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Addiction: A Zen Perspective

Perhaps  should clearly point out I did not write this but liked it so much I have copied it here.
 
Addiction: A Zen Perspective
 
The Zen of Addiction
Whether consciously acknowledged or not, we live in an almost constant state of anxiety. We are concerned with what we may lose, or what we may not gain. We also live in grief and regret over what we have left behind or at least feel we may have indeed lost. We thus attach ourselves to the very things that we cannot, ultimately, control; the past and the future. In truth, there is only today, this moment, and this breath with which we are, and can actually be, connected. The past is gone, and the future has not yet happened. We are here, now.
From a Buddhist perspective, addiction might be considered the archetype of attachment. Addiction is, in fact, a collection of attachments. It is attachment to fear, attachment to loss, and attachment to longing, emptiness, and a lack of a sense of purpose. Whether we choose alcohol, drugs, sex, food, pornography, exercise or even shopping, we are simply employing the means serving the compulsion to fill a space and dampen our pain. The means does not matter; that is simply a gesture. The compulsion is the crux of it, and that compulsion is not so much to drink, or do drugs, or to spend; that compulsion, ultimately, is to fill that space.
 
 
And just what is that space? We might look upon it as the “God-shaped hole.” The wisdom teachings suggest that in identifying with a self, a “me”, we divorce ourselves from the true nature of our existence. From a psychological perspective, this division presents itself as inauthenticity, and the internal conflict that condition engenders promotes internal strife. In our attempt to reconcile this sense of inauthenticity, we cling even more desperately to establishing a sense of “me-ness” and can, in some cases, become morbidly self-destructive in our attempts to soothe the pain of failure in that reconciliation.
Addiction generally begins as an interest. As soon as we express an interest in something, we are expressing a preference. In expressing a preference, we are dividing our attention and creating an attachment to something in the world around us. As that interest turns into a fascination, our attachment deepens. Our attention becomes more and more exclusive, and we become increasingly imbalanced; emotionally, intellectually, and spiritually.
Fascination may then flower into obsession, and we become a slave to our attachment. We are no longer ourselves, and, rather than ‘losing our mind’, which would be the skillful means by which to escape our attachment, we are trapped inside the mind.
With obsession, our attachment becomes even more intensified, and our exclusion even more narrow. As we become slaves to our attachment, our mind, and our behavior, we lose the ability to exercise free will and, in that light, move from obsession to compulsion; from place of being driven, to a place of need.
At this point we fail the First Noble Truth; our attachment has become so involved that we have invited suffering. We are no longer willful, but, rather, subject to and at the sufferance of the will of our attachments. When we find ourselves in a place that we cannot live without exercising this attachment, whatever it may be, we have fallen into a state of addiction.
Within the context of addiction, people often feel that they do not have a choice. Nothing could be further from the truth. We always have a choice. When confronting someone who themselves is confronting an addiction, saying to them, “Stopping your behavior is your choice.” is, however, often met with profound resistance for their failure to see that choice.
The key to getting a grasp on this is recognizing that choice is a constant state; it is not a single moment in time. If the choice not to be addicted were a single choice point, then all we would ultimately do is move our attachment from something socially defined as negative (say, drinking or being promiscuous) to something that is socially defined as positive (not drinking or being chaste). In point of fact, we would become addicted, or at the very least attached, to not being addicted.
Buddha spoke of the Middle Way. Within the context of choice that suggests that if we are present in the moment, our choices are constant. We do not, then, go right or left, say yes or no, think good or bad, or see black or white; rather, we are aware that both opportunities are presenting themselves, we recognize this and acknowledge it, then choose neither.
When we lose the Middle Way and fall off our balancing point, we create our pain. We create our sense of emptiness, and our anxiety around loss. We deceive ourselves into believing that we are less than whom and what we are by virtue of attaching ourselves to things, objects, situations, emotions, and anxieties that take us away from ourselves. This is the engine of addiction.
Coming back to the present moment brings us back to our constancy of choice. We find ourselves in the Middle Way, on the balancing point and we are able to see both choices. Seeing both sides in balance and in perspective then gives us the opportunity to exercise compassion. Most importantly, it gives us the opportunity to exercise compassion toward ourselves. We are able to see the left and the right, and we are also able to see the left in the right and the right in the left.
Our frustration with the world and sense of victimhood thus becomes transformed into the recognition that we must set an intention in our lives. Our depression finds an antidote for itself in the gratitude that we can express simply for being alive. We begin to see outside ourselves with a clear vision and recognize that the things outside ourselves are, in fact, quite outside ourselves. In letting go of our attachments we also let go of the things that influence us and draw us into a state of mind where we feel less than we are, where we feel that something is missing, where we need to fill the space, or dampen the pain, or simply make it go away.
Coming back to the breath as a marker for the present moment, and exercising the constancy of choice in that moment and every moment also gives us an opportunity to break free of the bonds of this supreme state of attachment and begin to climb out of the pit of suffering into which we have gotten ourselves.
© 2008 Michael J. Formica, All Rights Reserved
 

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William Blake’s vison of the ‘deadly dreams of good and evil’

I just loved this comment from William Blake – I think it puts it finger on just how obsessed we are with whether we are good or bad….
 
…I do not consider either the just, or the wicked, to be in a supreme state, but to be, every one of them, states of the sleep which the soul may fall into in its deadly dreams of good and evil, when it leaves Paradise following the serpent.
William Blake, “A Vision of the Last Judgement”
 
 

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How ‘mindfulness’ gets sold (down the river?)

As an ex-Buddhist monk, I spent years sitting – sometimes my mind would stop, but sometimes that could be really scary. There is a joke but a very accurate one that neurotics build castles in the air, psychotics live in them, and the psychiatrist collects the rent. So when your castle in the air begins to crumble and you fall into space, it can be scary. Nevertheless, the space, the pure mind is the true agent of healing  – sadly this seems to have become commercialized in a kind of gold rush by psychologists…
“Developed at Google and based on the latest in neuroscience research, our programs offer attention and mindfulness training that build the core emotional intelligence skills needed for peak performance and effective leadership. We help professionals at all levels adapt, management teams evolve, and leaders optimize their impact and influence.”
Mindfulness is enabling corporations to “optimize impact”? In this view of things, mindfulness can be extracted from a context of Buddhist meanings, values, and purposes. Meditation and mindfulness are not part of a whole way of life but only a spiritual technology, a mental app that is the same regardless of how it is used and what it is used for.
Bringing Buddhist meditation techniques into industry accomplishes two things for industry. It does actually give companies like Google something useful for an employee’s well-being, but it also neutralizes a potentially disruptive adversary. Buddhism has its own orienting perspectives, attitudes, and values, as does American corporate culture. And not only are they very different from each other, they are also often fundamentally opposed to each other.
A benign way to think about this is that once people experience the benefits of mindfulness they will become interested in the dharma and develop a truer appreciation for Buddhism—and that would be fine. But the problem is that neither Buddhists nor employees are in control of how this will play out. Industry is in control. This is how ideology works. It takes something that has the capacity to be oppositional, like Buddhism, and it redefines it. And somewhere down the line, we forget that it ever had its own meaning.
It’s not that any one active ideology accomplishes all that needs to be done; rather, it is the constant repetition of certain themes and ideas that tend to construct a kind of “nature.” Ideology functions by saying “this is nature”—this is the way things are; this is the way the world is. So, Obama talks about STEM, scientists talk about the human computer, universities talk about “workforce preparation,” and industry talks about the benefits of the neuroscience of meditation, but it all becomes something that feels like a consistent world, and after a while we lose the ability to look at it skeptically. At that point we no longer bother to ask to be treated humanly. At that point we accept our fate as mere functions. Ideology’s job is to make people believe that their prison is a pleasure dome. 
 
from an article in Tricycle by Caring-Lobel
 
Contrast this with Master Rinzai :  ‘You listening to the Dharma, if you are men of the way, who depend on nothing, then you are the mother of the Buddhas…Students seize on words or phrases.. which blinds their eyes to the Way`’

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What are you looking for ?

Paul Tillich described neurosis as ‘the way of avoiding non-being by avoiding being.’  The trouble is that the more we avoid ourself out of our fears, the more we feel empty and lost, and then the tendency is to look even harder to fill ourself up. Ours society completely colludes with this illusory vision, constantly holding out an idea to pursue, or something to buy – secretly telling us then you’ll feel good.
Sanity begins when we stop seeking out there – Joshu – one of the greatest of the Chinese Zen masters asked his master when he was young – what is the truth/ what is the way ?  Nansen said, ‘Ordinary mind is the way’. Joshu said, well, how can I get it ?  Nansen said, ‘if you try to get it, it will push you away’. (Literally in Chinese, it says:  to seek, is to deviate). So Joshu said, well if I dont try how will I know if I’m on the way or not ? Nansen said, ‘knowledge is delusion, not-knowing is ignorance, it is like vast space, how can there be right or wrong (or getting or not getting) in it.’
 
In the west we have come to a strange juncture, in post modernism where we recognize the stories we used to tell ourself (marxism, christianity etc) are just stories. But we are stuck there. Zen takes a leap into the underlyng field of the Mind – which is before any kind of idea or understanding.
This is why there are now ten thousand different versions of psychotherapy – they are all trying to grasp the ungraspable – like the monkey in the Chinese paintings trying to grasp the refection of the moon in the river. Only when we stop seeking and grasping do we suddenly find ourselves at one with the flow of Life – actually not too far off the Gestalt theory of change – that when you stop trying to change things, things change of themselves…

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The Psychiatrist who doesnt believe in anti-depressants

Dr Joanna Moncrieff, senior lecturer in psychiatry at University College London and author of The Myth Of The Chemical Cure.
“I’ve been practising psychiatry for 20 years, and in my experience antidepressants don’t do any good at all. I wouldn’t take them under any circumstances – not even if I were suicidal.
All the research shows is that, at best, antidepressants make people feel a tiny bit better than a placebo. But this doesn’t mean they actually treat depression. 
After all these years of brain scanning, we don’t even have evidence that depression is related to a chemical imbalance in the brain, so the whole idea that we can treat it chemically is questionable.
I believe depression is an extreme reaction to our circumstances, and the best way to recover from it is to work out the cause. 
Sometimes that means talking therapies and sometimes it means changing your circumstances, such as getting a new job or addressing relationship problems.
 
There are, of course, some people who are depressed for no apparent reason, but there is still no evidence they suffer from a brain disease or that antidepressants can help. It’s still better to try and find new things and break the cycle of thoughts and behaviour. 
Antidepressants are psychoactive drugs -they alter the mind, like cannabis or alcohol, and I’ve always thought that were I depressed, I’d want to have all my faculties to get me out of the rut – not be clouded by a drug whose effects we don’t really understand.”
 
from the Daily Mail 6th May 2014.
 

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‘Be patient to all that is unsolved in your heart…’

‘Be patient toward all that is unsolved in your heart and try to love the questions themselves like locked rooms and like books that are written in a very foreign tongue.
Do not now seek the answers, which cannot be given you because you would not be able to live them.
And the point is, to live everything. Live the questions now.”
Rainer Maria Rilke.
 
And yet, to know there is something you do not know, and to begin to be curious and willing to find out the truth is the way through the labyrinth of your own mind to the purity and ineffability of that which knows through you…

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Death…a painless arrest in the corridor of time

The following blog post was written by a young woman just after she had been caught up in a killer’s random firing in a Toronto mall. She had a strange sense of something amiss which took her out of the mall just before the crime happened. I hope you won’t be upset by this blog, because to me, the taste of death can be oddly liberating – it takes away all the imaginary future we live in and leaves us utterly at peace in the unknown – smack in this moment.
The odd and tragic thing is this same girl was caught up in the Aurora shootings in Denver, just two months later and died there.
“I was shown how fragile life was on Saturday. I saw the terror on bystanders’ faces. I saw the victims of a senseless crime. I saw lives change. I was reminded that we don’t know when or where our time on Earth will end. When or where we will breathe our last breath. For one man, it was in the middle of a busy food court on a Saturday evening.
I say all the time that every moment we have to live our life is a blessing. So often I have found myself taking it for granted. Every hug from a family member. Every laugh we share with friends. Even the times of solitude are all blessings. Every second of every day is a gift. After Saturday evening, I know I truly understand how blessed I am for each second I am given.”
Jessica Ghawi.
 

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What is mindfulness?

I have found mindfulness profoundly challenging – because I had to wean the parts of my mind that were addicted to false supports.  In questioning the widespread development of modern mindfulness I came across this short introduction to mindfulness by Master Sheng-Yen, who was one of my teachers, which I think puts things into perspective. Internal Family Systems attempts to systematically recognise and identify the obstacles to mindfulness – trusting your deepest nature.
“What then, is mindfulness? A good way to answer this question is to refer to the Buddha’s teaching on the Sutra on Mindfulness (Sattipathana Sutta), otherwise known as the Four Foundations of Mindfulness. These are the four contemplations:
▪    contemplation of the body
▪    contemplation of sensations
▪    contemplation of the mind,
▪    contemplation of mental objects (dharmas).
(For more on the four foundations of mindfulness, see the Ashoka course The Buddha’s Teaching As It Is >>>)
In the contemplation practices that make up the Four Foundations, the mind that is caught up in the ordinary delusions of sentient life is gradually weaned, as it were, from its attachments to the body, to sensual longings, to emotions and feelings, and finally to fixed notions and ideas about reality. When the mind is thus gradually reduced of its myriad attachments, what remains is luminous awareness. This awareness can be called “mindfulness.”
For the practitioner of Chan, there is no meaningful distinction between practice and daily life: practice is daily life and daily life is practice. The distinctive quality of Chan mindfulness is not just being “here and now” but being here and now without distraction, vexation, or conflict. It is a quality of being wholly in the present, with no left over afflictions and impurities.
 
Cultivating mindfulness
Unfortunately, mindfulness is often seen as something to be achieved in itself, somewhat analogous to the idea of climbing Mt. Everest without also scaling its intermediate peaks. This leads to situations in which there can be much talk about mindfulness but little evidence of it. Therefore, from the Chan point of view, it is better to think of mindfulness not as practice in itself but as a fruit of practice, the rich harvest after diligent treading on the Path. In other words, one should cultivate mindfulness by practicing of the Path. And what is the practice of the Path? We have already discussed this as the Three Disciplines: precepts, meditation, and wisdom. Let’s briefly review them from the point of view of mindfulness.
Mindfulness and the precepts
When we practice and uphold the precepts, we are ensuring that our lives will be in accord with Buddhadharma, and that means that our lives will also be more harmonious with others, less afflicting to ourselves, and more conducive to serenity. Even in adversity, knowing that our life is righteous, we can face problems more calmly and deal with them as they really are, not as we imagine them. When we can depart from vexations in this manner, our minds become more spacious and receptive to the opportunities to experience the present as wholly “here” and vividly “now.”
 
Mindfulness and meditation
When we are meditating, we are effectively reducing the noise and fluctuations of a mind otherwise caught up with life and all its distractions. When we are fully engaged in a method of practice, whether it be following the breath, contemplating a huatou or gong’an (koan), the mind has no space for thoughts of the present or the future. The method is all there is.
At such times we are entirely in the present and the mind is given a chance to experience the awareness of “now.” Like the marathon runner training for the big race, when we meditate diligently for a long time, the mind becomes habituated to facing the daily clamor of life with equanimity and stamina, not being tossed and turned around by obstacles and events. The ability to stay on track, nurtured by meditation, contributes to one’s ability to be immersed in the present, and to deal with it effectively.
Mindfulness and cultivating wisdom
When we cultivate wisdom, we begin to learn how to distinguish the real from the illusory, the true from the false, and the precious from the useless. Like a sword cutting through the underbrush before us, wisdom allows us to find the middle way between craving everything life has to offer and being indifferent to it all; it is being able to invest our time and effort in only those things that benefit ourselves as well as others in accordance with the Dharma.
By cultivating wisdom we also cultivate compassion, the ability to empathize with the suffering of others and to respond without self-interest. Based on a foundation of loving-kindness, compassion in daily life is best practiced as a “hidden” virtue. It is simply there as a potential to think wholesome thoughts acts, speak kind words, and perform beneficent acts. As such, compassion is also mindfulness.”http://www.dharmanet.org/coursesM/26/chan5b.htm