Tendai Marathon Monks
Tendai Marathon Monks
I was wondering why do the Tendai monks at Mount Hiei walk over 1000 miles around the mountain ?
What is the purpose behind the walking is it walking meditation to attain samadhi ?
I hope I'm not posting too much. I don't post more than once a day and if I do I try to find a section where I haven't posted previously. Any advice on how often I can post ?
What is the purpose behind the walking is it walking meditation to attain samadhi ?
I hope I'm not posting too much. I don't post more than once a day and if I do I try to find a section where I haven't posted previously. Any advice on how often I can post ?
"Suffer what there is to suffer, enjoy what there is to enjoy. Regard both suffering and joy as facts of life, and continue chanting Namu-myoho-renge-kyo. no matter what happens. How could this be anything other than the boundless joy of the Law? Strengthen your power of faith more than ever." - Nichiren Daishonin
Re: Tendai Marathon Monks
Hi ananda,
Keep posting until you run out of questions...
Keep posting until you run out of questions...
Re: Tendai Marathon Monks
maybe you want to watch this
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mYAuEF6Oto8
about the Tendai Kaihōgyō 回峰行 practitioners.
perhaps you'll find an answer there.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mYAuEF6Oto8
about the Tendai Kaihōgyō 回峰行 practitioners.
perhaps you'll find an answer there.
Life is great and death has to be just as great as life.
- Mike Tyson
People not only don't know what's happening to them, they don't even know that they don't know.
- Noam Chomsky
- Mike Tyson
People not only don't know what's happening to them, they don't even know that they don't know.
- Noam Chomsky
Re: Tendai Marathon Monks
The above you.tube link isn't working anymore. See here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=emE-dxCyRz4
John Steven's book about these remarkable practitioners is in print again. http://tinyurl.com/mtps4os
There you find good and reliable information about them.
John Steven's book about these remarkable practitioners is in print again. http://tinyurl.com/mtps4os
There you find good and reliable information about them.
Life is great and death has to be just as great as life.
- Mike Tyson
People not only don't know what's happening to them, they don't even know that they don't know.
- Noam Chomsky
- Mike Tyson
People not only don't know what's happening to them, they don't even know that they don't know.
- Noam Chomsky
Re: Tendai Marathon Monks
Glad to hear it! I know Keisho Leary at California Tendai Monastery had long been interested in getting that book out again. I wouldn't be surprised if he's the one who made it happen.WuMing wrote:The above you.tube link isn't working anymore. See here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=emE-dxCyRz4
John Steven's book about these remarkable practitioners is in print again. http://tinyurl.com/mtps4os
There you find good and reliable information about them.
Re: Tendai Marathon Monks
It may be to enjoy a 'deep fried mars bar' without concern about the calories.ananda wrote:I was wondering why do the Tendai monks at Mount Hiei walk over 1000 miles around the mountain ?
What is the purpose behind the walking is it walking meditation to attain samadhi ?
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... eback.html
However they are deeply inspirational, if not completely ga-ga.
Their intent is to become 'living Buddhas'.
Effort is good.
Right effort, in the right way, at the right time is better.
Re: Tendai Marathon Monks
Maybe I'm biased, maybe I'm ignorant, I just don't get these criticisms...lobster wrote:It may be to enjoy a 'deep fried mars bar' without concern about the calories.ananda wrote:I was wondering why do the Tendai monks at Mount Hiei walk over 1000 miles around the mountain ?
What is the purpose behind the walking is it walking meditation to attain samadhi ?
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... eback.html
However they are deeply inspirational, if not completely ga-ga.
Their intent is to become 'living Buddhas'.
Effort is good.
Right effort, in the right way, at the right time is better.
It's okay for Tibetan yogis to go up into the mountains and do nothing but seated meditation 24 hours a day, which includes maybe 4 hours of sleeping in lotus posture, but heaven forbid anybody do walking meditation instead... then you're just an ascetic...
This entire practice wouldn't have been that big deal 2000 years ago, when people walked everywhere and a 30 mile walking day wasn't outrageous.
It's probably not all that different than what folks like Ananda and company were doing back in the day when they did "walking meditation throughout the night."
I would wager a higher percentage of kids die in youth & high school sports leagues every year than monks doing the Kaihougyou.
The 9 days of Douiri, yeah, I'll grant that's pretty strict asceticism, but the walking part - building up from 30~40km a day to 84km a day over a 7 year period is not that outrageous imho.
Re: Tendai Marathon Monks
Certainly more people die daily of sitting on their asses doing nothing than die actively trying to do something inherently good. (I am speaking metaphorically here. It is possible to actively sit on your ass all day in a way that is inherently good. I am criticizing passivity and sedentary habits, not sesshin.)
I can't really criticize lobster's post, though, because I don't understand it all even after reading it twice.
I can't really criticize lobster's post, though, because I don't understand it all even after reading it twice.
Re: Tendai Marathon Monks
Right effort, in the right way, at the right time is better.
If you wish to become a Living Buddha, you can live in a cave in the Himalayas. Perhaps wander around mountains, and engage in other extreme practices, such as half starving yourself as the Buddha did.
It is impressive. It is inspirational. It often leads to change. Buddhahood . . . not so much.
There is not a magic formula of practices. Each person is different.
The Buddha gave up extremes of hedonism and asceticism, so we could find a balanced way.
There are other self indulgent practices. Impressive walling up. Living in a box for years. Isolationist Sanghas. Christian saints use to live on the top of poles for years. All of them were accredited with sanctity, some are worthy of listening to, many are not.
I prefer my saints to be ordinary, accessible filled with metta not weirdness. The Tendai marathon monks seem nice enough. I am sure they would make interesting dinner guests.
Personally I like weirdos but then that may mean normality/ordinariness is more what is personally required . . .
Do we need better human beings or another thousand years of bowing, running and robe wearing?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humanistic_Buddhism
Maybe we can have both?
If you wish to become a Living Buddha, you can live in a cave in the Himalayas. Perhaps wander around mountains, and engage in other extreme practices, such as half starving yourself as the Buddha did.
It is impressive. It is inspirational. It often leads to change. Buddhahood . . . not so much.
There is not a magic formula of practices. Each person is different.
The Buddha gave up extremes of hedonism and asceticism, so we could find a balanced way.
There are other self indulgent practices. Impressive walling up. Living in a box for years. Isolationist Sanghas. Christian saints use to live on the top of poles for years. All of them were accredited with sanctity, some are worthy of listening to, many are not.
I prefer my saints to be ordinary, accessible filled with metta not weirdness. The Tendai marathon monks seem nice enough. I am sure they would make interesting dinner guests.
Personally I like weirdos but then that may mean normality/ordinariness is more what is personally required . . .
Do we need better human beings or another thousand years of bowing, running and robe wearing?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humanistic_Buddhism
Maybe we can have both?
Re: Tendai Marathon Monks
Yeah, but as we discussed in the other thread, there were 14 dhutangas or "ascetic practices" that the Buddha was not only cool with, but he continued to practice long after his Enlightenment. He ditched self-mortifying ascetic practices, but not all ascetic practices.
Re: Tendai Marathon Monks
I'd like to pin you down on your actual position before I take the trouble of pointing out the contradictions and other problems in your posts so far in this thread.lobster wrote:Right effort, in the right way, at the right time is better.
Are you claiming that kaihogyo practice is not right effort, in the right way, at the right time? If this is your claim, on what basis do you make it? How are you informed on this--what is your evidence for making this claim? How are you qualified to make such a claim?
Re: Tendai Marathon Monks
Are you claiming
No.
No basis.
No evidence.
No qualifications.
Anything else you would like pinned?
Re: Tendai Marathon Monks
Arglebargle.
***
Here, lobster poses a question:
I've met kaihogyo practitioners. They are not weird. They are not robots. They are, as near as I can reckon, bodhisattvas. Good for them and good for us.
***
Here, lobster poses a question:
...implying that those involved with traditional forms of practice (summarized under the heading of bowing, running and robe wearing) are not productive of better human beings: that this form practice is not Buddhist practice at all. This is an unsubstantiated assumption, and one that slanders these practitioners. I find this attitude arrogant and closed-minded. Lobster asks, "Maybe we can have both?" without considering the possibility that, luckily for us, we already do, in the same bodies.lobster wrote:Do we need better human beings or another thousand years of bowing, running and robe wearing?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humanistic_Buddhism
Maybe we can have both?
I've met kaihogyo practitioners. They are not weird. They are not robots. They are, as near as I can reckon, bodhisattvas. Good for them and good for us.
Re: Tendai Marathon Monks
here is a slightly different and extended version (than the one years ago on Channel 4) of the documentary, about Tanno Kakudo, Kaihogyo practitioner, or the Kaihogyo practice of Tendai.
Marathon Monks of Mount Hiei - DER Documentary
Marathon Monks of Mount Hiei - DER Documentary
Life is great and death has to be just as great as life.
- Mike Tyson
People not only don't know what's happening to them, they don't even know that they don't know.
- Noam Chomsky
- Mike Tyson
People not only don't know what's happening to them, they don't even know that they don't know.
- Noam Chomsky
Re: Tendai Marathon Monks
Good for youJikan wrote:I've met kaihogyo practitioners. They are not weird. They are not robots. They are, as near as I can reckon, bodhisattvas. Good for them and good for us.
... and now I assume, back to the completely non weird, unprogrammed ...
Re: Tendai Marathon Monks
Maybe. But more importantly, good for them, and good for all of us. Good for them, because they are deep in their practice of the Buddha Dharma, which is something to rejoice in. And good for all of us, because their realization of the Buddha path can help liberate us all.lobster wrote:Good for youJikan wrote:I've met kaihogyo practitioners. They are not weird. They are not robots. They are, as near as I can reckon, bodhisattvas. Good for them and good for us.
So: I celebrate the profound practice of kaihogyo, and those yogins who are able to accomplish it.