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Nick_A
Guest
Hi all,
I have recently been reading about Buddhism and the concept of mindfulness. The author mentions always being aware of all of the stimuli around you (breathing, footsteps, etc) and all of the little things we normally do on "autopilot".
This seems like a great practice and I can understand its appeal. Yet, previous to this I was reading about Taoism in Chuang-Tzu. There, he mentioned the centipede speaking with the walrus. The walrus asks the centipede how he handles so many legs. The centipede responds that he doesn't try to think about it, but lets it flow naturally. If he actually stopped to think about it, he'd trip.
This sort of automatic "flow" as it might be called, also seems to me to be an approach with good potential and application.
But how can I reconcile these two concepts, which seem directly at odds with one another? I know they both come from different traditions, but might there be some philosophy by which we can know when mindfulness is proper and when flow is proper? Both of these traditions seem to be encouraging them exclusively, but this doesn't seem like truth to me.
Thoughts?
Thanks
p.s.
I'd also like to ask this of the folks over in the Taoist forum, but I once posted the same post in more than one thread and was deleted for spamming. I'm not sure how to do this properly?
Hi DT
The way to reconcile this apparant contradiction as I've come to understand it is to learn to be a human version of a duck. Consider the duck:
"Always behave like a duck: keep calm & unruffled on the surface, but paddle like hell underneath."
Mindfulness is conscious witnessing from above the water of the active life of the "flow" beneath the water.
Simone Weil uses the word purity in relation to mindfulness and defines purity as "the power to contemplate defilement." The above witnessing the below.
It is easy to think that mindfulness negates the automatic flow but when we see that these processes are happening at the same time but on different levels of reality on a vertical scale of being, there is no contradiction.
The duck's head is analogous to mindfulness and the feet paddeling like hell is the automatic "flow."