"Don't get sucked in by that nice drifty state. It's easy to stabilize that and just drift pleasantly in it for a long time, and it is not very useful. Stay sharp, stay focussed on the breath, keep going. Keep your attention keen. Get through it."
daverupa wrote:Right effort seems to be missing in such a state, doesn't it?
Beautiful Breath wrote:But thats not a bad thing is it? some of the more sublime states I read about have such a flavour.
daverupa wrote:Beautiful Breath wrote:But thats not a bad thing is it? some of the more sublime states I read about have such a flavour.
There are all kinds of sublime experiences, and all kinds of meditations and states, as a short anthropological survey will reveal;* but the Dhamma dictates that the foundation must be sammavayamo.
Now, there are cases where uppekha is appropriate, usually to do with asavas that are to be endured, but I tend to see many self-descriptions of meditation practice shaded with a certain zen-like passivity, rather than right effort, and this is not a useful flavour, however concomitantly sublime.
(* These assorted sublime states are probably often confused for jhana, I expect.)

Beautiful Breath wrote:So how should I (and others in the same boat) proceed? Ignore these states and try to re-establish Samatha on the initial Apana?


Beautiful Breath wrote:Interesting the dissonance between the Theravadin interpretation of this phemonena and the welcome it seems to have on Soto Zen forums... Like the song says, "two men say they're Jesus, one of them has to be wrong".
daverupa wrote:Beautiful Breath wrote:Interesting the dissonance between the Theravadin interpretation of this phemonena and the welcome it seems to have on Soto Zen forums... Like the song says, "two men say they're Jesus, one of them has to be wrong".
Not to be flippant, but the comparison would be between the Jesus of the New Testament and the Jesus of the Book of Mormon. One of them has to be wrong, indeed.
(hint: it's the made-up one)
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