2022

Identity and The Outsider. The Meaning of the novel by Albert Camus of France

During the Covid lockdown in 2021, I re-read The Outsider after 54 years. A powerful novel written by Albert Camus of France. I emailed Margaux in Paris of my appreciation for the novel. She kindly posted to me an illustrated English version of The Outsider (also occasionally translated as The Stranger). I gave a recorded talk on identity and the outsider in the Waldhaus Zentrum, Andernach, Germany in early May, 2022. …

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Does meditation and spirituality collude to glorify the Here and Now?

From a Participant in our MTTC (Mindfulness Teacher Training Course).

Dear Christopher,
Thank you for your reflections on past, present and future.
I picked up the word ‘Now’ during your latest talk.
I was wondering if you were referring to Eckhard Tolle, who always speaks of the present in terms of this is the only realm that is.
The past is gone and can’t be changed, the future is not here yet and will never be. The only ‘time’ to change is the NOW referring to the present.
All that is, is what we are now taking in the past as something that has formed us in a way as a river that gave shape to the valley it runs through.
At the same time is the present giving us the opportunity to flourish freshly every day, making every day brand new. Taking this into account life’s wonderful.
Although it might sound naive but doesn’t that exclude planning the future?
Love,
PS: Tomorrow morning session I have to leave by 9.45 o’clock.

Dear …
Thanks for message. Ah I see you planned the future in terms of ending your time in the session at 9.45 am. Thank you for letting me know.

The language of the Now includes:

  • Here and Now
  • Present Moment,
  • Just This.
  • No past. No future.
  • Nowhere to Go.
  • Nothing to do.
  • Pure Being,
  • Just Being.

Buddhist texts have here and now in them – a translation bearing no relationship to the Sanskrit or the Pali. The original Pali is ditthe-dhamme – literally, the view of something, past, present or furure.
This language of the glorification of the here and now has been in use for centuries. It is unhelpful.
The Now means experiencing a variety of sensations through the five senses and mental activities. These sensations depend upon the causes and conditions arising in the near and far past.
Being in the now, being absorbed in the now, can generate a blind spot to the evolution of life, to becoming, to vision and outcome/consequences of past/present and future.
I regard being stuck in the Now as a cage, small and contracted. We can stand back and witness what goes in the present as well as be absorbed in the present in healthy ways.

Some believers   have become Nowists claiming the past and future is in the present. Who can show the past and future in the present?
Some believers have become Nowists claiming the past and future is not in the present. Who can show in the present what is not related to the past and not related to the future.

Liberation remains unbound to past, present and future. Liberation does not depend on frequent to exposure to sensations through the senses of the Now.

The use of capital letters for the Now do not make the here and now substantial, nor cut ot off from past and future. The Now cannot stand with a unique, independent self-existence unrelated to past and future.

I cannot perceive a perpetually wonderful Now.

An awakened life requires no sensations for its confirmation. The now is an inseparable feature in the middle of the three fields of time – past, present and future.
I trust this is helpful.
Love

Christopher

 

 

 

 

 

Does meditation and spirituality collude to glorify the Here and Now? Read More »

What is a Buddhist Perspective? Title of the Blog is ‘Christopher Titmuss. A Buddhist Perspective.’ Some readers dismiss certain blogs…..

A handful of readers tell me, often bluntly, what I write is NOT a Buddhist perspective. I have regularly replied to such a reader. Since the reader implies he or she knows a Buddhist perspective, I politely request the person to write a Buddhist perspective adding I will post their Buddhist perspective on my blog.

So far, no correspondent has e-mailed me a true Buddhist perspective. Not one single reader in 15 years of blogging, more than 1000 blogs and over 800,000 views.

My blog addresses a wide range of topics including significant issues in the public mind, such as environmental destruction, the global pandemic and war. A reader can go to the top right-hand corner of the home page and type a key word in the Search bar. You may find a Buddhist perspective in your area of interest.

Topics include books, photos, films, business, science critiques, Dharma reflections, daily life, mindfulness, poems, music, politics, retreat environments, social, the Buddha and the spiritual.

I would prefer to use A Dharma Perspective. Unlike the word ‘Yoga,’ Dharma lacks street recognition, except among Buddhists. Hindus and those with interest in the teachings of the East.

What do I mean by a Buddhist perspective?

In Alphabetical order.

In my view, the text of a Buddhist Perspective stays true to areas referred to below.

  1. Addresses the truth of suffering, conditions for suffering, resolution of suffering and way to the resolution.
  2. Challenges corporate behaviour, such as addiction to profit, power and exploitation of customers, workers worldwide and the environment.
  3. Develops community over individualism and endeavours to write what is true and useful.
  4. Establishes calm-insight meditation, the power of mindfulness and all features of the noble path.
  5. Ethics of non-violence, non-harm and non-abuse.
  6. Expands the heart of empathy, love, appreciative joy, compassion and equanimity
  7. Explores dependent arising of all experiences and situations instead of fixations of ego of self-made.
  8. Teaches ethics, concentration/unification of mind (samadhi) and wisdom to give support to the diversity of people, creatures and habitats.
  9. Offers critiques of narrow, dogmatic claims in science, medicine, religion and other institutions
  10. Offers critiques of features of democracy, politics and secularism while recognising spirituality accessible in the arts.
  11. Offers training to end stress, not just reduce it, end problematic states of mind, not just reduce them.
  12. See and know an unconditioned freedom, unbound to any events between birth and death, and including both.

I look at a blog to ensure I keep to the spirit and letter of a Buddhist Perspective. Sometimes. readers send me a valid point about a blog, so I regularly adapt the point to the text to offer a more balanced view.

If we write with conviction, we enter a world of praise and blame. Via the blog and other forms of social media linked to the blog, responses or reactions land in front of me. I can understand why people resist writing anything, as it can be hard to handle the wrath and anger thrown at the writer. You do not need to be thick skinned. You do not need to use your sensitivity as an excuse to stop writing. We cannot write well unless we know a depth of sensitivity.

Fear of views of others, and old patterns of contraction form a writer’s block. Sensitivity cannot do that.

We can regard people’s reaction as grist for the mill, whether we agree or not with their comments.

I suspect Facebook automatically adjusts its algorithms to reduce readers of my Facebook page when I criticise Facebook. Instagram and the Covid vaccination industry. I don’t believe in so-called ‘free speech,’ and I don’t believe in censorship by powerful corporations, or the government. That is another blog to write – with a Buddhist perspective.

Let us not go quietly into the night.

Christopher Titmuss is the author of:
The Political Buddha
The Explicit Buddha
The Buddha of Love
The Mindfulness Manual, based on the Buddha’s teachings.

What is a Buddhist Perspective? Title of the Blog is ‘Christopher Titmuss. A Buddhist Perspective.’ Some readers dismiss certain blogs….. Read More »

Bright Star. A Poem by John Keats (1795–1821). Plus line-by-line in Plain English.

Bright Star. A Poem by John Keats (1795–1821). Plus line-by-line in Plain English. Read More »

Alison Wright. The Compassionate Photographer. 1961 – 23 March 2022. An Obituary.

One of the most adventurous and fearless women in the global Sangha, Alison Wright, aged 61, a National Geographic photographer, died last month (23 March 2022) while scuba diving on Sao Miguel island, one of the Portuguese Azores Islands. …

Alison Wright. The Compassionate Photographer. 1961 – 23 March 2022. An Obituary. Read More »

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