[quote=Pandara;9741]Hi Tyler,
I have been contemplating your post for a while now and would like to offer the following as well. I think our external world is one of great contradictions and fragmentations today and no easy journey for any student or follower of the path in such a world. Then we as seekers have to contend with the many teachers/master/gurus who contradicts each other around every corner to the point where some of them would even be rivals for the top spot, proclaiming they are the way or their teachings is the ultimate etc. A human thing this is, so you see even the great ones are just human eventually.
The great irony and sad part of this is, that these very same teachers/masters/gurus with their different beliefs and teachings create division and separation in our world today, instead of unifying and harmonising all.
So, how do you know you have a great teacher/master/guru? For me, I believe that when you are supported and encouraged by your teacher/master/guru to “experience” your own truth and to find your own inner teachings and truths through direct experience. This for me is the hallmark of a humble and a great teacher.
I once read this little story somewhere: One day one of the followers of the Buddha came to him and asked him: If I walk in a road and a man comes up to me and proclaims that he is the Buddha, should I belief him and what should I do then? The Buddha replied, you should not belief him, because the Buddha is within, not without.;)[/quote]
Thanks Pandara, you’re right, it’s not easy. Well in a way my teacher
did do this - he told me to go off and focus on God within my own soul.
But humble? I would not call him humble. or rather, his humbleness
varies.
I believe I found the key - and that is to give up the meditation he
taught because it was the essence of seeking something, and just
do “awareness watching awareness” instead, which I found in a
book of course.
I have decided that he really was sincere, but may not be that great for
total beginners, because something seriously got skipped there. I now
feel that the meditation he was teaching me is something to be done when
a person is a bit more advanced, and of course some basic training in how
to actually meditate can not be skipped.
So I am doing this, and I will slowly try to educate myself more about
Vedanta. I’m pretty happy with the new books I acquired - besides some
simple ones about Vedanta, I got two new Yoga Sutra commentaries that
should really do it. If those two commentaries don’t do it for me, then I
just won’t get it. But they are not being my first priority right now :).
So I have to keep reminding myself that he really did seriously believe
that his yoga sutra commentary could help me. The reason it did not,
was that he wrote it for his advanced students, and in fact any yoga
sutra commentary may not be the best text for beginners because it
s not set up to be understood all at once, so it may not give one a
good grounding to build on. That is my take on it anyway.
So I have been pretty frustrated about that, but then, some people
end up wasting far more time than I have (a few years), so I will try
not to feel too bad about it. It’s par for the course, to waste time
until you learn what works.
Tyler
PS I think some teachers might, after a while, start to have a somewhat
difficult time remembering what it was like to not be enlightened,
and then communication becomes a problem, and they don’t remember
where the beginners really need to start.