Monday, September 16, 2024

The Handbook for Enlightenment by Zen Master Rama, Frederick Lenz

 Rama - Dr. Frederick Lenz, Zen Master 1950 - 1998




THE HANDBOOK FOR ENLIGHTENMENT


Meditation is a practice that involves slowing down and eventually stopping your thought process. Within you is infinite light, power and ecstasy. But just as sunlight is blocked out by the endless realities that exist within your higher mind.


Success in meditation depends on right practices, consistency, and - if possible - regular empowerments by a Tantric root guru.


Right practices are the basic, intermediate, and advanced secret meditation techniques coupled with the continual practice of mindfulness.


Consistency means that is necessary for you to practice meditation twice a day without fail. This practice demands your full conscious attention during your meditation sessions and should not degenerate into daydreaming.


Empowerments by your Tantric root guru will speed up your progress significantly. A root guru has the ability to transfer different types of Kundalini energy into your consciousness. This energy will make it much easier for you to clear your mind and focus during your meditation periods, thus affording you much faster progress along the pathway to enlightenment.


THE PRELIMINARY PRACTICES


Meditation should be practiced in a clean place, either in or out doors, depending on your circumstances. It is recommended that you sit in a cross-legged position, keeping your spine straight. Most people find that sitting on a small meditation rug or cushion makes their meditation experience more conformable and consequently they are less distracted by their physical body.


The goal in meditation is the complete cessation of all thought during the period that you have set aside for meditation. This will take some time for most of you to achieve.


In the beginning, it is advised that you practice meditation while focusing on a physical or mental image, in order to help you to gradually develop your concentration skills. Once you have developed your concentration skills to a high degree, you will find it relatively effortless to slip into a state of meditative emptiness.


Initially, when you first begin the practice of meditation, don’t fight with your thoughts or try to suppress them with your will. This will only frustrate you and bind you to your thought even more strongly. Instead, spend your time concentrating on your visualization or focusing on a mantra or a yantra.


For the first three months of practice, spend about fifteen minutes meditating twice a day. After about three months of consistent practice, increase your time to thirty minutes. After six months of consistent practice, increase your session time to forty-five minutes. After a year of practice, increase your session time to one hour, twice daily.


Once you have reached this time level, it is not really necessary to add more time to your meditation practice. Instead, what becomes of paramount importance is to decrease your thought flow during your sessions. When you can successfully meditate for two hours a day, with few - if any - thoughts, you will be ready for the advanced secret meditation techniques.


The best times of the day to meditate are in the morning, during the period of sunset, or before going to sleep. Meditating in the morning clears your mind for the day ahead. It fills you with energy, so that you will have a happier and more creative day, and it also makes it easier for you to practice mindfulness during the day.


It is very easy to meditate at sunset. At that time a special doorway opens up between the interdimensional worlds, allowing you to meditate powerfully and also to recharge yourself with energy for the evening ahead. If you cannot meditate at sunset, have a second meditation before going to sleep at night. You will find that you will sleep more peacefully and your mind will be clear and energized when you awaken the next morning.


Do not be discouraged! In the beginning of your practice you may feel like you are wasting your time. Initially, you may find it difficult to concentrate, and you will probably spend more time "thinking" about meditation and other topics than you will actually spend concentrating and meditating. This is quite normal.


Just keep practicing, Even after a few weeks you will begin to notice that your mind is much more clear, that you are happier, more aware, and have more physical, mental, and psychic energy. After several months of consistent practice, you will also notice that you require less sleep.


THE PRELIMINARY PRACTICES OF VISUALIZATION AND MANTRA YOGA


The following are a series of secret basic and intermediate meditation techniques.


The Blue Sky


As you start your meditation, picture a beautiful blue sky without any clouds in it. As you picture the clear blue sky, feel that your body is growing lighter and lighter. Close your eyes and keep the image of the blue sky in your mind.


There are no limits to the blue sky. It stretches on endlessly in every direction, never beginning and never ending. As you visualize the blue sky, feel that your body has become so light that you have floated up into the clear blue sky. Visualize that you are floating in the sky, and that all tension, fatigue, worry, and problems have left you. Relax your mind and allow your breathing to seek its own level. Feel yourself floating gently in the clear blue sky that stretches endlessly in every direction, never beginning and never ending.


After several minutes have passed and you feel your thoughts slowing, picture that your entire body is merging with the blue sky. Your body is merging with the peace of the blue sky... Your mind is merging with the tranquility of the blue sky... Feel that you have actually become the blue sky. You no longer have a body or a mind. You have become the infinite blue sky that stretches endlessly in every direction, never beginning and never ending. Feel that you have become the perfect peace and tranquility of the blue sky. Completely let go and experience the bliss of meditation.


When you have completed your meditation session, open your eyes. You will now have a new and deeper sense of peace, relaxation, and poise. This renewed energy, joy, and calm will stay with you after you resume your normal activities.


The Tower of Light


Take a deep breath and exhale slowly, As you exhale, mentally picture all tiredness, tension, and fatigue leaving you. Then turn your attention to the crown of your head. Visualize that a wave of golden light is entering into you at the top of your head and passing throughout your entire body. Imagine this golden light passing from the crown of your head, through your neck, shoulders, arms, chest, stomach, lower back, and down your legs to your feet.


As you imagine the golden light passing throughout your body, feel yourself relaxing. Picture another wave of golden light entering through the crown of your head and visualize it passing through your entire body and then leaving through the soles of your feet. Feel that wave after wave of golden light is passing through this way. Each wave of golden light is passing through you in this way. Each wave of golden light that passes through your body removes more of your tension, quiets your mind, and helps you to enter farther and deeper into a state of meditation.


Picture that the waves of golden light have now become a solid river of golden light that is constantly passing through you. Picture this golden light expanding beyond your body and filling up the entire room. Then visualize the golden light expanding beyond the earth... beyond the sky... into the infinite. Feel that the golden light is constantly passing through you and washing all of your tensions, problems, and worries beyond you, beyond the earth... beyond the sky... and into the infinite. Continue visualizing the golden stream of light passing through you until you have ended your meditation session.


The Ocean


Imagine a vast ocean. The ocean is filled with hundreds and thousands of waves. Feel that you are part of that ocean. Imagine that each wave in the ocean is slowly moving through you. Feel that each wave is a wave of joy.


Imagine wave after wave of joy passing through your whole body. As each wave passes through your body, feel that all worries, tensions, anxieties, and problems are being washed away in the successive waves of joy. For several minutes, meditate on wave after wave of joy passing through you. Feel that each new wave of joy that passes through you increases the amount of joy that you now have, until you feel that you have become all joy. Nothing exists for you except limitless, boundless joy.


Now imagine that you are going beneath the surface of the ocean. The surface of the ocean is filled with many waves, but below the surface, in the depths, all is calm, silent, and serene. Imagine yourself sinking slowly into the depths of the ocean. Here there is only calmness, emptiness, and tranquility. As you visualize yourself going deeper and deeper into the depths of the ocean, feel that a profound paces is entering into you. Feel that the deeper you go into the inner ocean, the more peaceful and calm you become.


Visualize that there is no end to the depths of this ocean. It goes on endlessly. Imagine yourself sinking deeper and deeper into this endless ocean of light, feeling more peace and tranquility filling your entire being until you have become all peace and all tranquility. Continue practicing this visualization until you have ended your meditation session.


The Sphere of Power


Practice this technique whenever you feel tension entering into you from outside. This exercise can be practiced while seated, or as part of mindfulness, while you work, talk with others, or engage in any activity. This exercise is particularly effective when you need to stop tension, frustration, or panic immediately.


Focus your attention on the center of your stomach, in the area of your navel. Feel that this is an area of tremendous strength. Visualize a sphere, a dome of red energy surrounding your entire body, which is supported by your own willpower. Positive thoughts, feelings, ideas, and vibrations can pass through this sphere of red energy surrounding you, negative thoughts, hostilities, anger, and aggressive feelings of other persons and situations cannot enter you.


While you are visualizing this sphere of red energy surrounding you, feel that you are consciously directing energy from the center of your body, in the area of your navel, throughout the whole sphere. Feel that the energy of your willpower can easily deflect tension-causing feelings and frustrations that are directed toward you from the outside world. You will find that with repeated practice it becomes easier and easier to visualize this sphere of red energy and that you will be able to stop the negative energy of others entering you.


The Rose


Visualize a beautiful rose in the center of your chest. It is not necessary, when doing this exercise, to see a clear picture of the rose. Simply do the best you can to imagine a soft, reddish rose in the center of your chest. If other thoughts and images pass through your mind while you are performing this exercise, simply ignore them.


Imagine that the rose is completely folded up; none of its petals have yet unfolded. Now, as you focus your attention on the reddish rose in the center of your chest, visualize that the first set of petals, the outer row of petals, is gradually unfolding. As they do so, imagine them growing and expanding and filling the entire area of your chest. Simultaneously feel that a wave of peace and joy is spreading throughout your entire chest area.


Then visualize that a second set of rose petals is unfolding and expanding, this time filling the entire area of your body. Imagine another wave of peace and joy, even deeper than the first, starting at the center of the rose and expanding outward, filling your entire body with peace and joy. Now visualize a third set of petals, again starting at the center of the rose, and imagine them expanding outward, filling up the entire room, spreading peace and joy everywhere throughout the room in which you are meditating.


Then visualize a forth set of petals opening up, this time expanding and filling the entire planet. Feel that peace and joy are spreading from the center of the rose, throughout the earth, and filling all of the people of this earth with peace and joy.


Now visualize another set of petals opening up, this time filling the entire solar system with peace and bliss. At the same time, feel that you are spreading your own inner peace, of which you have an infinite supply, throughout the entire solar system.


Finally visualize that a sixth row of petals is opening up, this time filling up the entire universe, and on into the infinite.


As you practice this exercise, continue to visualize additional petals of the rose unfolding. As each set of petals unfolds and spreads out into the infinite, feel that they are reaching further and further out, and spreading a deeper peace and joy throughout your whole being and throughout all of existence. There is no end to the petals of the inner rose. Continue to unfold set after set of petals until you have completed your meditation session.


Swirling Light


Focus your attention on the center of your forehead. Visualize that there is a slow but steady swirl of white light there. This particular white light is very soft and gentle. Visualize that the white light above your forehead is slowly moving in a clockwise direction.


Then visualize that the swirling white light is slowly expanding. As it does, the white light begins to encompass the other portions of your body. Imagine the soft white light expanding in a circular swirling motion until your entire body has become lost in it.


Feel that the room you are meditating in is becoming filled with swirling white light. Visualize that the light is expanding beyond the room you are in to encompass the building or area in which you are located. Then imagine that the white light is expanding even farther, encompassing all of the area for miles around you. Finally, visualize the soft white light continuing to expand as it gently swirls around, until continuing to expand as it gently swirls around, until it has filled the earth, the sky, the universe, and all of infinity.


Let go. Allow yourself to merge with the slowly swirling calm, peaceful white light. In this timeless light, there is no yesterday, no tomorrow, there is no future or past. Your mind is calm and relaxed. All that exists is swirling white light, and you have become part of that light. Meditate and continue to visualize the swirling white light, experiencing peace and inner stillness, until your meditation session has ended.


PRACTICE TIPS


All of the previously described techniques can be practiced with your eyes open or closed. Most people find that it is easier initially to practice meditation with their eyes closed.


When your mind drifts away from one of the secret meditation techniques, do not become upset or frustrated. Gently move your mind back to the technique you are practicing and begin again. Initially your mind will drift frequently to other subjects, but with practice you will find that your mind’s strength quickly grows.


Think of your mind as a muscle. The more you use it, the stronger it will become. However, if you neglect to develop your mind through proper concentration and meditation exercises, it will atrophy and become weaker.


At the end of each meditation session, bow your head toward the ground. Give away your meditation away to the universe. Whether you feel you have done well or poorly, simply give your efforts to the universe. Also remember, if you are properly using the secret meditation techniques, you cannot have a "bad" meditation. The only bad meditation is when you don’t meditate at all.


Use the previous techniques in rotation. It will prevent your meditation experience from becoming stale, and the different techniques will place you in touch with different fields of auric empowerment, creating a balanced development of your practice.


YANTRA MEDITATION


Yantras are traditional visual aids that are used both externally and internally in the practice of Tantric Buddhism. Yantras are geometrical designs that enable you to focus on an image that will help you to quiet your mind. When you become more advanced in your practice, you will be able to fully visualize a yantra with your eyes closed. Any of the standard yantras in the Tantric texts are suitable for practice.


MANTRA YOGA


Another popular form of meditation is to repeat a mantra and focus on its sound, or its sound in conjunction with a visual image, while practicing meditation. Your root guru will provide you with a personal mantra for you to use. If you don not have access to a root guru, the best general mantra for practice is: OM mani padme hum.


Repeat this mantra, or your personal mantra, for the full period of your meditation session. Do not merely "parrot" a mantra when you are repeating it. Focus your full attention on the mantra when you are repeating it. Focus your full attention on he mantra you are using until all other thoughts are excluded from your mind.


SOME FINAL CONSIDERATIONS


It is perfectly acceptable to vary your practice. If you wish to use one of the secret techniques for one session, focus on a yantra for another session, this is perfectly acceptable. What is of greatest importance is keeping your mind focused during your periods of meditation and not letting your mind drift. It is far better to do a shorter meditation with little or no concentration.


When, during a session, you enter into a period of no-thought, you can stop practicing your visualization, repeating your mantra, or focusing on your yantra. Allow the emptiness, peace, and ecstasy of the thoughtless realm to overwhelm you. When you find yourself staring to think again, refocus on your visualization, yantra or mantra. Keep practicing in spite of all adverse conditions, and great success will be yours. May all sentient beings attain enlightenment!


The Handbook for Enlightenment comes from:


Lenz, Frederick. Ph. D. Snowboarding to Nirvana. St. Martin's Press. 1997.


Blog created by Rama Quotes


Friday, July 24, 2009

The Zen of Sports and Atheltics

American Buddhism: Health and Athletics

By Zen Master Rama, Frederick Lenz

Dr. Frederick Lenz, Zen Master Rama, quotes on buddhism, enlightenment, nirvana, zen, tantra, tibetan and mahayana.

It is fun to be outside; it's good to move your body and there is just a joy in sports and athletics.

 

As you gain more discipline over your body, you will find that a corollary discipline will develop in the mind because the two really go together.

 

Those who are already adept at some disciplines of the body will find that the study of Zen and meditation will give you much more control than you now have.

 

In order to succeed on the athletic field, it is necessary to succeed in daily life. Your spirit and your life must be perfectly trimmed for the chi to flow properly.

 

It is a good idea to become involved with sports and athletics. It makes you strong. You need to be strong to deal with this world and the powers and forces that block enlightenment.

 

Physical perfection, working out, adds to your spiritual perfection if that is your intent.

 

Sports and athletics can be a path in Zen, in concordance with daily practice of zazen meditation. You need to move with your spirit, not just with your body.

 

In Zen we strive to bring both the mind and the body into perfect combination, so that there is no intrinsic difference between them.

 

It is easier to develop the mind through meditation than it is just through athletic practice. If you put the two together, it will be unbelievable.

 

I recommend for everyone the study of some type of sports or athletics, particularly martial arts. Always check with your doctor first, naturally.

 

All success in sports and athletics, from the Zen point of view, comes from the mind. No matter what kind of shape your body is in, there is disharmony in the being.

 

There are lots of people who work out and aren't at all powerful in terms of their mind or their spirits.

 

If your intent is that athletics and sports are tools or devices to reach higher levels of mind, then your workout sessions become meditation.

 

Allow the emptiness inherent within actions and experiences to guide and shape your choices.  Let your actions direct you, the actor, not the other way around.

 

In the Zen of sports and athletics, we seek to bring discipline and control into our physical movements, but at the same time to eliminate the self that gets in the way of perfect play.

 

In the West, we think of sports and athletics as individual achievement, the thrill of victory, the agony of defeat; it all revolves around the ego. This has nothing to do with the Zen of sports and athletics.

 

If someone else runs faster than you or makes more money than you or is more adept at anything, that doesn't mean you have lost. You are measuring yourself only against yourself and your tendencies not to do all that you are capable of doing.

 

Winning has to do with gaining personal power through the practice of meditation and mindfulness; not draining your energy on ridiculous things and people.

 

The strategy of winning is gaining personal power. There are no techniques to learn that will cause you to win. You need power, balance and wisdom to win and to learn from your loses.

 

Be a perfect flow of energy in whatever you chose to do.  This is perfect action.

 

Before beginning an activity always first empty yourself of thoughts regarding what you are about to do.

 

To do something perfectly, you must not think about what you are doing at all ... Your thoughts are what create imperfections in your actions. They alienate you from the true reality of any action you perform.

 

When your spirit is free and your body is well developed, magic occurs. You are able to let go and become the play.

 

Allow the inherent emptiness within what you are about to do direct you.

 

Instead of your ego directing you and making countless mistakes, allow yourself to be guided by the invisible principles of the universe within your action.

 

When you can become completely impassive in play, then you become fluid and completely unpredictable. No one knows, including yourself, what you will do next. You couldn't even explain it.

 

If I have led my life totally deliberately, then when I come to the end of the diving board, I can just fall off the diving board and it will be perfect. I won't even remember what happened.

 

You can hit a home run. If you are honest, you'll know when it's perfect because at that critical moment of connection, there was no sense of being there. That is perfect play. There is no self involved.

 

If all the members of a team have synchronized their energy and they have all subordinated their egos to success of the team, then we have a functioning unit. If we have a lot of hotshots who want attention, you won't really play that well.

 

Teamwork - everything is one. You can connect with the emptiness of all things. All things are empty.

 

If you are serious about sports and athletics then you need to begin the discipline of mind. With the power of mind, almost anything can be accomplished.

 

The emptiness of play is when there is no self present. There is no one playing -- there is only play itself taking place, perfect fluid motion.

 

If you have the sense of participation in sports or athletics, of being a player, then you are not really into the Zen mind. In Zen mind there is no sense of self in the play.

 

Before beginning an activity always first empty yourself of thoughts regarding what you are about to do. Then allow the inherent emptiness within what you are about to do to direct you.

 

Unlock the power of the will. Learn balance and gain the knowledge and wisdom necessary to guide those powers, to succeed in sports and athletics.

 

Any good athletic is always in a state of perpetual training, as is the Zen student.

 

Thought control is the ability to direct mind and attention anywhere. Your ability to win is dependent upon the power of your concentration. Winning is a state of mind.

 

The Frisbee is a round disk. That's the somethingness. But it has another side; it has a nothingness which you cannot perceive with your physical mind or your senses.

 

In the game of Frisbee you throw the disk to someone else. The point of Frisbee is perfect communication. The person at the other end of the field is receiving an impression, a vibration from you.

 

The more perfectly you can refine the process of Frisbee, the tighter your energy is and the more you become one with the nothingness of the Frisbee, the nothingness of the play.

 

Your ego interferes, your sense of self. When you let go of the mind, the Frisbee will take its own path.

 

When you unite the nothingness of your mind with the nothingness of the Frisbee, then the Frisbee is not a Frisbee, and you are not you.

 

You are trying to pierce the veil, to break through the Frisbee so that it doesn't exist, to break through the football so it doesn't exist, and to break through your opponent so they don't exist.

 

Transform yourself. It is not the opponent that will change, or the Frisbee. They will change in relation to your change. You must change.

 

Zen and Buddhism have produced martial arts, because of the Buddhist injunction against weapons.

 

Most martial arts have to do with the mind, ultimately. The ability to be unafraid, to walk away from a fight without fear - that is control.

 

People who use the mind and aggressive energy to blow their opponent away can be figured out. Anybody you can figure out you can defeat.

 

If you are afraid of other people take a martial arts class. The best way to overcome fear is learn to be proficient in martial arts.

 

The best martial artist doesn't WIN fights, but avoids fights. Martial arts is a way of gaining basic self-mastery of your mind, body and emotions. It can also be very useful in combat situations.

 

Use the practice of mind and body; in order to make those moves perfectly, you have to pull your mind out of its mundane thoughts and awarenesses and bring it into the body movement.

 

The very advanced practitioners of martial arts never had to raise a hand. They could knock an opponent down without physically touching them, just with chi, pure power. We don't see too many of them anymore.

 

The samurais lived with death constantly. They wore a short dagger to take their own life if need be. At any moment they might have to do that, it was a part of their code.

 

The samurais were very interested in Zen because they admired the tremendous precision that the Zen Masters had, their lack of fear and pain and their absolute lack of fear of death.

 

The chi is the central energy or power that we use in physical expression. When the chi is flowing properly in our lives, we can be very adept athletically.

 

If the chi is being wasted by useless activities, emotions and associations that drain us, then we don't have enough power when it comes time to perform.

 

It is quite possible to speed up the healing process to the part of the body that is injured. This all has to do with the release of chi.

 

I think the very best thing you can do is observe what makes you stronger and what makes you weaker.

 

Linus Pauling would have us believe and perhaps correctly, that enough vitamin C will have us live another 20 or 30 years, I think the strongest power in the world is not vitamin C but the power of our own thoughts.

 

The most powerful force to maintaining a good immune system is the power of positive thinking and not allowing yourself to be unnecessarily drained emotionally by worries and fears.

 

In the Orient we have known for thousands of years that the most powerful tonic for ill health is a happy and clear mind.

 

When you're happy, your immune system is at its strongest point. And when you think negatively, or when you hate, or allow yourself to grow emotionally out of control, you are weakening your immune system.

 

Several very good friends of mine have died of AIDS. I spent a great deal of time with them when they went through that process.

 

One or two of my friends set longevity records for people who had AIDS.  What they did, incredibly hard though it was, was to practice meditation, positive thinking and they worked out physically quite a bit.

 

Diet is highly individual. You have to see what your body wants and what is healthy for it.

 

Diet is a matter of personal preference, but if you're interested in the advanced states of meditation, eating mammals should be avoided. They have a more evolved consciousness and can affect your attention field greatly.

 

Eternity becomes more beautiful as we age, if we age well.  If we age poorly, then we don't improve our minds; we don't refine all the aspects of our being.

 

When your spirit is free and your body is well developed, magic occurs.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Does Commercialization Hurt Snowboarding?

More quotes on the Modern Zen Master:
www.ramaquotes.com


Interview Exceprt:

I like the change in the industry. I personally think that the technological innovations in snowboards, binding, boots and other gear, have made this sport both safer and more accessible to members of the general public.
While certainly we are all aware that there has been a degree of commercialization, I don't think that commercialization can ever take away from the actual experience you have carving down a mountain of pure granular powder.
So, no - I think that the commercialization, minus the hype, has given us better and safer equipment and now there are millions of people enjoying the coolest sport in the world, not just a few of us.

Zen Master Rama is author of: snowboarding to nirvana and surfing the himalayas.