Why are Enlightened Teachers So Repetitive?
Have you ever wondered this!? Why are all the authentically enlightened teachers so repetitive? You ask one question and they say "It is as it is", you ask a completely different, like where's the bathroom, and "It is as it is." Or in the case of our beloved guide/teacher here, "rigorous, self-aware, contemplative life." Now listen. I'm writing this with a smile of friendship on my face. I mean no insult at all. Instead, I show my compliments, as you will see.
The Initial Elation of Intuitive InsightFor the last week or two, I've developed a system of meditation, walking and writing that has proven very efficacious for me. I found if I go on meditative walks, or what I call "intuitive walking", I experience insight after insight into dhamma. I began jotting down the comprehensive summaries of these insights on my phone, and then continue walking until something more compelling arose. It's a remarkable experience, because numerous coincidences and/or synchronicity between the internal and external experience that generate a strong draw--perhaps more aptly "gravity."
The Growing Burden of InsightI would go home, and write for hours as the intuitive stream continued. They really began to pile up. Soon, on these walks, these insights that I hadn't seen expressed anywhere before began to interconnect with well-known ancient knowledges, and then modern interpretations of the ancient knowledge. And, well, you get the idea. The web became larger and larger until I just couldn't figure out how to focus the book. In honesty, I want the book to contain ALL OF IT in all it's splendor, but I am beginning to feel like there will be no end to this. Which is half my point about teacher providing short or repetitive answers.
The Ultimate QuestionI began looking for ways to concisely express the most important knowledge, because I'm fairly certain no one will be able to read through what would be a bible-length book once finished. Which brings us back to our repetitive teachers. "Presence" this, "self-aware contemplative" that. I think, maybe like it is beginning to feel like my experience, they see TOO much. Perhaps to the tipping point, where the constant stream of insight is no longer as palpable as tranquility and peace.
After years, decades of explaining and teaching, do you think they would eventually just roll it all back in? I liked how the Buddha did it. He had only the most important information, as carefully organized and expressed as possible.
The Fool Inside Still LivesAnd yet, there is a part inside me--probably the intellect becoming addicted to the intuitive conscience--that wants to spend the rest of this life putting the compelling inter-connectivity of the Dhamma down on paper so that a generation full of intellects can have their minds blown, the hearts uplifted, and their consciousness liberated.