Within my personal experience, such ideas such as purity, one true being, the true path etc. are simply unnecessary and distracting. The hard way stated that following one or another organization's form of the way/the proper way to live/the simple way to live isn't the "Hard way". The Hard Way is life itself. The Hard Way is the crevasse beside the cliff and the cliff represents those organizations or ways of thinking that can, and often do prevent us from fully experiencing life as it occurs. We are afraid to sample the edge, sample the great vastness that occurs within our universe, our worlds, our thoughts. It is that fear that keeps us from revealing our true selves and our true intentions.
In summary, I feel that this piece represents the ideas of religion and religious philosophy and provides a guideline as to the proper way one should live their lives and the distractions that will keep them from this path. I also feel that the methods and the message Trungpa's "The Hard Way"suggest can apply better to our own lives and understand how to live in a way that is true and positive to one's outlook upon life.
I'm glad I'm not the only one who sees strong parallels between eastern and western thought...I think there's a huge paradox here, in that we're studying a school of thought that says not to follow any particular school of thought blindly. If I understood your post correctly, that's that you're getting at too. Am I right?
ReplyDeleteI agree with the notion that there is nothing new in eastern thought that hasn't been thought of in western thought . . . because it's all human thoughts about truth, reality and life. However, I agree with Gareth that the Four Noble Truths are used as the foundation of the Abrahamic Religions right down to the promise of something undeliverable, and the answer that is not an answer. But that's only if you use these Noble truths as a religion. As a philosophy it is another matter entirely.
ReplyDelete"Sample the crevasse."
ReplyDeleteSounds like a metal song.
Nice turn of phrase.
I mean it.
I agree that Eastern and Western thought are very similar. It seems humans everywhere are striving for the same basic principles, but we are also fighting over it, too. It's such a...paradox.
ReplyDelete