Author: | Andrea Scarsi | ISBN: | 9781370642816 |
Publisher: | Andrea Scarsi | Publication: | August 6, 2016 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition | Language: | English |
Author: | Andrea Scarsi |
ISBN: | 9781370642816 |
Publisher: | Andrea Scarsi |
Publication: | August 6, 2016 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition |
Language: | English |
Enlightenment, a common term in the Zen world, is the release of all the synapses, that floating free give the sensation of the opening of the thousand petals of the lotus flower of divine consciousness. Zen is famous for being weird, sharp, and sometimes violent. Its funny stories, seemingly meaningless and inconclusive, have the precise meaning indeed to indicate the state of being, and the mind, beyond the inherited paradigms and familiar places. Zen's universe is objectively subjective and subjectively objective, rooted in the common ground of understanding, which is the pure act of witnessing reality for what it is, without interpretations, definitions, and judgments. All of this, obviously, is reduced to the simple dissipation of all the learned, resulting in the restoration of our brain, spinal cord and central nervous system to the original state of functioning, conscious of having pressed, of our own free and spontaneous will and capability to understand and want, the reset button.
The fifty proposed practices bring us here directly, while the anecdotes crumble the temple's walls and columns at a time, disintegrating the karmic crystallization of our ego cocoon finally and widening the infinite sky of absolute consciousness, devoid of form and full of everything, especially of truth, magnificence, and pleasure. Each sentence is complete in itself.
Enlightenment, a common term in the Zen world, is the release of all the synapses, that floating free give the sensation of the opening of the thousand petals of the lotus flower of divine consciousness. Zen is famous for being weird, sharp, and sometimes violent. Its funny stories, seemingly meaningless and inconclusive, have the precise meaning indeed to indicate the state of being, and the mind, beyond the inherited paradigms and familiar places. Zen's universe is objectively subjective and subjectively objective, rooted in the common ground of understanding, which is the pure act of witnessing reality for what it is, without interpretations, definitions, and judgments. All of this, obviously, is reduced to the simple dissipation of all the learned, resulting in the restoration of our brain, spinal cord and central nervous system to the original state of functioning, conscious of having pressed, of our own free and spontaneous will and capability to understand and want, the reset button.
The fifty proposed practices bring us here directly, while the anecdotes crumble the temple's walls and columns at a time, disintegrating the karmic crystallization of our ego cocoon finally and widening the infinite sky of absolute consciousness, devoid of form and full of everything, especially of truth, magnificence, and pleasure. Each sentence is complete in itself.