What is the starting point?

Discussion in 'Religion Archives' started by wynn, Nov 18, 2009.

  1. lightgigantic Banned Banned

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    we all move towards what we have a taste for ... and I think that is a key issue that under-rides many things we are certain of



    then the goal is to retain european culture as distinct from america ... or even the goal of a musician is to be a good musician (as opposed to a good heavy weight boxer or something)

    If one doesn't have goals beyond meeting the demands of the body (or living to work and working to live) its not vastly distinct from the blatant signification of the advertisement




    By illusion (since its the nature of illusion, a potency of god, to be greater than ourselves ... which isn't to say that god plants it in us, but rather that its our desire which directs us )

    I wasn't talking about aspects of sadhana bhakti (which will always remain bitter just as sweet things will always remain bitter to a jaundiced person).

    I was talking about talking more along the lines of activity and quality (or karma and guna). For instance just like you don't seem the type to take up kick boxing, you also don't seem the type who can suspend all pragmatic considerations of making a living or family for one's self to contemplate scripture and philosophy all day ... this doesn't of course mean that you have to address such needs, interests and concerns divorced from such philosophy, just means that grinding to a stand still until you work out how god created the universe or something will simply frustrate you
     
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  3. wynn ˙ Valued Senior Member

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    How can we know what we are moving towards, unless we have already attained it?


    I don't think the "Europeans" would state it so clearly.


    So once that initial decision was made to attempt to enjoy separately from God, we have set ourselves up for kinds of trouble that we did not foresee how very troublesome they would be for us?
    Because normally, one would not think that the lesser can overcome the greater. But it seems that denial of God is such a profound shock to our system that that which we deem the greater can in fact be overcome by the lesser.
    Am I understanding this correctly?


    Do you mean that chanting will always remain bitter for me?


    I am painfully aware of pragmatic considerations in my life.

    But how can one move on with one's daily work life without actually knowing whether it is worth it, how it all ties in with relation to God and so on?

    How does one deal with fundamental philosophical uncertainty, on a daily basis, and still function in the world?
     
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  5. lightgigantic Banned Banned

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    we know what we are headed towards having already had some of taste (or at least the anticipation of taste) for it




    lol
    I guess blunt statements are characteristic of yanks.




    something like that
    Its not so much the shock but coming under the agency of (maha) maya




    for as long as the jaundice of material life continues, yes




    A healthy part of the process is to simply dovetail or add a spiritual element to whatever one is doing.

    If one is besieged by doubt whether there is any merit in spiritual practices that are tagged to our routine activities, it must be doubly so in the absence of them.
     
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  7. wynn ˙ Valued Senior Member

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    Can we change our direction?


    Perhaps it is the bluntness that disturbs "European sensitivities", not so much what is actually being said.


    And I can't hope for this jaundice to go away anytime soon ...?


    How does one do that?


    This sentence can go two ways, "them" can refer to either "spiritual practices" or "routine activities". Which did you mean?
     
  8. lightgigantic Banned Banned

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    sure, but any make over on one's values is tough work



    kind of like an american might say something like "You are lying through your f*ckin teeth" and a european might say "you appear to speaking something far removed from the truth"

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    that depends on you




    Take a look at whatever one is doing and simply add K ... as opposed to turfing out all one's possessions in the name of renunciation or something (I remember one challenged practitioner who removed their in built wardrobe and cupboards with a chainsaw just to adopt the "spiritual" lifestyle"

    IOW its not so much about radically changing one's life but simply reducing the opportunities for bad karma and adding K.

    (I guess if one made a living as a drug dealer or butcher it could warrant a few radical changes)




    I meant spiritual practices.

    Its not really possible to have an absence of routine activities.
     
  9. wynn ˙ Valued Senior Member

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    Nah, it would be something more Derridaish.

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    In what sense does it depend on me?

    Is this jaundice subject to an overnight change; that I am supposed to have a desire so strong to turn this jaundice around that it can be done overnight, a matter of instant action, or nothing?

    Because whenever I hear this "it depends on you", there seems to be the implication "if you really wanted it, you would do it instantly and succeed fully, and if you don't, it means that you don't really want it, and deserve contempt".


    How do I "simply add K."?

    Should I write, stitch or carve K.'s name or initial on every item that is in my possession?


    Moreover, there are at least two major problems here for me:

    1. I do not actually know that K. is the SPoG, or that Vedic scriptures are relevant. Perhaps it is all a hoax, like so many other supposedly spiritual things, and I will just be fooled again.
    So "simply adding K." would mean to unconditionally trust that it isn't a hoax. I don't have such trust, nor do I see how to attain it.

    2. Given my experiences with those who claim to be K.'s devotees, I really do not think K. would want to have anything to do with me, and more likely preceives me as a nuisance, as something to get rid of. So why I should I try to force my presence onto someone who doesn't want me?
     
  10. Doreen Valued Senior Member

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    Why not fully enter the jaundice, give it full acceptance, embrace it and hear it out, ritually treat it as a part of you and develop a relationship the way one tries to improve a relationship with a roommate?

    K?
     
  11. wynn ˙ Valued Senior Member

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    Oh. That's like saying "If you only ate enough chocolate, and with the right attitude, then you would see there is true satisfaction in chocolate. But as it is, you just haven't tried hard enough to get the desirable results, so you should apply yourself more. Practice makes perfect."
     
  12. Doreen Valued Senior Member

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    That is not a that. It became that that for you in this situation. For me that that me like a release in some situations. In others it felt exactly like what you said above.

    I'll take a different tack.

    Let's say, during the night, you underwent the change in yourself you desire - if that is an idea you can apply to your situation. You wake up tomorrow and you do not know this miracle occurred. What signs would there be that the change took place? How would you notice? How would others notice that this desired change took place in you and what would they notice?
     
  13. wynn ˙ Valued Senior Member

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    This is a useful line of questions, thank you.

    First of all, I would get up early. I would not feel tired. I would feel confident that my life has meaning, and I would look forward to the day ahead of me. I would begin attending to my duties. Not necessarily all polyanna exuberant, but positive, calm, composed, focused.
    There wouldn't be a moment of time in the day that I wouldn't know what to do or sit around idly.
    Others would notice this by seeing that I do all or most of my work on schedule, that I am rarely late for my terms and appointments.
     
  14. iceaura Valued Senior Member

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    You are sure that if your life acquired meaning that it wouldn't do so by dispensing with terms and appointments revealed, in this new light, to be empty?

    My own suspicion is that upon that kind of enlightenment the first thing most people would do is quit their job.
     
  15. Mercy Angel Registered Member

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    Go within... all the answers for you are there. The various "holy" books are merely a series of individual experiences interpreted by others and written down by still others. The original experience is lost, and it is impossible to experience the experience of another anyway. We all have our own path and would do well to locate and stay on it rather than rehash religions and the man-made concepts which are as far from the divine as one can get! Religions are based on fear. Where there is divine love there is no fear.
     
  16. sine.nomine Registered Member

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    It sounds to me like you need to feel better about yourself. Eat better, get out of the house, help your friend move into his new apartment, enjoy life, be curious, camp out, volunteer, do what you feel is right. As for religion, once you take out the dogma, they all have similar core themes (for the most part).
     
  17. lightgigantic Banned Banned

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    generally we experience relief from jaundice gradually
    even if you really wanted to get free of jaundice, it wouldn't happen over night. If you intermittently apply yourself, you get mixed results.



    Its more along the lines of adding to one's actions .... so its more a focus on what one is doing with t he objects

    Therefore it is only practicable to add according to your capacity
    IOW to the degree that you know K is the SPoG, is the degree that you add.


    I think you are projecting a bit here
     
  18. wynn ˙ Valued Senior Member

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    Such as refraining from drinking coffee, or from wearing leather jackets?


    In my case that would mean zero then, if I am the one to assess how much I know that K is the SPoG.


    I would hope so. But surely the reactions one gets from religionists in some way reflect the way God is inclined (or disinclined) toward someone, do they not?
     
  19. lightgigantic Banned Banned

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    actually its more about utilization than refraining




    not a complete zero



    depends on the "some" of the some, one's control group one is using to base such assertions and also the expectations one is coming pre-packaged with
     
  20. wynn ˙ Valued Senior Member

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    Yes, I thought so. Such as "eat vegetarian food", "rise early" ...


    It seems like a zero to me.

    I have no certainty that that which I think I know about God, indeed is knowledge of God. It may be, or not.

    My standard for proper knowledge is that it must be both

    1. knowledge of the truth (which is something anyone can have, at least to some degree; even a child can learn the scriptural verses and have knowledge that way)
    and
    2. knowledge that what is said to be the truth indeed is the truth and why it is the truth (which is something reserved for an omniscient entity or for someone who has a sufficiently high realization).


    But perhaps this twofold standard is not the norm in theism?


    One thing that I find very very strange is that it is said that the gopis did not actually know they were dancing with the SPoG. They were just irresistibly attracted to that young man and they acted on that attraction.

    Which seems to imply that the second criterion above is not necessary for the execution of devotional service. (Although I am not sure the scenario applies in this world!)


    The majority have been displeased with me. The few that didn't are all online, and I don't know - perhaps if they knew me in person, they'd be as displeased as those who know me in person.
     
  21. wynn ˙ Valued Senior Member

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    There is only so much teeth-gritting that I can bear.

    I don't know how others did it or are doing it, and they seem to be unable or unwilling to relate to me.

    To me, chanting is one of the most grim, frustrating activities. I feel viscerally sick and stressed out from it. My stomach hurts. If I chant in the morning, I am sure to feel like crap the whole day long.

    I tell myself that I should "just do it" and that I should "have faith", but that mostly feels like banging my head up against a wall, literally.
     
  22. lightgigantic Banned Banned

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    I don't really know what would drive you to feel that way, but now that you mention it, I guess ultimately we just go where we feel.

    For instance if someone just feels fine without adopting means aimed at surmounting their situation, they simply stay put.
    Otherwise its just part of the sweat of application
     
  23. lightgigantic Banned Banned

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    so whats an example of something you already know?

    even in this world, a person in a position of power tends to regard those that know them as a person, distinct from their position, as more intimate associates.




    The majority have been displeased with me. The few that didn't are all online, and I don't know - perhaps if they knew me in person, they'd be as displeased as those who know me in person.[/QUOTE]
     

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