2020/09/26

86 - Samvega and Pasada: Two Buddhist Emotions Indispensable for Practice - The Zen Studies Podcast

86 - Samvega and Pasada: Two Buddhist Emotions Indispensable for Practice - The Zen Studies Podcast



85 – I Shouldn’t Feel Like This: A Practitioner’s Conundrum
87 – Nyoho: Making Even Our Smallest, Mundane Actions Accord with the Dharma – Part 1
Samvega and pasada keep our practice alive and on course. Samvega is spiritual urgency arising three things: A sense of distress and disillusionment about life as it’s usually lived, a sense of our own complicity and complacency, and determination to find a more meaningful way. Contrary to society at large, Buddhism encourages the cultivation of samvega – as long as you balance it with pasada, a serene confidence that arises when you find a reliable way to address samvega.


I recently encountered an article by one of my favorite Buddhist scholars, Thanissaro Bhikkhu, called “Affirming the Truths of the Heart: The Buddhist Teachings on Samvega and Pasada.”[i] As far as I can recall, I had never before heard those terms – samvega and pasada – in my 20-plus years as a Buddhist. Indeed, you won’t find them in Buddhist dictionaries (I looked), and most references on the web are to Thanissaro’s article, in which he admits, “very few of us have heard of” samvega and pasada.
However, despite the apparently limited usage of these terms, I wanted to share them with you. Our human ability to reflect on our own subjective experience has developed hand-in-hand with language, so sometimes we just need the right word and we’re suddenly able to comprehend and express our reality in a whole new way. For me, the definitions of these two “Buddhist emotions” clarify and reflect my own experience in practice, and I find the associated concepts useful.

Samvega: Spiritual Urgency

First, samvega. Thanissaro explains:
“It’s a hard word to translate because it covers such a complex range—at least three clusters of feelings at once: the oppressive sense of shock, dismay, and alienation that comes with realizing the futility and meaninglessness of life as it’s normally lived; a chastening sense of our own complicity, complacency, and foolishness in having let ourselves live so blindly; and an anxious sense of urgency in trying to find a way out of the meaningless cycle. This is a cluster of feelings that we’ve all experienced at one time or another in the process of growing up, but I don’t know of a single English term that adequately covers all three. Such a term would be useful to have, and maybe that’s reason enough for simply adopting the word samvega into our language.”[ii]
Samvega is what made Siddhartha Gautama, later Shakyamuni Buddha, leave home and pursue years of strenuous religious practice. According to the classic story, he was raised in luxury in a palace and carefully insulated from the suffering in the world. Eventually he got curious and ventured outside the palace, only to encounter four sights: A sick person, an elderly person, a corpse, and a renunciate holy man. He was keenly aware upon seeing these things that he and everyone he knew would inevitably get sick, old, or die (or some combination of those). After some careful contemplation, he set out on the path of a renunciate spiritual seeker rather than continue to live as if his youth, health, life, and comfort were going to last forever.
Personally, I started feeling samvega as a young adult but had no word or context for it. Although, like prince Siddhartha, I was comfortable and fortunate in my own life circumstances, life in general seemed meaningless, if not downright unacceptable. So much of human effort seemed aimed at some future pay-off that rarely met expectations, and never provided permanent refuge. In an instant our circumstances could turn from fortune to utter despair and misery, and there wasn’t a thing we could do about it except try to ignore the possibility. I also experienced quite a lot of pain from the cognitive dissonance caused when I contrasted my happy-go-lucky life with the unfathomable human suffering, greed, and corruption I witnessed in the world. Life just didn’t make sense, and it was difficult to rally the enthusiasm to play along when, in my heart of hearts, I was experiencing samvega: An oppressive sense of shock, dismay, and alienation from realizing the futility and meaninglessness of life as it’s normally lived; a chastening sense of my own complicity, complacency, and foolishness in having let myself live so blindly; and an anxious sense of urgency in trying to find a way out of the meaningless cycle.

Keeping Samvega at Bay Through Denial and Distraction

Sadly, as a teenager I found little solace or guidance about what to do about my samvega. I devoured Thoreau’s Walden, amazed at his gutsy and insightful criticisms of society. I resonated with the Stoic philosophers. It was nice to know I wasn’t the only one, but nothing I read offered me much in the way of advice about what to do about my feelings. Most people I talked to about them just didn’t relate. I think they worried I was self-absorbed or depressed, or just thought I was overthinking things. Overall, the message I got was that samvega was a weird – and hopefully passing – weakness in my personality, causing me to obsess over questions with no answers instead of getting on with life like a grown-up.
The response of society to the possibility of samvega seems, to me, to be expressed in the analogy of Siddhartha Gautama’s father keeping him confined to the palace, thereby insulating his son from the brutal realities of human existence. According to the myth, a prophecy had been made that Siddhartha would leave home, practice as a renunciate, and awaken as a Buddha. His father hoped to prevent this outcome and therefore tried to keep Siddhartha from experiencing anything that could cause samvega to arise. In Thanissaro’s words, Siddhartha’s father sought to “distract the prince and dull his sensitivity so that he could settle down and become a well-adjusted, productive member of society.”[iii] Like the Buddha’s father, those of us in modern society often seem hell bent on keeping samvega at bay by concentrating on the positive, absorbing ourselves in pleasant distractions, fighting the signs of aging, keeping the sick, elderly, and dead out of sight, and turning away from the incomprehensible levels of destruction, injustice, and suffering happening in the world.
To be fair, keeping samvega at bay through denial and distraction makes sense if you have no other way of dealing with it. The cool thing about Buddhism is that it acknowledges, and even encourages, samvega from the beginning, because (again in the words of Thanissaro) it offers “an effective strategy for dealing with the feelings behind it.” Thanissaro also says Buddhist practice is an “opportunity to solve the problem of samvega.”[iv]

Samvega is Not the Same Thing as Dukkha

I remember the first time I read about Buddhism’s Four Noble Truths. I was 24 years old and reading a guidebook in preparation for a short trip to India. As soon as I read, “Life is marked by dukkha” (dissatisfactoriness, suffering, or stress), my heart leapt. I had never heard of a religion or spiritual tradition admitting that as its very first and basic premise. Then I read on to find out Buddhism didn’t just admit the existence of fundamental dissatisfaction, it provided a whole host of tools for addressing and relieving that dissatisfaction and making your life more meaningful. I was sold.
However, although the last 20 years of practice have been very rewarding, I didn’t actually have the concept of samvega with which to frame my experience. Instead, I thought of my initial samvega – my dismay at the ultimate meaninglessness of life as it’s normally lived, my sense of complicity, complacency, and foolishness in letting myself get pulled into living that way, and my sense of urgency about trying to find another way to live – was dukkha. In other words, at least part of me thought my samvega should go away with practice.
Dukkha, as I’ve discussed a number of times on this podcast (e.g. Episode 9 and Episode 14), can range from a very subtle sense of dis-ease to acute suffering. The Buddha taught that the cause of dukkha can be found within our own minds. Essentially, we desire for things to be other than how they are, which is impermanent, not-self, and therefore ungraspable. It’s entirely possible for each of us, in any given moment, to release our desire and be freed from dukkha.
In terms of the way we view life as it’s normally lived – our own lives, as well as the lives of all beings on this planet – we can be freed from distress by giving up our desire for things to be any other way than how they are. In other words, we accept life as it is. We still may find ourselves in painful or difficult circumstances, but it’s all much easier to deal with when we’re not unnecessarily adding dukkha to the equation.

How Samvega Can Be a Good Thing

All well and good – but such practice with dukkha, according to Buddhism, should relieve some measure of your own internal stress and misery, but it should not negate your samvega. Samvega is a responsible, compassionate, natural response to the craziness of our world, and it’s what motivates us to practice. We’re right to feel shocked, dismayed, and alienated when we observe life as it’s normally lived (for example, with so many people struggling with abject poverty, generation after generation, while the vast majority of the world’s wealth is concentrated in the hands of a few). We’re right to feel a chastening sense of our own complicity, complacency, and foolishness as we strive to act compassionately and responsibly but so often get pulled back into a comfortable nest of self-interest. We’re right to have a sense of urgency in trying to find a way out of this meaningless cycle.
Not only does Buddhism acknowledge samvega and offer a more meaningful path than life as it’s normally lived, Buddhism encourages you to actually cultivate samvega. Again, you usually won’t find the term samvega used per se, but Buddhist literature is full of exhortations to students to arouse their spiritual urgency. As Thanissaro explains, Buddhism’s “solution to the problems of life demands so much dedicated effort that only strong samvega will keep the practicing Buddhist from slipping back into his or her old ways.” In Theravada there’s a practice of the “five remembrances” for overcoming intoxication with youth, health, life, things we find dear and appealing, and bad conduct, where practitioners recite:
“‘I am subject to aging, have not gone beyond aging.’ This is the first fact that one should reflect on often, whether one is a woman or a man, lay or ordained.
‘I am subject to illness, have not gone beyond illness.’ …
‘I am subject to death, have not gone beyond death.’ …
‘I will grow different, separate from all that is dear and appealing to me.’ …
‘I am the owner of my actions, heir to my actions, born of my actions, related through my actions, and have my actions as my arbitrator. Whatever I do, for good or for evil, to that will I fall heir.’ …”[v]
In Mahayana Buddhism we similarly talk about bodhicitta, or the Way-Seeking mind, as being essential to practice. However, bodhicitta can be given a rather positive spin and isn’t nearly as explicit as samvega about identifying a profound dissatisfaction with the way life is usually lived. Some of the urgency and distress of samvega is conveyed, however, by the admonition common in Zen circles and elsewhere to “train as if your hair is on fire.”
In the process of letting go of desire and grasping, and thereby relieving dukkha, we’re not meant to give a big thumbs up to the way life’s normally lived. We’re not meant to rub salve over our sense of dismay, complicity, and determination so we’re better able to derive maximum enjoyment from our fortunate circumstances. However, sometimes Buddhism can seem rather down on ordinary life, so let me be clear that by cultivating samvega we’re not looking to judge others or make moral generalizations about lifestyles. We’re not concluding life is, on the balance, miserable, so only suckers would enjoy themselves. What we are trying to do is keep impermanence, not-self, and dukkha in the forefront of our minds, because life is fleeting. We’re trying to stay awake instead of being lulled back into complacency through denial or distraction.

Pasada, or Calm Confidence: The Balance to Samvega

The key to the Buddhist approach to samvega is cultivating its balancing emotion, pasada. (At least, this is according to Thanissaro Bhikkhu, and my own experience confirms this is true.) Pasada, Thanissaro says, is “usually translated as ‘clarity and serene confidence’” but, like samvega, pasada is a complex emotion amounting to “mental states that keep saṁvega from turning into despair.” In other words, pasada is a strong hope, and later confidence, that we’ve found a way to address samvega – a way to live that’s not futile or meaningless, but positive, fruitful, helpful, and leads to greater wisdom, peace, and compassion. When I say “a way,” I don’t mean just the path of Buddhism, or even to imply all Buddhists are treading the same path. Just as Buddhists aren’t by any means the only people to experience samvega, I’m sure they don’t have a corner on the market when it comes to pasada.
The important thing is recognizing samvega is just depressing or overwhelming unless we have some confidence we can cope with it and address it. When we’re starting to feel overly negative about our lives or the world, it’s time to cultivate pasada. Each of us will have different ways we do this – perhaps spending time in meditation, reading or listening to the Dharma, talking with teachers or Dharma friends, or devoting ourselves anew to our practice (because that usually ends up being a positive experience). Pasada is renewing our serenity and our confidence in our path, not avoiding samvega through distraction or denial; pasada arises in spite of, or even because of, samvega. Pasada is what was reflected in Siddhartha Gautama’s experience when he traveled outside the palace and saw a renunciate spiritual seeker: After being rudely awakened to the realities of old age, disease, and death, the young man was inspired by the serenity of the holy man to start a spiritual search of his own.
It can be challenging to navigate your practice life over time. Sometimes things feel just right – you’re on fire for practice and deeply inspired by the path you’ve chosen. At other times you may find yourself feeling rather complacent and lazy and in the need of more motivation. At still other times, you may feel very determined to find a better and more meaningful way to live, but lacking in the faith that you’ll actually be able to do it. Perhaps the concepts of samvega and pasada will help you approach the inevitable difficulties involved with keeping your practice alive and on course: Sometimes you need to cultivate samvega, and sometimes you need to focus on pasada.


Photo Credit

Sannyasi in yoga meditation on the Ganges, Rishikesh (https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:1_Sannyasi_in_yoga_meditation_on_the_Ganges,_Rishikesh.jpg). Ken Wieland from Philadelphia, USA [CC BY-SA 2.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

Endnotes

[i] Thanissaro, “Affirming the Truths of the Heart: The Buddhist Teachings on Samvega & Pasada” (https://www.dhammatalks.org/books/NobleStrategy/Section0004.html)
[ii] Ibid
[iii] Ibid
[iv] Ibid
[v] “Upajjhatthana Sutta: Subjects for Contemplation” (AN 5.57), translated from the Pali by Thanissaro Bhikkhu. Access to Insight (BCBS Edition), 30 November 2013, http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/an/an05/an05.057.than.html

85 – I Shouldn’t Feel Like This: A Practitioner’s Conundrum
87 – Nyoho: Making Even Our Smallest, Mundane Actions Accord with the Dharma – Part 1

Noble Strategy [5] The Healing Power of the Precepts

 5] The Healing Power of the Precepts

The Buddha was like a doctor, treating the spiritual ills of the human race. The path of practice he taught was like a course of therapy for suffering hearts and minds.

This way of understanding the Buddha and his teachings dates back to the earliest texts, and yet is also very current. Buddhist meditation is often advertised as a form of healing, and quite a few psychotherapists now recommend that their patients try meditation as part of their treatment.

Experience has shown, though, that meditation on its own can’t provide a total therapy. It requires outside support. Modern meditators in particular have been so wounded by mass civilization that they lack the resilience, persistence, and selfesteem needed before concentration and insight practices can be genuinely therapeutic.

Many teachers, noticing this problem, have decided that the Buddhist path is insufficient for our particular needs. To make up for this insufficiency they’ve experimented with ways of supplementing meditation practice, combining it with such things as myth, poetry, psychotherapy, social activism, sweat lodges, mourning rituals, and even drumming. The problem, though, might not be that there’s anything lacking in the Buddhist path, but that we simply haven’t been following the Buddha’s full course of therapy.

The Buddha’s path consists not only of mindfulness, concentration, and insight practices, but also of virtue, beginning with the five precepts. In fact, the precepts constitute the first step in the path. There’s a modern tendency to dismiss the five precepts as Sunday-school rules bound to old cultural norms that no longer apply to modern society, but this misses the role that the Buddha intended for them: as part of a course of therapy for wounded minds. In particular, they are aimed at curing two ailments that underlie low self-esteem: regret and denial.

When our actions don’t measure up to certain standards of behavior, 

  • we either (1) regret the actions or 
  • (2) engage in one of two kinds of denial, 
  • either (a) denying that our actions did in fact happen
  • or (b) denying that the standards of measurement are really valid.

 These reactions are like wounds in the mind. 

Regret is an open wound, tender to the touch, 

whereas denial is like hardened, twisted scar tissue around a tender spot. 

When the mind is wounded in these ways, 

it can’t settle down comfortably in the present, because it finds itself resting on raw, exposed flesh or calcified knots. 

When it’s forced to stay in the present, it’s there only in a tensed, contorted, and partial way. 

The insights it gains tend to be contorted and partial as well. 

Only if the mind is free of wounds and scars can it settle down comfortably and freely in the present and give rise to undistorted discernment.

This is where the five precepts come in: 

They’re designed to heal these wounds and scars. 

Healthy self-esteem comes from living up to a set of standards that are practical, clear-cut, humane, and worthy of respect. 

The five precepts are formulated in such a way that they provide just such a set of standards.


Practical: 

The standards set by the precepts are simple—no intentional killing, stealing, engaging in illicit sex, lying, or taking intoxicants. It’s entirely possible to live in line with these standards—not always easy or convenient, maybe, but always possible. 

Some people translate the precepts into standards that sound more lofty or noble—taking the second precept, for example, to mean no abuse of the planet’s resources—but even those who reformulate the precepts in this way admit that it’s impossible to live up to them. 

Anyone who has dealt with psychologically damaged people knows the damage that can come from having impossible standards to live by

If you can give people standards that take a little effort and mindfulness but are possible to meet, their self-esteem soars dramatically as they find themselves actually capable of meeting those standards. They can then face more demanding tasks with confidence.

Clear-cut: 

The precepts are formulated with no ifs, ands, or buts. This means that they give very clear guidance, with no room for waffling or less-than-honest rationalizations. An action either fits in with the precepts or it doesn’t. Again, standards of this sort are very healthy to live by. Anyone who has raised children has found that, although they may complain about hard and fast rules, they actually feel more secure with them than with rules that are vague and always open to negotiation. Clear-cut rules don’t allow for unspoken agendas to come sneaking in the back door of the mind. If, for example, the precept against killing allowed you to kill living beings when their presence is inconvenient, that would place your convenience on a higher level than your compassion for life. 

Convenience would become your unspoken standard—and as we all know, unspoken standards provide huge tracts of fertile ground for hypocrisy and denial to grow. 

If, however, you stick by the standards of the precepts, then as the Buddha says, you’re providing unlimited safety for the lives of all. There are no conditions under which you would take the lives of any living beings, no matter how inconvenient they might be. In terms of the other precepts, you’re providing unlimited safety for their possessions and sexuality, and unlimited truthfulness and mindfulness in your communication with them. 

When you find that you can trust yourself in matters like these, you gain an undeniably healthy sense of self-esteem.

Humane: 

The precepts are humane both to the person who observes them and to the people affected by his or her actions. If you observe them, you’re aligning yourself with the doctrine of karma, which teaches that the most important powers shaping your experience of the world are the intentional thoughts, words, and deeds you chose in the present moment. This means that you are not insignificant. 

With every choice you take—at home, at work, at play—you are exercising your power in the ongoing fashioning of the world. At the same time, this principle allows you to measure yourself in terms that are entirely under your control: your intentional actions in the present moment. 

In other words, they don’t force you to measure yourself in terms of your looks, strength, brains, financial prowess, or any other criteria that depend less on your present karma than they do on karma from the past

Also, they don’t play on feelings of guilt or force you to bemoan your past lapses. Instead, they focus your attention on the ever-present possibility of living up to your standards in the here and now. 

If you live with people who observe the precepts, you find that your dealings with them are not a cause for mistrust or fear. They regard your desire for happiness as akin to theirs. 

Their worth as individuals doesn’t depend on situations in which there have to be winners and losers. When they talk about developing goodwill and mindfulness in their meditation, you see it reflected in their actions. In this way the precepts foster not only healthy individuals, but also a healthy society—a society in which the selfesteem and mutual respect are not at odds.

Worthy of respect: 

When you adopt a set of standards, it’s important to know whose standards they are and to see where those standards come from, for in effect you’re joining their group, looking for their approval, and accepting their criteria for right and wrong.

 In this case, you couldn’t ask for a better group to join: the Buddha and his noble disciples. The five precepts are called “standards appealing to the noble ones.” 

From what the texts tell us of the noble ones, they aren’t people who accept standards simply on the basis of popularity. They’ve put their lives on the line to see what leads to true happiness, and have seen for themselves, 

for example, 

  • that all lying is pathological, and 
  • that any sex outside of a stable, committed relationship is unsafe at any speed. 

Other people may not respect you for living by the five precepts, but noble ones do, and their respect is worth more than that of anyone else in the world.

Now, many people might find cold comfort in joining such an abstract group, especially when they haven’t yet met any noble ones in person. 

It’s hard to be good-hearted and generous when the society immediately around you openly laughs at those qualities and values such things as sexual prowess or predatory business skills instead. 

This is where Buddhist communities come in. They can openly part ways with the prevailing amoral tenor of our culture and let it be known in a kindly way that they value good-heartedness and restraint among their members. 

In doing so, they provide a healthy environment for the full-scale adoption of the Buddha’s course of therapy: the practice of concentration and discernment in a life of virtuous action. 

Where we have such environments, we find that meditation needs no myth or makebelieve to support it, because it’s based on the honest reality of a well-lived life. You can look at the standards by which you live, and then breathe in and out comfortably—not as a flower or a mountain, but as a full-fledged, responsible human being. 

For that’s what you are. 

Intimacy with God: An Introduction to Centering Prayer by Thomas Keating | Goodreads

Intimacy with God: An Introduction to Centering Prayer by Thomas Keating | Goodreads



Intimacy with God: An Introduction to Centering Prayer

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Intimacy with God: An Introduction to Centering Prayer

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The prominent Trappist monk and founder of the centering prayer movement, Thomas Keating provides this poetic and accessible introduction to the method of Centering Prayer.

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Nate

Aug 08, 2011Nate rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition

Shelves: spirituality, catholic

This book was recommended to me by a monk in his eighties in a meeting of spiritual direction with me. I had been feeling very attracted to the practice of Zen meditation for its focus on the present moment, breathing, and acceptance of change, pain, emotional ups and downs, etc. I had felt that my prayer life was getting too cluttered with words. I had enjoyed for quite some time praying various forms of the hours, but often felt that I was just rushing through them because there was too much verbal/left-brain material. Centering prayer seems to bring together the best of modern psychological insights marrying them to an ancient practice, but making its explanation more simple and applicable to someone of the 21st century. One of the big differences between centering prayer and other forms of meditation, especially Buddhist forms, is that centering prayer is a focusing of one's intention rather than attention. The main purpose of centering prayer is to focus one's intention to allowing God's spirit to come and change one's heart to become more Christlike. This requires a lot of pain and inner turmoil as one's ego/small self becomes dislodged and burned away. It also creates more space in one's soul for acceptance of God's will. (less)

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Stephanie

Jan 27, 2011Stephanie rated it liked it  ·  review of another edition

Shelves: christian

Let me just say if I were to pass this book in a bookstore I wouldn't give it a second thought. While looking at its mystical cover, and the Buddhist looking author on the back cover, I'd immediately assume it was some sort of new-age meditative read. While some may go for that, I myself would have passed it right up.



However, regardless of the cover, I was told to read this book to get a deeper insight on Contemplative Prayer. Although I had a few issues with the book (like the Holy Spirit being referred to as "she") I gotta admit it's still a very insightful read. There are moments where the author gets right to the root of contemplative prayer and explains its importance for all, regardless of your religion.



If you really truly want to feel that deep connection with God, this author shows us a level of prayer most of us don't do or are even aware of. It's not meditation or some new-age method, it's actually an old technique Christ Himself used. It's all about looking within yourself and to God, no outside distractions or excuses, just you and Him. (less)

flag5 likes · Like  · comment · see review

D'Linda

Feb 19, 2019D'Linda rated it it was amazing

A must read:



- refresh you faith

- let God work on your soul

- lower your blood pressure

- bring hope back to your existance

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Russell Burnett

Nov 16, 2011Russell Burnett rated it it was amazing

I read this book and immediately tuned to page one and read it again. Donald Miller, if he were a Catholic monastic, could have written Chapter 2, Attitudes Toward God.

"[O]ur spiritual journey may be blocked if we carry negative attitudes toward God from early childhood." Page 22.

"Human nature prefers to offer substitute sacrifices to placate God rather than to offer the sacrifice that God clearly states in Scripture is the only acceptable one, which is the gift of ourselves....This is the attitude of Typhonic conciousness, the level of conciousness proper to primative peoples and to children from ages two to four." Page 25.

The book is convicting - why wouldn't I devote 20 minutes twice a day to sitting quietly, non-judgmentally, in a state of consent to the presence of God, whatever that does or does not turn out to be? Could it be that the world, as in "not of this world", is more important to me than the possibilty that something more is in and around me? (less)

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Ci

Mar 02, 2014Ci rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition

Shelves: re-read-books, how-to-books

This slim book is a how-to book for Centering Prayer, the most elementary practice in the Benedictine tradition. This practice is diametrically different from common ecclesiastic prayers in conventional church setting. It is not public, nor audible, nor forceful. The best way to describe it is "to rest in God". No forced thinkings nor unnatural feelings.



The first chapter outlines the recent movement from "self outside of God", toward "God in the self". The latter resonates Eastern religions' center theme while negates the conventional transcending, outside, fearful, requiring pleading and negotiating divine presence.



The process has some similarity to Mindfulness Meditation method, with the additional centering on holding a sacred word, although not a mantra-like active articulation. My current understanding is that Centering Prayer needs to be practiced for one or two years before understanding (or just to see) its effect. To hear God, the author asks us first to trust the process of resting in quiet solitude. By orienting one's state of mind toward the divine, then the process would unfold itself. I understand the first stage of its effect in "rest moves toward peace." And peace will bring more tumultuous "unloading" of unhealthy thoughts from deep psyche, which makes the praying process a crucible for spiritual purity.



The author comments on the pure spiritual growth instead of the "spiritual junk food" (page 72). Since the author did not elaborate much, I wonder if it is a refutation of the more conventional evangelic mainstream in modern America.



I could not make much more than the first stage of understanding, even though the contents are plainly written. I plan to revisit this book in a year's time.



-- Notes on March 27.



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Contemplative Outreach Hawaii

Jul 02, 2016Contemplative Outreach Hawaii rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition

Shelves: cohi-books

Suggested for those establishing a practice of Centering Prayer. It is considered one of the three foundational books by Fr. Thomas Keating along with Open Mind, Open Heart and Invitation to Love. Intimacy with God goes deeper into the practice including popular discussions and diagrams on: the dynamics of Centering Prayer, the river as a metaphor for human consciousness, the "target" diagram illustrating levels of awareness, etc.; the circular illustration of the four moments of Centering Prayer; the analogy of the tell and the archeological dig in uncovering our wounds of a lifetime; and the spiral staircase depicting various spiritual levels.



The book also covers supportive practices like Lectio Diviina and praying the rosary. As well as Centering Prayer in the World. (less)

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Kris

Sep 11, 2014Kris rated it it was ok

Shelves: religion-christianity

A rather dull and dry book, considering the powerful topic.



Written from a distinctly Catholic perspective, Keating somehow incorporates influences from Eastern religions into Christianity while throwing in some technical language to hopefully help readers pray better to God. There are plenty of vague phrases to go around. Exactly what is "divine union" and how is it "discovered"...? What is Keating referring to when he says we can get "closer to our true self"...? Who knows?



Pulling this book randomly off the library shelf was no luck. I sped-read the last 70+ pages. (less)

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Mary

Jan 19, 2013Mary rated it liked it

if you are looking for a book that gives basic instructions to contemplative prayer then this book isn't for you. This book gives history, reasons, beliefs, and facts. It was interesting read and I found it fascinating but wasn't what I was looking for.

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Andrew

Mar 06, 2013Andrew rated it it was amazing

The definitive book on lectio divina and centering prayer as spiritual practice. The book also offers an excellent historical perspective on the mystical tradition in Christianity, and on how it became un-mystical or "Western" in Keating's terms, in the 18th century and following.

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Rich Lewis

Nov 04, 2017Rich Lewis rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition

“This book describes the unfolding experience of contemplative life that grows as the false self and the accompanying sense of separation from God recedes.”



I have been a practitioner of centering prayer for just over 3 years.  Let me share some key insights that I gained as I read this wonderful book.



Trust

“The Christian spiritual path is based on a deepening trust in God. It is trust that first allows us to take the initial leap in the dark, to encounter God at the deeper levels of ourselves. And it is trust that guides the intimate refashioning of our being, the transformation of our pain, woundedness, and unconscious motivation into the person that God intended us to be.”



Each time I sit in silence I trust God. Laurence Freeman reminds us that meditation is an act of faith. During this time, I trust that God will transform me slowly and at His, not my pace, into the person He intended me to be. This can certainly be scary and frustrating because I constantly bring my ideas and preconceived notions to the silent prayer table.



I must let go of who I think I am, what I think I want to be so I can open to the Divine. Each time I sit in silence with God I practice my faith muscle. As I trust God during the silence of centering prayer I better learn how to trust God during my non silent times of the day.



The Body

“The body is storehouse of emotional energy that is not adequately processed.”



A long term silent prayer practice heals my body. Silent prayer is a safe place where I can and should feel comfortable to allow the release of the often unconscious emotional energies that are stored in my body as clenched teeth, tight chest, heavy shoulders, upset stomach to name a few.  God loves me and only wishes to heal me to my innermost core.



Pain: A Sacred Symbol

“Then we just sit with it, and the pain itself becomes our sacred symbol.”



This is an excellent suggestion. My sacred word is an internal image of a Jesus icon. There are times when my mind especially races during centering prayer. My mind is preoccupied with worry and anxiety. Rather than use my Jesus icon at this time, I can use the worry or anxiety as my sacred symbol over and over again until the closing bell has rung.



Wear Away the False Self

“By returning to the sacred word again and again, we gradually are wearing away the layers of false self until they are emptied out.”



“The fullness of divine life of course is not permanently established until we come to the bottom of the pile of our emotional junk. The undigested emotional material of a lifetime has to be processed by the Divine Therapist before we can as access the fullness of liberation from the false self.”



This beautiful act of ever so gently returning to the sacred word wears away the false self layers! It is a daily act when I release the false self chains and become the person God wants me to be. I can also return to my sacred word even during my non silent times of the day and remain focused on who God wants me to be.



Sacred Reading

“In our day, we are almost completely desensitized to sacred reading because we are so used to newspapers, magazines, and speed reading.”



Sometimes it is nice to read a book slowly and chew on it. That is why I like lectio divina. Sacred reading is a different type of reading. I read with the eyes of the heart. What glimmers and shimmers as I read the pages? What is the Divine trying to reveal to me? I encourage others to try it too.



Whole Being

“It is the opening of mind and heart – our whole being – to God beyond thoughts, words, and emotions.”



When we sit in silence with the Divine we bring our whole being to God: body, mind and heart. I relax my body yet remain alert. I let go of thoughts and emotions that are on my mind. I open my heart to God. This is important! We must open our whole being to God: body, mind and heart.



Mystery

“….so that when we sit down in our chair or on the floor, we are relating to the mystery of Christ’s passion, death, and resurrection, not as something outside of us but as something inside of us.”



I will admit that I struggle with this one. If God is in me, as I sit in silence I relate to the mystery of Christ’s passion, death and resurrection as something inside of me. It makes sense and I trust that God will continue to reveal more of this mystery to me.

What suffering am I in the midst of? What must I die to in order to better experience the presence of God? What new life have I seen resurrected in my daily routines and activities?



Next Steps

“The primary teaching of Centering Prayer is basically very simple and can be expressed in two words: “Do it!”  It will then do you. But it requires doing it every day.”



“No one understands contemplative prayer without some experience of it.”



“When we are sitting in Centering Prayer, we may seem to be doing nothing, but we are doing perhaps the most important of all functions, which is to become who we are, the unique manifestation of the Word of God that the Spirit designed us to be.”



The next steps are simple yet very important. Keep at it! A twice per day, centering prayer practice will transform you. You will become the person God intends you to be!



I will go back and re-read this enlightening book.



Rich Lewis

www.SilenceTeaches.com (less)