In our ordinary experience, there is the world and there is you. Recognizing this does not mean that you are going against the Buddha’s teaching of egolessness. There is definitely something there, which is the working basis and magic of the path. You cannot negate that you taste a good cup of coffee. You cannot say that there is no coffee and there is no “you” to taste it—there are such things! Mindfulness of life is based on that kind of immediate appreciation. The meditation practice is to learn to appreciate the immediateness of what is happening right here and now.
--Trungpa Rinpoche
1 comment:
Trungpa Rinpoche's simple statement is both as simple as it sounds and also a kind of inside joke.
It's a gentle way of attracting full heart attention from all audience types. "Immediate appreciation" is simultaneously the result of the path, the path, and something that one is immediately introduced to through relating to your teacher in a certain way.
It's a kind of custom fitting apparatus, the Dzogchen discourse.
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