To those who started in one tradition then began following another, what was your experience of that transition, and why did you make it?

  • ricketycricket@lemmygrad.ml
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    1 year ago

    Over time I’ve had several teachers and practiced in different traditions.

    One of my first teachers was a Zen priest trained in Soto and Caodong. I didn’t stay with him because it wasn’t really what I was looking for. Then I met a teacher who had been trained in Jodo Shinshu as well as Soto and Rinzai Zen. I practiced Pure Land for a while, and it has always been the tradition that suited me most. I live in an area without much Buddhist presence, so I was mainly finding teachers who offered stuff online. The Shinshu guy was the first one I officially did the refuge ceremony with. But shortly after that I actually stumbled on a group in my area.

    They were a Tibetan group in the Nyingma school. I practiced with them for like seven or eight years. But eventually my practice with that group hit a wall, and that along with various other reasons led me to looking elsewhere, and I began again looking for a Pure Land group. Still not much in my area, but nowadays there are way more online resources. So I’ve been keeping up with livestreams with a Vietnamese group in Texas. I really like the Vietnamese traditions, and there are a couple groups within a couple hours of me. I’m planning on checking those out and maybe visiting them once a month while continuing to follow the livestreams from the Texas group.

    I really prefer the simplicity of Pure Land practice. Tibetan Buddhism tends to be extremely complex, and practices can be very intense, involved, and take up a lot of time. It’s normal for Tibetan lamas to want their students to do formal practice 1.5-2 hours every day. That’s waaaay too much. It had gotten to the point that I just didn’t even have a social life, let alone have time for organizing or being part of any leftist groups. Overall I really like Tibetan Buddhism, but right now the norm is for teachers to push a ngakpa-style study and practice.

    Ngakpas are traditionally full-time householder practitioners. Like it’s literally their profession. They’re village priests. That doesn’t work in the West, because people are already working full time jobs, and to be frank, it upsets me that this is the norm. It isn’t the norm in Tibet. Tibetan lamas need to get it through their heads that everyday people do not have hours of freetime to spend on formal practice. IMO, Tibetan Buddhists in the modern world need to focus on concise sadhanas. Concise sadhanas exist and they can take 15-20 minutes instead of over an hour. They’re way more realistic for the modern world. But they’re seen as kind of just preparing people for more intense practices. And I know this isn’t just a problem I have had. I have repeatedly met former Tibetan Buddhists who switched schools because of the intensity and high expectations.

    Unfortunately, many of the Zen groups in the West are highly watered down, and they often have similarly high expectations of long sessions of sitting. Theravada groups and Zen groups have also both been heavily impacted by colonization (read Esoteric Theravada by Kate Crosby on this topic).

    Personally, I think Pure Land Buddhism is the most suitable for everyday people. It is simple, concise and flexible. It doesn’t rely on the same kind of hierarchical relationships with teachers that Tibetan Buddhism and Zen require. It is easy to learn and put into practice. In fact, it has become quite normal, at least in diaspora, for Vietnamese Pure Land Buddhists, for example, to just practice on their own at home while using online resources, like dharma talks on Youtube, to fill in the gaps. But most Westerners have been conditioned to kind of be put-off by it due to superficial similarities to Christianity. But a huge number of leftists in the world are Pure Land Buddhists. Most Buddhists in China and Vietnam, for example, practice Pure Land (most of the time these groups will be presented as Chan/Thien, the mainland form of Zen, but in practice it is Zen for the monks, Pure Land for the people, precisely because of the simplicity of Pure Land vs. the intensity of Zen).

    Anyway, let me know if you have any questions. I’ve been really happy switching back to Pure Land. I keep harping on this, but the simplicity and conciseness of the practice has made it so much easier to just have a normal social life and engage with organizing and leftist groups in my area. I think it actually is more suitable to that kind of thing than the more popular schools in the West (Zen, Tibetan, even Theravada) are. It’s more democratic in its methods, and less reliant in a teacher, which is also nice because if you find out you’ve been following some horrible person (i.e. stories of abuse come to light), it isn’t as devastating as in Zen and Tibetan Buddhism because your practice isn’t so dependent on a teacher.

    • YouNaughtyMonsters
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      1 year ago

      This is a really interesting response. Ya see, I’m currently studying a Tibetan tradition and I’m finding it difficult to fulfill expectations. I’ve tried bringing this up with my teacher–obliquely–but most of the responses are variations on “If you do the practice right, you’ll want to devote that much time” or “You’re experiencing the laziness of attachment.” It feels like they’re expecting an ordained level of practice from non-ordained people. “Householders” don’t seem to be a thing.

      And so, part of me has started to look at–you guessed it–Pure Land. Not just for the comparative simplicity but because Avelokiteshvara is the Buddha I feel drawn to most strongly, and his spiritual guide is Amitabha. I feel like following Avelokiteshvara’s example can’t be bad.

      Also, this avoids another issue you mentioned, in which one’s Spiritual Guide (i.e., guru or teacher) is an actual person. Such beings are all too prone to exhibiting their nature as samsaric beings. It’s a big stumbling block for me.

      Thank you for taking the time to compose such a comprehensive and compassionate response.

      • ricketycricket@lemmygrad.ml
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        1 year ago

        Oh hey, sorry for the late response. I don’t check lemmygrad often. I just wanted to touch on something you said.

        There are entire Pure Land traditions focused more on Avalokiteshvara than on Amitabha. If that’s what you feel drawn to, then I think that’s great. I’d recommend reaching out to u/SentientLight on Reddit. He’s a Vietnamese-American (and ML) who practices specifically in an Avalokiteshvara-centered Pure Land lineage. He can definitely help you get started.

  • MiddleWeigh@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Personally I don’t follow one tradition. I have my own flavor, including stuff from outside of buddhism. I don’t really put much importance on tradition, it’s just whatever I feel.

    The closest thing to being apart of a tradition i have is that I’m a certified reiki healer, and I sort of have my own flavor of that as well, plus it’s not really buddhism per se.

  • Mostly_Frogs@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I haven’t switched traditions exactly, but something like it. I started out Theravada in my studies and understanding. I went to several 10 day retreats under Theravada teachers. Eventually I came into contact with some Chan and Zen practitioners, and learned some of their philosophy. I took the Bodhisattva vows and am firmly in that camp now. Now, as to your question about why to make a change?

    The Chan group that I buddied up with put us through a program of academic training during which I studied the Lotus Sutra. Initially I thought the Lotus Sutra was nonsense. Why in the world would the Buddha deceive us for “skillful means?”

    I’m still not sure I believe in the Lotus Sutra, but I don’t think it matters. The Buddha teaches therein that the true path becomes clear when we gain enough wisdom, so to speak. Specifically, he said that all his teachings so far were just in preparation for the true path of the Bodhisattva. It’s controversial to say that arhats are not done with their spiritual development, but considering the Buddha claims in the Lotus Sutra that becoming an arhat was just preparation for the Bodhisattva path…that means they are actually the same training. So whether Bodhisattva or not, the training and practice can be the same. If I become an arhat and see different, so be it.

    Some people balk at the idea of a Bodhisattva making a vow to come back eternally, but that’s not actually a vow that I took. Vowing to liberate all beings doesn’t mean staying here forever. I have vowed to become a Buddha. As daunting as it is to come back for several mahakappas, that’s ok, it’s still a finite time period to achieve the greatest relief of suffering.

    • arroyoflow@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      Thank you for sharing your history and perspectives, I found them both very informative and intriguing. If you’re interested in fielding questions, I have a few:

      1. What was your perception of Mahayana before changing traditions and how has it changed?

      2. I may be wrong, but I thought that the Lotus Sutra was central to the Mahayana tradition and by extension Chan. Has your reservations about the Sutra posed any challenges for you (internally or external) as you’ve embraced Chan?

      3. What do you think Chan offered you that you weren’t getting from the Theravada tradition.

      Thank you for your time.