Guest guest Posted July 10, 2008 Report Share Posted July 10, 2008 Wed, 09 Jul 2008 14:40:14, " sppdestiny " <Revolution wrote: >>The sword stood for Male honor and martial spirit etc. The Chrysanthemum for culture, the pen. It was also paired with death and, homosexuality (the flower represents the male anus (japanese can be weird and intense)). The beauty of the flower represents the height of culture but also clinging to beauty as the flower is associated with November, the descent. Perhaps echoed in a quotation from the " Dhammapada " (some buddhist book of sutras): " the flower is beautiful, but within the flower there is an arrow pointing right at us. " Or as in the Japanese term " a-wa-re " , as characterized by Alan Watts (in some taped lecture): that quality of beauty, especially in art (Chinese Tang and Song, Japanses Sumi), of a sort of nostalgia, beauty by virtue of its very transience. Watts illustrates citing Shakespeare, the epilogue to The Tempest, about those magnificent castles of the human imagination, that, in the end, disappear into " thin, thin air " . Wed, 09 Jul 2008 17:39:23, " sppdestiny " <Revolution wrote: >> Sure there is a sense of loss but my experience is its insignificant in relationship to the lightness and clarity gained. And the point is that while emotions come and go, as do the seasons, our relationship to our experience is volitional and that's what makes the difference between health and pathology. Agreed. A rhetorical focus on loss is often an antidote to the deeply conditioned tendencies to accumulate, and hold-on. For instance, again gleaned from Jeffery Yuen: 1) ambitiously trying to absorb and master ever more and more literature, theory, treatment options and protocols, etc. in CM, vs the point where one gets it, the viewpoint and attitude (yi – intentionality / signification) of actually doing the medicine. At that point, let go of any particular school, regimen, as a priori standpoint, and just perceive, in the patient, exactly what's there ( " unproliferated reality " ). Then respond with whatever is appropriate on the basis of all the study and knowledge. 2) once asked about Taoist " letting-go " (that he'd mentioned in some medical context), Jeffery responded that it's a sense of not investing " blood " in phenomena that come and go ( " qi " ). E.g. taking on what a patient presents, experiencing it through oneself, responding to it (activity, qi), without letting it into one's blood, where memory, experience that has past and future (hun, shen) abides. (as in " our relationship to our experience is volitional " ?) Investing, " financing " (Jeffery likes these words, as also in " banking " the kidneys " ) with blood, yin, or jing is like attaching, making it into part of one's " self " , so to speak. Rather, letting it blow thru, like wind thru a willow tree (image of liver flexibility); lungs / qi inhaling and exhaling; moment to moment coming and going. Corollary: one needs to be able to clearly discern one's own ability to take-on AND then let-go in a " resonance " relationship with a patient in any particular case. Else watch out: burn-out, or worse. tricky, but core stuff, chris m Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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