Tag: buddha

  • Mind Tripping in the Mental Maze

    Mind Tripping in the Mental Maze

    Adventures in neuroscience mental coding – mindfulness

    In my last post, I gave a very brief introduction to our mind’s use of object relations as a way of storing and processing information. The mind is very useful, but as they say – the mind is a good servant, but a lousy master. The mind is perfect for what it does – record, recall, compare and extrapolate data, but there are a few flies in our mental ointment:

    1. Buddha's BrainThe brain body/mind starts receiving and recording impressions long before we take our first breath. For months after that first breath, our nervous system, physical body and psyche are still an undifferentiated system.
    2. We are born into this world as extremely sensitive and impressionable beings., which results in very powerful imprinting on the body/mind/soul. From about 5 years of age on, our sensitivity wanes and new impressions carry less and less of emotional/body charge which lessens the creation of deep, lasting impressions (except in the case of trauma).
    3. As an organism, we are hardwired for survival. The brain’s evolution is skewed to give instantaneous attention to negative perceptions to support our fight or flight response. This helps to establish veils of perception that are skewed more toward the “negative” than the positive and sets in motion inertia of constant mental activity – chatter, chatter, chatter.
    4. Our parents and holding environment bombard us with a constant stream of thoughts, sensations and emotions that had little connection to or alignment with our sublime spiritual nature – we are objectified long before we are born and are seen as just another thing, albeit a living entity thing.

    So, we wind up with a voice in our head that chatters all the time, which might not be so bad if we were constantly chanting the sacred. But, even this would suffer from our early conditioning because by the time we start seeking the real, we are an entity identity operating system with bloated, outdated, suboptimal, looping code that makes Windows look lean, mean and full of dazzling light.

    A few excerpts from Buddha’s Brain by Rick Hanson:

    • buddha mind brain neuroscienceThe bias of the brain tilts implicit memories in a negative direction, even when most of your experiences are actually positive.
    • The brain is designed to change through experiences, especially negative ones; we learn from our experiences, particularly those that happened during childhood, and it is natural for that learning to stick with us.
    • A toddler has about three times as many synapses as an adult; on the way to adulthood, adolescents can lose up to 10,000 synapses per second in the prefrontal cortex.
    • Emotional arousal facilitates learning by increasing neural excitation and consolidating synaptic change.
    • Given the negativity bias of the brain, it takes an active effort to internalize positive experiences and heal negative ones.
    • Because of all the ways your brain changes its structure, your experience matters beyond its momentary, subjective impact. It makes enduring changes in the physical tissues of your brain which affect your well-being, functioning, and relationships. Based on science, this is a fundamental reason for being kind to yourself, cultivating wholesome experiences, and taking them in.
    • Focus on your emotions and body sensations, since these are the essence of implicit memory. Let the experience fill your body and be as intense as possible.
    • …most of the shaping of your mind remains forever unconscious. This is called implicit memory, and it includes your expectations, models of relationships, emotional tendencies, and general outlook. Implicit memory establishes the interior landscape of your mind— what it feels like to be you— based on the slowly accumulating residues of lived experience.
    • Only we humans worry about the future, regret the past, and blame ourselves for the present. We get frustrated when we can’t have what we want, and disappointed when what we like ends. We suffer that we suffer. We get upset about being in pain, angry about dying, sad about waking up sad yet another day. This kind of suffering— which encompasses most of our unhappiness and dissatisfaction— is constructed by the brain. It is made up.
    The discoveries being made in neuroscience are bringing new insights into ancient spiritual practices and psychodynamics. This knowledge can be supportive and assist us in deepening our spiritual practice and movement toward realization and enlightenment. Understanding the mechanics of how the brain filters and assimilates perception  into our subjective reality of self and the world affords us with more opportunity for precise and powerful practice that is more being and less doing.

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  • Ipseity

    Ipseity according to the dictionary is: selfhood; individual identity, individuality. [from L. ipse, self, himself]

    The absolute is both my nature and my identity. Is the nature of the soul and her very identity. It constitutes her manifestations but it is also her depth and deepest essence. Alternatively, we can say the absolute is our true self, our objectively actual self. But it is also the nature of the soul. That is why we like to refer to the absolute as ipseity, for the word ipseity means both nature and self. To recognize the absolute as ipseity is a profound experience, for it is the self-realization of this dimension of true nature. A. H. Almaas

    Breathe into Being

    The Sufis say that existence came about because the Divine ‘Himselfness’ (Arabic: Huwiyyah, often translated as ‘Ipseity’ in scholarly works) breathed the Breath of Compassion, Nafs ar-Rahman, on the possibilities (Arabic: ayan-i-thabitah) that were latent in Himself.

    Be that as it may, the human soul is referred to in the Qur’an and elsewhere as a breath, nafs. (Interestingly, the word for spirit – ruh – also means ‘wind’). God moulds Adam with his two ‘hands’ and breathes into him His Spirit. And that part of us that is not moulded ‘clay’ (our materiality) is the nafs, the breath, our soul.

    According to some Sufi sources, there are seven gradations of the human nafs, ranging from the habitual, unreconstructed self of people who have done no ‘work’ on themeselves (the so-called ‘commanding self’, ‘Nafs al-ammarah’, which is really nothing but fragments of conditioning) through to the ‘completed self’, Nafs al-kamilan. – from James

    What would the Buddha say about ipseity? Is there self-identity in the absolute nature of the everything/anything

    Image by Amy TheissIpseity 28

  • Disidentification

    PoppyI came across this post while looking into disidentification. The post, in part, has an exercise in disidentification. There are a lot of “I” statements in the exercise and then this paragraph:

    Through the process of disidentification you become more and more your own manager. You find yourself becoming more free from concerns about the expectations or judgments of other people. The self is the inner director.

    There is little in this exercise, as I see it, that involves disidentification. In fact, just the opposite it increases identification with an idealized self.

    Disidentification is a natural result of open-ended inquiry into the nature of the self. Who am I? What am I? Exploring my beliefs, attitudes and convictions is part of the process of disidentification.

    The process of disidentification often begins with a situation in which we are totally charged, reactive and identified with some self-image from the past. These processes are psychodynamic slices of a larger overall process for the seeker of true nature.

    This manager and director of the self mentioned above is the central identification. The deeper implications of disidentification are clearly seen in the Buddha’s questioning of the existence of self.

     

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  • Buddha Pendants

    I received an email today from my friend, Cathleen Bunt, over in Hawaii. Cathleen is a gifted artist. Here’s her email:

    Here’s a great gift for someone into spirituality. The Buddha head pendant.

    Golden_buddha

    Available in 18k gold or sterling silver. With or without a stone in the third eye. The above pendant has a white diamond, below are yellow, teal blue and pink diamonds. I also have black diamonds and rubies. The pendants are about 1 inch high.

    Silver_buddhas

    These pendants have a nice weight and a substantial feel. I fix each wax myself, carefully going over the face to correct any imperfections. Then it’s cast and cleaned up, here in my shop and given my signature finish
    of sandblasting and raising the fine gold or silver. It’s a very unique gift.

    If you’re interested please call soon, as I have a limited supply.

    Cathleen Bunt 808–874–8855

    http://www.cathleenbunt.com


  • Einstein & Buddha

    Buddha space einstein

     

    If at first the idea is not absurd , then there is no hope for it.

    The most beautiful emotion we can experience is the mystical. It is the power of all true art and science. He to whom this emotion is a stranger, who can no longer wonder and stand rapt in awe, is as good as dead. To know that what is impenetrable to us really exists, manifesting itself as the highest wisdom and the most radiant beauty, which our dull faculties can comprehend only in their most primitive forms-this knowledge, this feeling, is at the center of true religiousness. In this sense, and in this sense only, I belong to the rank of devoutly religious men.   –  Albert Einstein

    Albert Einstein did not know how to tie his shoelaces.

    Image by Jess Artem

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