loving, impermanence and the illusion of self

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  • 8/9/2019 Loving, Impermanence and The Illusion of Self

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    Loving, Impermanence and The Illusion ofSelf

    August 1, 2010 by Anjuelle Floyd

    recently read he 20th century Tibetan Buddhist master, Kyabje Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoches commentary on Lama

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    Miphams The Wheel of Investigation and Meditation That Thoroughly Purifies Mental Activity.

    Khyentse Rinpoche writes in the commentary, Instead of being convinced that there is a self-entity, we realize thatelf is a mere concept.

    His words immediately drew me in.

    A psychotherapist, I am forever pondering notions ofselfand other, phenomena, as Khyentse Rinpoche urges are bconstructions of the mind in it, and our feeble efforts to understand and navigate the world, life and loving.But there I go again, linking the mind, my thoughts and feelings to me, and who I really am.

    Khyentses commentary, listed in the Summer 2010 Issue of the Buddhist Review, Tricycle, followed a brief articleakob Leschly, wherein Leschly describes his 16-year experience, starting in 1975, of studying with Dilgo Khyentse

    Rinpoche along with many others who were students of the meditation master.

    Master Khyentses axiom on the our obsession with selfas an entity separate from others are a balm that both soothand grates on our nerves and fears reaching into and rooted in our deepest anxieties. It is those, rather these, internalworries that both divide and link us as humans.

    wonder what would happen if we could be more open about what frightens us the most, haunts our securities, huntdown our egos with threats of destroying us, this notion of self that stands between us and them, me and you, self another.

    My soon-to-be released novel, The House, displays the protagonist, a wife, whose husband she was divorcing does t

    when learning that he is dying of cancer.

    As a wife these ponderings cut to the thick of what I think marriage is all aboutself and other and the battle to becoone in body and spirit, soul and mind.

    n a culture such as America where the notion of and individual self stands head and shoulders above all other pursueven that most sacred of happiness, I often wonder if this is why the divorce rate stands enormously tall, or perhaps at least find the act of remaining in and committed to relationship almost repulsive.

    Words like, strong, and independent.., combined with phrases such as I felt crowded in, needed my spaceand/or I dont want to become too dependent or weak, allude to the desire to see ourselves as strong through the

    ability to divide and separate ourselves from another, and deny our need for intimacies that but for relationship with

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    other we will not experience.

    The need to stand firm and strong propels us to cut ourselves from the very parts of who we are.

    solation breeds not only further isolation, and loneliness, but also ignorance of who we truly are, the ground of beihat lies beneath the aggregates of our human organs encapsulated in the flesh of our body swirling in the more ether

    phenomena of thoughts and feelings that give us this elusive and illusionary sense of self.

    When in meditation and contemplating in the midst of fleeting thoughts and the ebbs and flows of the vicissitudes of

    emotions rising and falling, who this being called Anjuelle is and the meaning and purpose of my life and livingbeyond buying, spending, working and toiling at activities wrapped in various sheaths of impermanence, I must alwall back upon my experiences of being both a wife and friend to my husband, a companion who promised in our vo

    my promise, to serve faithfully and unto death as a helpmate and lover.

    can do no other.

    Any less would abdicate myself from what stands at the center of my hearts desires, the path on which my soul yeanot simply to tread but immerse my life and living inthat of losing my ego, this sense of separateness that divides bme and others from the phenomena of my existence.

    To embrace impermanence and the transitory nature of this life we must hold onto what is real and substantive.

    For me these are life, death, and the wheel of continual change, and at the center of which stand love and everlastingcompassion and respectfor those who have stepped from among the trees of other and for no explainable reason lovand adored us.

    Posted in Marriage | Tagged marriage, love, self, Tricycle, Buddhist Review, Lama Mipham, Kyabje Dilgo KhyentsRinpoche, Jakob Leschly, The Wheel of Investigation and Meditation That Thoroughly Purifies the Mind, meditatioBuddhism, Tibetan master, transitory, life, death, living real, substantive, impermanence, change, ego, other, worldLeave a Comment

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    Loving, Impermanence and The Illusion of Self August 1, 2010Loving, Impermanence and The Illusion of Self August 1, 2010 by Anjuelle Floyd I recently read he20th century Tibetan Buddhist master, Kyabje Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoches commentary on LamaMiphams The Wheel of Investigation and Meditation That Thoroughly Purifies Mental Activity. KhyeRinpoche writes in the commentary, Instead of being convinced that t []

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    Our Eyes on the Prize... Married Lifewhy I write July 26, 2010

    Of Senior Pictures, Former Eastern Block Countries, and Forgotten Anniversary Cards July 25, 2010Anjuelle Floyd | Edit The summer has whisked by. One day it was May 31st and our middle was finishiwhat had been their eleventh grade yearthey were a high school juniorand two days later we werelistening to a message left by the school photographer sta []

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