Special Thoughts
My Zen (actually Korean Chan) master once said something to me that has stuck in my mind.
Modern human beings have lost the ability to distinguish their symbolic abstractions in words from reality.
This was said in a different way in the movie Oh God, You Devil where George Burns, playing the devil was asked what his greatest accomplishment was. He answered, “Language!”
Have you ever noticed that language is the convenient way we obscure and justify when we mistreat our fellow human beings. We always seem to find a way to come up with a reason why we are “doing unto others” in a way other than we would have “done to ourselves.”
So, let’s keep this simple.
When you help people you do good.
When you hurt people you do bad.
End of story.
Keeping your life this simple will help you enjoy the world more. Forget the pundits and politicians, and just do good to others.
In a lecture on Spiritual Materialism, I remember Chogyam Trungpa Ripoche describing the phenomena of pursuing one spiritual path, then another, then another. It’s a bit like a kid in a candy store… “oooh, I want that one…. no that one…. oh no that one!” The point is that this constant jumping from one path to another does not lead to real spiritual progress, just to jumping.
That basic idea applies to everything in our lives. Do you know someone (maybe yourself) that constantly jumps from one thing to another and never seems to get anything done. Many years ago I had a business partner that seemed to actually prefer constant activity to making money. It was amazing. We would have a signed deal on the table that meant a lot of money, but he would drop that deal to pursue something new. Needless to say, we weren’t partners very long.
It’s the same thing with diet and exercise. Try one thing, then try another, then try another. Sound familiar?
The fact is that in order to make real progress we have to stick to something and actually do it. That’s doesn’t mean you have to pick the first thing you run across and stick with it. It might take a little time to find something that you really like and resonate with. But once you’ve found it, then do it and stick with it.
And that takes us to a little more in depth consideration of the human mind. Have you ever noticed that our minds just love to be entertained. Well, just in case you haven’t thought about that take a look at all the TV, radio, movies, sports, books, magazines, etc. that are surrounding us. They’re all one form of entertainment or another. Some are obvious entertainment, while others like news programs are more subtle because they’re informative entertainment. Somehow we rationalize that something that is informative has a higher intrinsic value than say a cartoon.
It’s not particularly useful to debate if news stories are more valuable than cartoons, but it is important to realize that when we are being entertained we are not doing anything. And to achieve anything you must actually do something… and that means you’ve got to distinguish being entertained from actually doing something.
To read about one spiritual path after another so that you can talk about them intelligently at cocktail parties is absolutely not the same thing as actually following a spiritual path… say by meditating year after year. In fact, I remember when I first started studying Zen being asked by my Zen master if I knew much about Zen and Buddhism. I proudly responded, “Yes, I’ve read quite a few books about them.” With a very serious look on his face he responded, ”Oh, well that’s ok. I think we can overcome that.”
In the final analysis it is the ego being entertained and the ego that inflates itself by placing a value on the entertainment. It’s the ego that says, “I am learning this new thing, so now I’m smarter.” The funny thing is that this whole approach to happiness is based on the mistaken notion that one’s ego is inherently existent and a valid point of view… at least mistaken in Buddhist thinking. Doing is different than thinking you’re doing.
So, the thought for today is to distinguish when you are being entertained or entertaining yourself mentally from when you actually are accomplishing results. Then remember that extraordinary results are achieved by small continuous efforts… by actually accomplishing daily victories.
Today the United States finds itself in yet another round of self analysis about why Representative Gabby Giffords was shot over the weekend. As usual, the far left is pointing to the violence in right wing talk radio and TV and the right is scrambling to dissociate this act of violence from conservative politics. So, again, as a country we turn an incredibly tragic event into a form of intellectual entertainment or, if you prefer, mental masturbation.
The simple fact at this point in time (and it has certainly not always be so) the violent rhetoric is coming predominantly from proponents of conservative thinking. That is not saying that all conservatives are bad or even that conservative points of view are bad… but an example of the bizarre is Glenn’s Becks website condemning violence in one panel while showing Glenn holding a handgun in another panel. We cannot begin to solve the problem until as a country we are intellectually honest about who does use violence as a tool for self-promotion whether left or right. This is not about whether any political group is good or bad. It is about two things.
- Your yourself not promoting violence in any form
- You holding anyone who does promote violence personally accountable by taking action to shun them and their activities.
And in the final analysis, liberal or conservative simply does not matter. What does matter is violence or non violence. To that end, J. Krishnnamurti has said
The crisis is a crisis in consciousness… a crisis that cannot anymore accept the old norms… and considering what the world is now, with all the misery conflict, destructive brutality, aggression, and so on, man is still as he was. He is still brutal, violent, aggressive, acquisitive, competitive, and he has built a society along these lines.
And changing that starts by a change in consciousness that recognizes that the promotion of violence in any form and by anybody is the manifestation of evil in this world, period. In the tradition of Gandhi, Depak Chopra has asked all people to take the vow of non-violence in action, thought, and speech.
So, I ask everyone to watch the following video…
Then link to The Chopra Foundation web site by clicking here and take the vow yourself.







