Saturday, November 23, 2013

THE BUDDHA AND ME CONTINUED



If you haven't already, read the blog before this one.

THE BUDDHA AND ME CONTINUED
By Doc Walton

When I come back from my coma, my trance, my so called state of nothingness the Buddha has put me in, I feel better.  But then, who wouldn't? You're not there and then you are.  What's not to like?  THERE is better than NOT THERE.  I feel as if I have left a few things behind, though, back there in the nothing.  Things better left behind, like anxieties and a couple of worries.  They'll catch up with me later, I'm sure.  They always do.  In the meantime, I'm going to have a nice stretch to see if I can relieve this kink in my back - sitting for a long time brings that on - and then get on with my day; a day filled with this and that and a search for evidence that I'm at least nearing enlightenment.  I mean, after all, I meditated and that's like half the battle, isn't it? 

It's the other half I found so elusive.  It's not clearly defined.  What, exactly, do I have to do?  And what, after I've achieved enlightenment, will it feel like?  How will it differ from what I feel like right now?  I'm happy, satisfied with what IS, and even smug about my contentment from time to time.  Okay, I'm sure that smug part is not included in the definition of enlightenment, but I'm being honest here and I'm reasonably sure honesty is in there somewhere.  Of course all that happy, satisfied smugness goes right out the window the moment I catch a cold and run a fever or have more bills than I have money.  How do the enlightened handle those situations?  How do they feel when their kid or their dog gets sick?  I'd like to know and the Buddha is not telling.  At least not from what I've read.  He gets all hazy and mystical like it's some kind of big secret that only he and a chosen few are on to.  Okay, I understand that, but where do I get in line to be chosen? Or, who do I have to do as the cruder would put it?

Seriously, why does it have to be so hard?  I'm fed up with trying.  I'm just going to be happy, compassionate, tolerant, forgiving, and try to be in and enjoy every moment of this thing called life. If enlightenment dawns, fine.  If not, screw it. Who needs it anyway?


Tuesday, November 05, 2013

The Buddha and Me



               The Buddha and Me

                                   By Doc Walton


The ceramic Buddha leaning against a tree in my backyard squats there grinning at me like a deranged evangelist, one of those guys with too much light behind eyes that don’t blink enough.  I admire the always up demeanor this small statue sports, but I wonder what is hidden behind that frozen smile. I get the feeling there is something on its mind, something it is trying to tell me that doesn’t quite square with its “Look, I’m fat and happy” Buddha countenance.  It’s an odd feeling and it drops on me like an invisible cloak.  There’s nothing to it really, nothing concrete, nothing I can point to with conviction as I sit here squinting through the window glass at this corpulent character, but I sense something the exact opposite of what the Buddha is supposed to represent, something not joyful at all. In fact, what I’m feeling, if I were to put a word to it, is something sinister.
The Buddha, as a vague history tells us, was a rich kid who was unfulfilled by his life of plenty so he abandons it and wanders off in search of a more meaningful existence. He finds this new existence completely within himself – possibly while sitting under a tree just like his miniature likeness in my backyard – and that Better Way has come to be called, Enlightenment.
Enlightenment: The turning of consciousness from darkness to light.  Think about it.  From Darkness.  The Buddha came from Darkness in search of light.  Is it possible he carried the Darkness with him?  Is it possible that all the millions of representations of him throughout the years have shared a bit of that hidden Darkness? 
That contingency certainly seems possible to me as I lock into a stare contest with my own inanimate symbol of a Better Way, a contest that is proving to be more than who can hold the other’s gaze longest, more than who has the stronger will, but rather a test in which I must fight for my own existence!  I feel not only my thoughts leaving my head but all else as well, my awareness, my consciousness, my complete sense of self.  It is my soul that is being sucked out through my eyes. It was my very soul that is bit by bit being excised from wherever it lies within me.  I feel my SELF, all that I AM being inexorably drawn towards the demonic ceramic figure before me.  A figure whose fat satisfied grin now seems to widen as it absorbs the contents of my reality.  I am nearly gone, nearly gone…and then…I am.

Some people say Doc has the most peculiar way of meditating.