Why meditate?
Posted: Thu May 30, 2013 10:57 pm
This from Brad Warner's latest blog:
"I think that in the future - maybe 50 years from now, maybe 200 if we're pretty slow - people will look back on our culture where very few people meditated the way we look back on cultures where very few people brushed their teeth. They'll wonder how we could have neglected something that is so obviously necessary for a decent life. They'll marvel at the fact that the knowledge was there, that the teachers were available, that the activity itself was so simple and obviously good for you, and yet so few people took the initiative to do it."
It's an interesting thought. I agree with Brad. Future generations will almost certainly think it strange that meditation was once a minority practice, rather than the norm. Or is that just me being optimistic about future generations?
Btw, here's the link to Brad Warner's very entertaining blog:
http://hardcorezen.info
Brad Warner is the author of Hardcore Zen, a book I highly recommend.
"I think that in the future - maybe 50 years from now, maybe 200 if we're pretty slow - people will look back on our culture where very few people meditated the way we look back on cultures where very few people brushed their teeth. They'll wonder how we could have neglected something that is so obviously necessary for a decent life. They'll marvel at the fact that the knowledge was there, that the teachers were available, that the activity itself was so simple and obviously good for you, and yet so few people took the initiative to do it."
It's an interesting thought. I agree with Brad. Future generations will almost certainly think it strange that meditation was once a minority practice, rather than the norm. Or is that just me being optimistic about future generations?
Btw, here's the link to Brad Warner's very entertaining blog:
http://hardcorezen.info
Brad Warner is the author of Hardcore Zen, a book I highly recommend.