Zenda71
Well-Known Member
Greetings all.
I was wondering this morning how one goes about choosing which school (or path) to follow. I'm American and wasn't born a Buddhist. So I get to choose rather than relying on tradition.
I've leaned toward the Theravadan tradition, which seems to be a more straightforward method (i.e., no extra deities or rituals). But as a woman, and probably as an American, I disagree with some of the traditions of this school, especially the more patriarchal elements. Zen scares me because its harshness, particularly the punishment aspect. The idea of having someone strike me while meditating is repulsive to me; I've had enough physical violence in my life. Tibetan Buddhism seems cluttered with deities and rules, and frankly reminds me of my Catholic upbringing to much. BUT the writings of Pema Chodron and Tenzin Palmo resonate very much with me. I especially admire Tenzin Palmo for her quest to given women into full access to the "deeper" Buddhist teachings.
I know that no group is perfect and that you take the "bad" with the "good". (Such is life.) But how do you know what to chose? Is it bad form to try out other lines of thought? Or is it really just a matter of "chop wood, carry water" and letting it unfold as it may.
I'd be interested to hear other's experiences/views. Is it just me? Or have others struggled with this?
With metta,
Zenda
p.s. I may have asked this before on this forum. It feels familiar to me, but that could be because it remains such an issue.
I was wondering this morning how one goes about choosing which school (or path) to follow. I'm American and wasn't born a Buddhist. So I get to choose rather than relying on tradition.
I've leaned toward the Theravadan tradition, which seems to be a more straightforward method (i.e., no extra deities or rituals). But as a woman, and probably as an American, I disagree with some of the traditions of this school, especially the more patriarchal elements. Zen scares me because its harshness, particularly the punishment aspect. The idea of having someone strike me while meditating is repulsive to me; I've had enough physical violence in my life. Tibetan Buddhism seems cluttered with deities and rules, and frankly reminds me of my Catholic upbringing to much. BUT the writings of Pema Chodron and Tenzin Palmo resonate very much with me. I especially admire Tenzin Palmo for her quest to given women into full access to the "deeper" Buddhist teachings.
I know that no group is perfect and that you take the "bad" with the "good". (Such is life.) But how do you know what to chose? Is it bad form to try out other lines of thought? Or is it really just a matter of "chop wood, carry water" and letting it unfold as it may.
I'd be interested to hear other's experiences/views. Is it just me? Or have others struggled with this?
With metta,
Zenda
p.s. I may have asked this before on this forum. It feels familiar to me, but that could be because it remains such an issue.