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Is Zen Enlightenment for real?

I’m intrigued by Zen meditation as a supposed path to enlightenment.

I’ve tried repeatedly — lying silent in bed, blanking out my mind, hearing nothing but the rhythm of my breath, seeing nothing but dark blurs behind my eyelids. But all it does is put me to sleep. In the end, I never get a smidgeon of enlightenment. I’m still just the same old me.

I wonder whether anyone finds enlightenment — or whether the quest is self-deceptive, a fantasy leading nowhere.

American Buddhism is a mushrooming field with many gurus. It’s followed by intellectuals such as brilliant atheist Sam Harris. Researcher John Horgan wrote some years ago: “The number of Buddhist centers in the United States has more than doubled to well over 1,000. As many as 4 million Americans now practice Buddhism, surpassing the total of Episcopalians. Of these Buddhists, half have post-graduate degrees.”

Horgan wrote in Slate that he plunged ardently into the exotic pursuit, but … “Eventually, and regretfully, I concluded that Buddhism is not much more rational than the Catholicism I lapsed from in my youth. Buddhism’s moral and metaphysical worldview cannot easily be reconciled with science — or more generally, with modern humanistic values.”

Buddhism’s insistence that suffering is an illusion theoretically could make followers less concerned when bigoted police kill unarmed Black men, or women are victimized by predators, or other outrages occur.

Horgan added that supposedly enlightened gurus can be unappetizing: “Chogyam Trungpa, who helped introduce Tibetan Buddhism to the United States in the 1970s, was a promiscuous drunk and bully, and he died of alcohol-related illness in 1987.”

Robert Fuller, former president of Oberlin College, made an intense study of meditation gurus and their adoring followers. Writing in Psychology Today, he summed up: “Getting a close look at several individuals who were advertised as enlightened led me to conclude that there’s a lot of hype and hypocrisy in the business. A good many of them, not unlike a fair number of academics I’d known, seemed to be in it primarily for the lifestyle. Many gurus are treated like deities and hold absolute power over their devotees. As ‘enlightened beings,’ they’re accountable to no one, and their foibles, appetites and excesses are given a pass.”

“The language of enlightenment tended to be esoteric, obscurantist and elitist, and the teachings attracted more credulous dabblers than credible seekers,” he continued. “In my quest, I did not come across anyone who could be said to dwell in a state of permanent enlightenment.”

I’ve never known any meditator who seemed enlightened. Have you? Have you ever seen amazing insights or remarkable creative output by an enlightenee?

James A. Haught, syndicated by PeaceVoice, was the longtime editor at the Charleston Gazette and has been the editor emeritus since 2015. He has won two dozen national newswriting awards and is author of 12 books and 150 magazine essays. He also is a senior editor of Free Inquiry magazine and was writer-in-residence for the United Coalition of Reason.
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Graylight · 51-55, F
First, what you’ve been doing is sleep relaxation, not meditation. Get out of bed. 😉

There are many Buddhist paths and many forms of meditation, from breathing to active. Maybe you’d benefit from some guided meditation so you can explore and learn as you find what works best for you. The path is wide- my partner just finished a silent retreat. For me, a week in Death Valley does it.

Good luck. When you’re looking for the right path, there’s no wrong direction.
SW-User
Really? A quite simple reading of many zen masters would reveal that there is no "path" to enlightenment. In fact, "enlightenment" is rarely, if ever, mentioned.

Zen, zazen, has nothing to do with "blanking out" your mind.

Oh yes, much American Buddhism is all about the pursuit of "enlightenment". "I want it fast and I want it NOW"! It takes a while, looking back through history, to recognise just how long it takes for the Dharma to truly take root in new places.

Why say any more.
SW-User
"Buddhism’s insistence that suffering is an illusion"

???????

From the foundational Theravada Texts:-

..... ask what you want, Kassapa.”

“How is it, Master Gotama: is suffering created by oneself?”

“Not so, Kassapa,” the Blessed One said.

“Then, Master Gotama, is suffering created by another?”

“Not so, Kassapa,” the Blessed One said.

“How is it then, Master Gotama: is suffering created both by oneself and by another?”

“Not so, Kassapa,” the Blessed One said.

“Then, Master Gotama, has suffering arisen fortuitously, being created neither by oneself nor by another?”

“Not so, Kassapa,” the Blessed One said.

“How is it then, Master Gotama: is there no suffering?”

“It is not that there is no suffering, Kassapa; there is suffering.”

“Then is it that Master Gotama does not know and see suffering?”

“It is not that I do not know and see suffering, Kassapa. I know suffering, I see suffering.”


Take it from there....
ranaya · 31-35, M
Hi @BlueSky

https://incarnated-masters.blogspot.com/

Go through this blog. Our spiritual lineage was founded in Sri Lanka and this blog has several interesting posts and insights into the meditative experiences.
laotzu92 · M
Before enlightenment, chop wood, carry water. After enlightenment, chop wood, carry water.
ArcAngel · 61-69, M
You need to pray to YaHWeH, Michael, Raphael, Gabriel,
Uriel and Jesus to come to you and bring the Higher Light
Stream to you and take it within you and read the Keys
of Enoch to get the Higher Knowledge into you. Just
leaving your mind blank will do nothing for you.
Love, Light and Peace,
Scott
these techniques allow you to reach a state of consciousness in which you don't care about anything

you can also put a certain background on this state, which will color your state with divinity, natural power, or disneyland, etc. if you wish
Fukfacewillie · 56-60, M
No, it's not real.

 
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