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Difference between revisions of "Mastery"

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(Created page with "<poem> A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a ...")
 
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<poem>
 
<poem>
A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly.
+
A [[human being]] should be able to [[change]] a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, [[balance]] accounts, build a wall, set a bone, {{Wiki|comfort}} the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, [[die]] gallantly.
  
 
     Specialization is for insects.
 
     Specialization is for insects.
  
     —Robert Heinlein, Time Enough for Love
+
     —Robert Heinlein, [[Time]] Enough for [[Love]]
  
Buddhist tantra is about elegant, accurate, kind, effective, expansive action in the real world. That means that it values skill, creativity, and accomplishment.
+
[[Buddhist]] [[tantra]] is about elegant, accurate, kind, effective, expansive [[action]] in the real [[world]]. That means that it values skill, creativity, and [[accomplishment]].
  
Tantra aims at mastery: mastery of specifically religious techniques, but also of all arts, sciences, and practical know-how.
+
[[Tantra]] aims at [[mastery]]: [[mastery]] of specifically [[religious]] techniques, but also of all arts, sciences, and practical know-how.
  
Tantra engenders all-around cluefulness: savoir-faire, improvisatory panache, and practical élan.
+
[[Tantra]] engenders all-around cluefulness: savoir-faire, improvisatory panache, and practical élan.
  
Some specific methods of tantra develop mastery, but mostly it’s the power of the attitude. Tantra develops discipline, precision, commitment, and confidence. You need these general-purpose emotional skills to be competent at anything—or at everything.
+
Some specific methods of [[tantra]] develop [[mastery]], but mostly it’s the [[power]] of the [[attitude]]. [[Tantra]] develops [[discipline]], precision, commitment, and [[confidence]]. You need these general-purpose [[emotional]] skills to be competent at anything—or at everything.
  
Accomplishment is a natural outcome when you unclog energy. Then you free your passion—your caring about real-world specifics—for action. The ability to enjoy all circumstances cuts through complaints—the limiting ideas that something is wrong with the world or with yourself. Spacious passion produces spontaneity, grace, and pride without aggression. A tantrika needs nothing and has nothing to lose, so he or she is willing to take drastic action, without flinching, when needed.
+
[[Accomplishment]] is a natural outcome when you unclog [[energy]]. Then you free your passion—your caring about real-world specifics—for [[action]]. The ability to enjoy all circumstances cuts through complaints—the limiting ideas that something is wrong with the [[world]] or with yourself. Spacious [[passion]] produces spontaneity, grace, and [[pride]] without [[aggression]]. A tantrika needs [[nothing]] and has [[nothing]] to lose, so he or she is willing to take drastic [[action]], without flinching, when needed.
 
Specific skills
 
Specific skills
  
In pre-modern Tibet, well-educated lamas had to master a university curriculum that covered all the intellectual disciplines known then: from astrology through botany, calligraphy, dance, history, medicine, poetry, psychology, and so on to zoology. (Well, maybe not zoology, but at least demonology, a branch of cryptozoology!) Of course, most of the specific content of Tibetan education was completely wrong. However, the attitude that you should learn as much as possible, about as many things as possible, remains valuable.
+
In pre-modern [[Tibet]], well-educated [[lamas]] had to [[master]] a university curriculum that covered all the [[intellectual]] [[disciplines]] known then: from [[astrology]] through botany, {{Wiki|calligraphy}}, dance, {{Wiki|history}}, [[medicine]], [[poetry]], [[psychology]], and so on to zoology. (Well, maybe not zoology, but at least demonology, a branch of cryptozoology!) Of course, most of the specific content of [[Tibetan]] education was completely wrong. However, the [[attitude]] that you should learn as much as possible, about as many things as possible, remains valuable.
  
Westerners often have the idea that “spirituality” is the opposite of “worldly concerns.” They are surprised, baffled, and even annoyed when they see how much energy Tibetan teachers put into creating useful or beautiful things. “High lamas” turn out to be accomplished experts in unlikely disciplines like carpentry, target shooting, or film-making.
+
Westerners often have the [[idea]] that “[[spirituality]]” is the opposite of “[[worldly]] concerns.” They are surprised, baffled, and even annoyed when they see how much [[energy]] [[Tibetan]] [[teachers]] put into creating useful or [[beautiful]] things. “High [[lamas]]” turn out to be accomplished experts in unlikely [[disciplines]] like carpentry, target shooting, or film-making.
  
Tantra is anti-spiritual, though. It is mainly about “worldly concerns,” so this is no contradiction.
+
[[Tantra]] is anti-spiritual, though. It is mainly about “[[worldly]] concerns,” so this is no contradiction.
 
Elitism
 
Elitism
  
At this point, you may be thinking tantra sounds elitist. You might not be good at everything; you might not even be particularly good at anything. A religion that is only for special people might sound unattractive, or even evil.
+
At this point, you may be [[thinking]] [[tantra]] sounds elitist. You might not be good at everything; you might not even be particularly good at anything. A [[religion]] that is only for special [[people]] might [[sound]] unattractive, or even [[evil]].
  
Remember, though, that we’re now in the result section of this outline of tantra. I’m writing about the goal, or the ideal.
+
Remember, though, that we’re now in the [[result]] section of this outline of [[tantra]]. I’m [[writing]] about the goal, or the ideal.
  
Tantra has prerequisites; but being already accomplished is not one of them. Mastery is an aim, not a starting point.
+
[[Tantra]] has prerequisites; but [[being]] already accomplished is not one of them. [[Mastery]] is an [[aim]], not a starting point.
  
Tantra requires hard word, however. It is expansive, but not laid-back.
+
[[Tantra]] requires hard [[word]], however. It is expansive, but not laid-back.
  
Consensus Buddhism sometimes seems to promote itself as a religion for dropouts, space cadets, and victims. Tantra is incompatible with seeing yourself that way. If you are willing to let go of that kind of self-definition, it has methods for developing confidence and competence—but you need to leave ordinariness behind.
+
Consensus [[Buddhism]] sometimes seems to promote itself as a [[religion]] for dropouts, [[space]] cadets, and victims. [[Tantra]] is incompatible with [[seeing]] yourself that way. If you are willing to let go of that kind of self-definition, it has methods for developing [[confidence]] and competence—but you need to leave ordinariness behind.
  
Tantra is, in fact, elitist—depending on what you mean by that word. It could be meritocratic. It could be open to anyone who meets the functional prerequisites, and is willing to follow the path.
+
[[Tantra]] is, in fact, elitist—depending on what you mean by that [[word]]. It could be meritocratic. It could be open to anyone who meets the functional prerequisites, and is willing to follow the [[path]].
  
Tantra can’t be made compatible with some extremist egalitarian ideologies, though. It’s just a fact that some people are better at some things than others. That has natural consequences. For example, someone who is better at a skill can often teach it to someone who is less good at it, and not vice versa.
+
[[Tantra]] can’t be made compatible with some extremist {{Wiki|egalitarian}} ideologies, though. It’s just a fact that some [[people]] are better at some things than others. That has natural consequences. For [[example]], someone who is better at a skill can often teach it to someone who is less good at it, and not vice versa.
  
Historically, tantra has almost always been elitist in a different sense. It has mainly been reserved for the ruling class, because practical mastery leads to power, and the ruling class wants to keep power for itself. Social, political, and economic elites have created artificial obstacles to keep commoners from practicing tantra.
+
Historically, [[tantra]] has almost always been elitist in a different [[sense]]. It has mainly been reserved for the ruling class, because practical [[mastery]] leads to [[power]], and the ruling class wants to keep [[power]] for itself. {{Wiki|Social}}, {{Wiki|political}}, and economic elites have created artificial obstacles to keep commoners from practicing [[tantra]].
  
Tibet, for example, has a hereditary caste system, not unlike India’s. Tibetans—like civilized people everywhere—are obsessed with social class distinctions. It would be unacceptable for a Tibetan aristocrat to be religiously inferior to someone from a lower caste. So it is important to keep low-caste people from religious accomplishment.
+
[[Tibet]], for [[example]], has a hereditary [[caste]] system, not unlike India’s. Tibetans—like civilized [[people]] everywhere—are obsessed with {{Wiki|social}} class distinctions. It would be unacceptable for a [[Tibetan]] aristocrat to be religiously inferior to someone from a lower [[caste]]. So it is important to keep low-caste [[people]] from [[religious]] [[accomplishment]].
  
This is one reason Tibetan conservatives oppose teaching tantra to Westerners. It is not only racism; it is also classism, or casteism.
+
This is one [[reason]] [[Tibetan]] conservatives oppose [[teaching]] [[tantra]] to Westerners. It is not only racism; it is also classism, or casteism.
  
I’ll write much more about this in upcoming posts. It’s one key to understanding why Tibetan tantra is mostly useless in 2012.
+
I’ll write much more about this in upcoming posts. It’s one key to understanding why [[Tibetan]] [[tantra]] is mostly useless in 2012.
 
The bridge builder
 
The bridge builder
  
The epitome of tantric mastery was Thangtong Gyalpo (1385–1464).
+
The {{Wiki|epitome}} of [[tantric]] [[mastery]] was [[Thangtong Gyalpo]] (1385–1464).
  
He was a genius; a Tibetan Renaissance Man. For his religious accomplishment, he is generally regarded as a Buddha. He invented the iron-chain suspension bridge, which could span broad rivers for the first time, and built more than a hundred of them across the Tibetan region. He was the inventor of the art form known as “Tibetan opera,” and his operas are still frequently performed. He was an architectural innovator, building numerous temples of peculiar design, some of which I’ve visited. He was a painter, sculptor, doctor, composer, musician, and poet. I expect he cooked a mean momo.
+
He was a genius; a [[Tibetan]] {{Wiki|Renaissance}} Man. For his [[religious]] [[accomplishment]], he is generally regarded as a [[Buddha]]. He invented the iron-chain [[suspension]] bridge, which could span broad [[rivers]] for the first [[time]], and built more than a hundred of them across the [[Tibetan]] region. He was the inventor of the art [[form]] known as “[[Tibetan]] opera,” and his operas are still frequently performed. He was an architectural innovator, building numerous [[temples]] of peculiar design, some of which I’ve visited. He was a painter, sculptor, doctor, composer, musician, and poet. I expect he cooked a mean momo.
  
Here’s an extract from a letter to my lamas, from when I was on pilgrimage in Bhutan in 2003:
+
Here’s an extract from a [[letter]] to my [[lamas]], from when I was on [[pilgrimage]] in [[Bhutan]] in 2003:
  
     As an MIT graduate I have a special place in my heart for Thangtong Gyalpo: he’s the only acknowledged Buddha who was also an engineer. (As far as I know.)
+
     As an MIT graduate I have a special place in my [[heart]] for [[Thangtong Gyalpo]]: he’s the only [[acknowledged]] [[Buddha]] who was also an engineer. (As far as I [[know]].)
  
     According to my guidebook, only one of his bridges is still functioning. I saw it today, and I think the book was exaggerating. It is no longer functioning, and on the whole is no longer functional. Unfortunately, since the building of a modern Bailey bridge across the same gorge in 1978, it is no longer used, has not been maintained, and is rapidly falling apart; which is very sad.
+
     According to my guidebook, only one of his bridges is still functioning. I saw it today, and I think the [[book]] was exaggerating. It is no longer functioning, and on the whole is no longer functional. Unfortunately, since the building of a modern Bailey bridge across the same gorge in 1978, it is no longer used, has not been maintained, and is rapidly falling apart; which is very [[sad]].
  
     It’s a damn fine piece of engineering. It’s about seventy-five feet long, with nine chains hung to give a U-shaped cross-section. The chains are anchored in stone gatehouses at either end. The roofs of these have been allowed to collapse, so now water runs through them and the masonry is also collapsing. Unless some reconstruction is done, I think the chains will fall into the river within a decade.
+
     It’s a damn fine piece of {{Wiki|engineering}}. It’s about seventy-five feet long, with nine chains [[hung]] to give a U-shaped cross-section. The chains are anchored in stone gatehouses at either end. The roofs of these have been allowed to collapse, so now [[water]] runs through them and the masonry is also collapsing. Unless some reconstruction is done, I think the chains will fall into the [[river]] within a decade.
  
     The chains themselves are in perfect condition. They show very little rust, and look like they could have been forged a year ago. Apparently he used an alloy that is both strong and rust-proof. Although my engineering training was entirely un-civil, it looks to my eye like the bridge was substantially over-engineered, which is probably why it has survived six hundred years. (His bridge over the Tsangpo must have been several-fold longer; I speculate that he used the same gauge chain on all his bridges, which made for overkill on this one.)
+
     The chains themselves are in perfect [[condition]]. They show very little rust, and look like they could have been forged a year ago. Apparently he used an alloy that is both strong and rust-proof. Although my {{Wiki|engineering}} training was entirely un-civil, it looks to my [[eye]] like the bridge was substantially over-engineered, which is probably why it has survived six hundred years. (His bridge over the Tsangpo must have been several-fold longer; I speculate that he used the same gauge chain on all his bridges, which made for overkill on this one.)
  
 
     The cross-members have all fallen away, and the chains are now tied to each other instead with baling wire, which is also rusting away, so they hang free in many places.
 
     The cross-members have all fallen away, and the chains are now tied to each other instead with baling wire, which is also rusting away, so they hang free in many places.
  
     One could, however, still walk across; and having in this case more devotion than sense, I set out to do just that. I was about a quarter of the way across before Norbu, the translator, noticed and yelled at me to come back.
+
     One could, however, still walk across; and having in this case more devotion than [[sense]], I set out to do just that. I was about a quarter of the way across before Norbu, the translator, noticed and yelled at me to come back.
  
     Obviously these bridges were great things. I asked Norbu why people hadn’t built more of them after Thangtong Gyalpo left. I had to ask three times in different ways before he understood, because it was such a stupid question. “They couldn’t,” he finally replied. “He built it with his miracle power, you know.”
+
     Obviously these bridges were great things. I asked Norbu why [[people]] hadn’t built more of them after [[Thangtong Gyalpo]] left. I had to ask three times in different ways before he understood, because it was such a stupid question. “They couldn’t,” he finally replied. “He built it with his [[miracle]] [[power]], you [[know]].”
  
     This is why I hate miracles: they are such an obstacle to people using their own gumption and applying methods: whether methods of civil engineering or meditation.
+
     This is why I [[hate]] [[miracles]]: they are such an obstacle to [[people]] using their own gumption and applying methods: whether methods of civil {{Wiki|engineering}} or [[meditation]].
  
 
Tragically, the bridge was completely destroyed a year later.
 
Tragically, the bridge was completely destroyed a year later.

Revision as of 16:54, 3 September 2013

A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly.

    Specialization is for insects.

    —Robert Heinlein, Time Enough for Love

Buddhist tantra is about elegant, accurate, kind, effective, expansive action in the real world. That means that it values skill, creativity, and accomplishment.

Tantra aims at mastery: mastery of specifically religious techniques, but also of all arts, sciences, and practical know-how.

Tantra engenders all-around cluefulness: savoir-faire, improvisatory panache, and practical élan.

Some specific methods of tantra develop mastery, but mostly it’s the power of the attitude. Tantra develops discipline, precision, commitment, and confidence. You need these general-purpose emotional skills to be competent at anything—or at everything.

Accomplishment is a natural outcome when you unclog energy. Then you free your passion—your caring about real-world specifics—for action. The ability to enjoy all circumstances cuts through complaints—the limiting ideas that something is wrong with the world or with yourself. Spacious passion produces spontaneity, grace, and pride without aggression. A tantrika needs nothing and has nothing to lose, so he or she is willing to take drastic action, without flinching, when needed.
Specific skills

In pre-modern Tibet, well-educated lamas had to master a university curriculum that covered all the intellectual disciplines known then: from astrology through botany, calligraphy, dance, history, medicine, poetry, psychology, and so on to zoology. (Well, maybe not zoology, but at least demonology, a branch of cryptozoology!) Of course, most of the specific content of Tibetan education was completely wrong. However, the attitude that you should learn as much as possible, about as many things as possible, remains valuable.

Westerners often have the idea that “spirituality” is the opposite of “worldly concerns.” They are surprised, baffled, and even annoyed when they see how much energy Tibetan teachers put into creating useful or beautiful things. “High lamas” turn out to be accomplished experts in unlikely disciplines like carpentry, target shooting, or film-making.

Tantra is anti-spiritual, though. It is mainly about “worldly concerns,” so this is no contradiction.
Elitism

At this point, you may be thinking tantra sounds elitist. You might not be good at everything; you might not even be particularly good at anything. A religion that is only for special people might sound unattractive, or even evil.

Remember, though, that we’re now in the result section of this outline of tantra. I’m writing about the goal, or the ideal.

Tantra has prerequisites; but being already accomplished is not one of them. Mastery is an aim, not a starting point.

Tantra requires hard word, however. It is expansive, but not laid-back.

Consensus Buddhism sometimes seems to promote itself as a religion for dropouts, space cadets, and victims. Tantra is incompatible with seeing yourself that way. If you are willing to let go of that kind of self-definition, it has methods for developing confidence and competence—but you need to leave ordinariness behind.

Tantra is, in fact, elitist—depending on what you mean by that word. It could be meritocratic. It could be open to anyone who meets the functional prerequisites, and is willing to follow the path.

Tantra can’t be made compatible with some extremist egalitarian ideologies, though. It’s just a fact that some people are better at some things than others. That has natural consequences. For example, someone who is better at a skill can often teach it to someone who is less good at it, and not vice versa.

Historically, tantra has almost always been elitist in a different sense. It has mainly been reserved for the ruling class, because practical mastery leads to power, and the ruling class wants to keep power for itself. Social, political, and economic elites have created artificial obstacles to keep commoners from practicing tantra.

Tibet, for example, has a hereditary caste system, not unlike India’s. Tibetans—like civilized people everywhere—are obsessed with social class distinctions. It would be unacceptable for a Tibetan aristocrat to be religiously inferior to someone from a lower caste. So it is important to keep low-caste people from religious accomplishment.

This is one reason Tibetan conservatives oppose teaching tantra to Westerners. It is not only racism; it is also classism, or casteism.

I’ll write much more about this in upcoming posts. It’s one key to understanding why Tibetan tantra is mostly useless in 2012.
The bridge builder

The epitome of tantric mastery was Thangtong Gyalpo (1385–1464).

He was a genius; a Tibetan Renaissance Man. For his religious accomplishment, he is generally regarded as a Buddha. He invented the iron-chain suspension bridge, which could span broad rivers for the first time, and built more than a hundred of them across the Tibetan region. He was the inventor of the art form known as “Tibetan opera,” and his operas are still frequently performed. He was an architectural innovator, building numerous temples of peculiar design, some of which I’ve visited. He was a painter, sculptor, doctor, composer, musician, and poet. I expect he cooked a mean momo.

Here’s an extract from a letter to my lamas, from when I was on pilgrimage in Bhutan in 2003:

    As an MIT graduate I have a special place in my heart for Thangtong Gyalpo: he’s the only acknowledged Buddha who was also an engineer. (As far as I know.)

    According to my guidebook, only one of his bridges is still functioning. I saw it today, and I think the book was exaggerating. It is no longer functioning, and on the whole is no longer functional. Unfortunately, since the building of a modern Bailey bridge across the same gorge in 1978, it is no longer used, has not been maintained, and is rapidly falling apart; which is very sad.

    It’s a damn fine piece of engineering. It’s about seventy-five feet long, with nine chains hung to give a U-shaped cross-section. The chains are anchored in stone gatehouses at either end. The roofs of these have been allowed to collapse, so now water runs through them and the masonry is also collapsing. Unless some reconstruction is done, I think the chains will fall into the river within a decade.

    The chains themselves are in perfect condition. They show very little rust, and look like they could have been forged a year ago. Apparently he used an alloy that is both strong and rust-proof. Although my engineering training was entirely un-civil, it looks to my eye like the bridge was substantially over-engineered, which is probably why it has survived six hundred years. (His bridge over the Tsangpo must have been several-fold longer; I speculate that he used the same gauge chain on all his bridges, which made for overkill on this one.)

    The cross-members have all fallen away, and the chains are now tied to each other instead with baling wire, which is also rusting away, so they hang free in many places.

    One could, however, still walk across; and having in this case more devotion than sense, I set out to do just that. I was about a quarter of the way across before Norbu, the translator, noticed and yelled at me to come back.

    Obviously these bridges were great things. I asked Norbu why people hadn’t built more of them after Thangtong Gyalpo left. I had to ask three times in different ways before he understood, because it was such a stupid question. “They couldn’t,” he finally replied. “He built it with his miracle power, you know.”

    This is why I hate miracles: they are such an obstacle to people using their own gumption and applying methods: whether methods of civil engineering or meditation.

Tragically, the bridge was completely destroyed a year later.

Source

meaningness.wordpress.com