632931342338noreply@blogger.com