Sunday, November 28, 2010
Death Of The Ego
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Death of the Ego
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
The Voices Of The River
Siddhartha talks about how he had been through many phases in his beliefs. When he was a boy he was into sacrifices and gods. Later on he was an ascetic and learned to fast and deal with the weather. After his brush with the shramanas he goes and learns from the great Buddha Gotama. With Kamala he learned about the joy of love and with Kamaswami he learned the ways of business. He thought he was stooping to a new level of ill minded thought when he wanted to go suicide in the river. When he heard the word om he felt like he has slept properly and awoken properly for the first time in one hundred years. But he also feels like he has come all this way only to become a child again. He feels like he has become a fool in thinking suicide is the way to enlightenment. I think he is trying to say that this is kind of like his second awakening and he feels reborn again.
Avery Valerio
Time and Voices According to the River
The Ferryman's Virtue by Fletcher Reich
Life Recap
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
Voices of the River
Personally, I never would have thought of the river that way. It was creative and interesting to read about how you can interpret a river and your surroundings. My grandpa has told me before that by learning from your surroundings you can achieve anything. I never really thought of it much until I read this book and its now that I finally realize how right he truly was. If everyone simply payed attention to their surroundings, everything would be much better understood. Living in a world of material, its often forgotten what we can learn from nature and the world.
Death to the Ego
The Ferryman
When the ferryman told Siddhartha this he was saying that you can learn many things from the river such as listening. Because the river is always clean and cycles around at all times, Vasudeva has learned that most good things will come back to him. The river taught him to become a good listener by listening to Vasudeva when he was still learning to listen. The river is an object that cannot talk but can listen. Also Vasudeva might have learned from his reflection.
Time and Voice of the River
The Virtue of Listening
“Of the ferryman virtues, this one was his greatest: he knew how to listen like few people do.”(pg. 82) He can listen, and when he does, he speaks not a word. The ferryman can make the speaker feel their words absorbing into him. He did not judge, nor did he skip information. He simply sat, and allowed Siddhartha’s words flow through him. This made Siddhartha realize the joy, and happiness that comes from opening up to such a listener. “Having ones own life-ones seeking, one’s suffering-either this others heart.”(pg. 82) If you can find someone who can listen, you can find answers in yourself by re examining information. It feels good to be heard. In the end, this is one step closer to enlightenment. It means Siddhartha can now listen. He can now make others feel like the ferryman the ferryman listened to him.
Siddhartha's Ego
Ferryman's virtue
The Ferryman’s Virtue
The Ferryman is a wise man. Upon being asked to teach all his knowledge to Siddhartha he says, you will not learn from me, I have nothing to teach you, I learned all by listening to the river and you will learn this way too. Siddhartha sees knowledge in this man’s eyes and actions. And despite his previous thoughts of not wanting a teacher he aspires to re-learn to listen like the ferryman. When Vasudeva tells Siddhartha he won’t tech him Siddhartha is disappointed but interested in why he made the refusal. This exert shows that Siddhartha has found the right path towards nirvana and has begun the long journey of listening. Over time Siddhartha listens to the river and hears it out. He quickly is becoming happy and is showing the first signs of enlightenment. The ferryman’s virtue is listening, by living with the river he has been taught to listen and not speak. He has learned a very wise skill that most would just pass by. Vasudeva knows right speech, right speech; to speak only when necessary and not say anything that may harm another, to listen “Vasudeva spoke not a word himself, the speaker felt him receiving his words into himself… just listening…” pg110. Siddhartha sees that through listening the ferryman has reached perfection, he has let the suffering of Siddhartha enter his hart and embraced it knowingly. This is significant because Siddhartha needs to learn not to be taught, he needs to learn to listen and wait; and now he has done this.
Time and Voices According to the River
The Ferryman-Time and Voices according to the River
Ferryman's Virtue Smoles
In the beginning the selection describes how Siddhartha enters the ferryman’s hut and accepts his gift of food. While they eat Siddhartha tells him of his journeys. The tale continues on late into the night and Vasudeva listens very intently. When Siddhartha is finished Vasudeva says that he thought correctly: the river had spoken to Siddhartha. He invites Siddhartha to stay with him, eat his food and sleep in his room. Siddhartha accepts gracefully. Siddhartha is surprised that Vasudeva was such an amazing listener and he explains that he learned this from the river. Siddhartha decides to stay and learn from the river because it has many voices and when you hear all of them together the word OM reveals itself. The reason this selection has significance is because the ferryman is just as important of a teacher as Kamala, Kamaswami, and Gotama were. All these people have helped Siddhartha on his path to enlightenment. What the selection is revealing to us is that through the river Siddhartha can finally reach nirvana. Everything in his life has led him to this point where he will learn from the ferryman and the river and he will finally reach enlightenment. In my opinion I care about the ferryman. I think he is a good man; an undiscovered hero in a sense. As he says he has taken many people across the river and to many it was nothing but an obstacle but to the ones where it became something more than that, he was willing to teach. He seems very kind and as though he will help Siddhartha immensely. I like this chapter because I can relate to this man. I wish I was able to listen as well as him and only speak when necessary. He’s only there to help.
Ferryman's Virtue
This chapter is a pivotal point in the book; it is kind of a reawakening for Siddhartha Gotama. The old Siddhartha returns to the ferryman, to where his journey to the child people started. He lives and learns by the river along with Vasudeva who teaches him one of the greatest virtues; to listen. At first Siddhartha is astonished with this skill that Vasudeva has mastered. “Look, you have already learned from the riveer that is good to aim low, to sink, to seek the bottom” Then he himself finds this talent along with the realization that there is no time. As the ferryman put it “…the river is everywhere at once-at its source, at its mouth…everywhere at the same time…there is only the present, and not the shadow we called the future.” Siddhartha is learning about listening from his newest teacher the river. It’s important because this is his reawakening. He learns from Vasudeva as well as the river, in the small amount of time he was with Vasudeva he learned some deep things. Siddhartha learns that he has reached enlightenment and side by side with the happy Vasudeva. The ferryman’s virtue is one of the most important thing that Siddhartha will learn in his life. It’s an important for him to learn this because some people just talk and talk with no meaning, but the Ferryman can listen, his special important virtue.
Tristan River voice
“Is it not true, friend, that the river has many voices, very many voices? Does it not have the voice of a king, of a warrior, of a bull, of a night bird, of a woman about to give birth, of a man sighing, and a thousand other voices too?”
“All creatures’ voices are in its voice.” Vasudeva
All these quotes have been chosen by my very good eye. The points of these three quotes are to talk about the time and the voice of the river. In the second quote it talks about the rivers many voices. The river says every thing and with all these voices it comes together and to Siddhartha it makes Om. The last time I was at a river it did not make and om sound. The book then relates the river to time. They do this because you really can’t stop time. The river also resembles that because it is always going. It is also in continuous cycle. Time does not actually exist and it is always moving around the river is also spread everywhere. There is no such thing as the future or past just now. Like time the river is only in one place the river bed the past (in the ocean) and the future (clouds) really aren’t real
Sidd's Recap
Death of the Ego.
Siddhartha is saying that what he had been trying to fight, his ego, had been absorbed by everything that made him who he was. Siddhartha used to be the priest in training or the ambitious shramana determined to rid himself of his ego, but in doing so he was just intergrading it further. When he became controlled by wealth and greed, he stopped meditating and distanced himself from everything he once was. When he let go of his knowledge, his ego left as well. I loved how the only was to really save himself was to destroy himself. "Maybe self-improvement isn't the answer, maybe self-destruction is the answer." –T.D.
Time and Voices According to the River
Siddhartha recaps his life-pg 75
Summary
Siddhartha tells how when he was a young boy he was completely involved with gods and sacrifices. When he was a youth it was all about meditation, asceticism and thinking. He suffered as an ascetic then learned from the great Buddha Gotama. Then he learned about the child people and love and money by living in Samsara. He changed from a man to a child. He lost his ability to think. He had to become a fool to see atman in himself again.
Interpret
This is a very pivotal point in this chapter. As Siddhartha looks back on his life and sees how it was all building up to the point he’s at now. He seems to be very grateful for all the events in his life.
Significance
This is very important part in the book because Siddhartha realizes how all his suffering and indulgence in Samsara was exactly what he needed to lose his ego and find atman in him again in order to continue his journey. He is now prepared to continue upon his quest to enlightenment.
Response
This part of the chapter made me think to myself that maybe he was finally drawing very near to enlightenment and that in the next few chapters he may reach nirvana.
Nico-river
“Is it not true, friend, that the river has many voices, very many voices? Does it not have the voice of a king, of a warrior, of a bull, of a night bird, of a women giving birth, of a man sighing, and a thousand other voices too?”
“That is true,” nodded Vasudeva, “all creatures’ voices are in its voice.”
These three quotes on page 84 really describe the time and voice of the river. The first quote on this page has one major meaning: That time does not exist and the river demonstrates this by being in multiple places at one time. The river is in all these places at once and this is the same thing with time, time is in many places at once and is still one thing. There is no such thing as the past, present or future it is all one. This is a lesson that the river teaches Siddhartha, that he can relate his life to. The second and third quote meanings are the river can teach many things in many different ways. It may show you anger with its roar, or it could show you what peacefulness is with its silence. When all these voices come together the sound they make is “Om” and this is the sound of the universe. I think some of this is true I believe in the fact that time does not exist and they river demonstrates this. But I do not believe in the idea that the river makes the word “Om”. I don’t believe this because I don’t hear the word “Om” from a river.
The Ferryman's Virtue
Vasudeva has reached enlightenment, but he doesn't express it through words, but actions. The key action is listening. Siddhartha tells Vasudeva of his journey and how he got there. Even though Vasudeva does not say a word during Siddhartha's story, Siddhartha knows he listened to every word. Siddhartha admires this virtue because he knows that few people know how to listen. At the end of Siddhartha’s story, Vasudeva says "The river spoke to you." and offers Siddhartha a place to stay with him. He thanks Vasudeva and accepts his offer. He also thanks him for listening so well to his story, and hopes to learn from him how to listen so well. Vasudeva replies "You will learn that, but not from me. The river taught me how to listen; you will learn that from the river too."
-Connor Courter
Siddhartha's Recap
The ferryman’s greatest virtue is listening. When the two men were sitting on a tree trunk late in the night Siddhartha told him his story. Vasudeva listened with great attention and took everything in. Siddhartha could feel him receiving his words into himself."the speaker felt him receiving his words into him self, quietly, openly, unhurriedly, missing nothing, not jumping ahead through impatience, attributing neither praise nor blame-just listening." Siddhartha felt happiness speaking to such a listener. Vasudeva asks Siddhartha when he is done with his story if he will live with him. Siddhartha accepts and tells the man that he will learn from him, this is when Siddhartha asks Vasudeva if he will be his teacher. Vesudeva replies “The river taught me how to listen; you will learn from that river too. The river knows everything; everything can be learned from it...” This is how the ferryman is teaching Siddhartha and he will learn much from the river.
The ferryman’s virtue is important because when you listen you learn more than when you just talk and ask questions. Siddhartha will learn a lot from the river and this is how he will start to become enlightened. He will also become enlightened from watching and listening to Vasudeva.
I feel that listening is not something the people are good at today. For example many celebrities don't listen and they just talk and talk. If people began to listen maybe they would make better choices. I also think that listening is a very big part of enlightenment because if you just talked and told people what to do you would have a big ego; and you can’t become enlightened with a big ego.
Death of the Ego
This “Death of the Ego” was when the song bird inside of him had died, really his inner voice. Without it now he is "like a child, so full of confidence, so fearless, so full of joy." Though he thought before when he was told he was wiser than others and amazing for such a young soul he was finding a path to enlightenment, when really he was making his ego bigger. He now realizes that his ego was a problem he was having to being able to find enlightenment. The quote I chose is “That is why he had to continue to endure these ugly years, to endure the revulsion, the emptiness, the meaninglessness of a lost and desolate life until the end, to the point of bitter despair, until Siddhartha the hedonist, Siddhartha the greedy, could die.” This quote is saying that in order to find happiness, you must feel the pain in life and suffering, experience all that life has to offer. This way you know how good life is when the pain and suffering has ended. Also I thought that getting rid of his ego was important because it’s him letting go of what was growing more inside him. It was making him unhappy; this is what was stopping him from reaching happiness and enlightenment. Loosing it is what will help him reach what he is seeking.
Death of the Ego (page 77-78) by Nick N.
Page 77-78
Siddhartha has been fighting his ego since he decided to be an ascetic and lately, it has taken over him. As he is sitting near the river in the forest he starts to reflect. Why hasn’t his ego left him yet? Thinking back, he has always been, well, better than the rest of them, and from there his ego took over him. No matter what he did to destroy his ego by fasting and austerities, it always came back. It came back stronger, to the point where his mind was corrupt with power, pleasure and greed, to the point where the shramana within him died. He looked deep within the river, beyond the flowing water; it was telling him something that he just didn’t know yet.
Time and Voices According to the River
Ferryman`s Virtue
“It is as I thought. The river spoke to you. It is your friend too; it spoke to you too.” Vasudeva the ferryman has reached enlightenment and his main virtue is listening. He is peaceful because he knows how to listen to everyone and so he learns many things. Vasudeva is a ferryman and is always on the river, he does not see it as an obstacle as all the others do, its sacred to him the river is his teacher the one who taught him to listen. He does not talk about himself he listens to what others have to say and heres their story so he knows what theyve gone through and so he can help. Vasudeva has been alone for a long time just him and the river, he is not discouraged or lonely he is at peace and he hangs out with the river. He is not a teacher or a wise man nor is he a buddha, he is just a simple person who has learned an important skill.
Time And Voice According To The River
The Ferryman’s virtue is to listen to the river and learn from it. He sais that he can’t teach Siddhartha but the river can. The river taught Vasudeva how to listen and he thinks it can teach Siddhartha to. The river knows everything and you can learn from it. The river is a tool that’s available for you to use. “Look you have already learned from the river that it is good to aim low, to sink, to seek the bottom.” This is what Siddhartha should do to fallow his goal. Its like a rock going straight into the water.
....
In this quote, in the chapter ‘The Ferryman’, Siddhartha learns from the river. The river tells him that there is no time, and everything is separated by only shadows and nothing real. The river only knows the present. Saddhartha also notices that the river has the voices of every creature in it, and Vasudeva the ferryman tells him that the voice in the river is Om. This is significant because the river is like Siddhartha’s inner voice that tells him what to do, like his conscience, and gives him advice. Siddhartha also learns that the river can teach everything if he listens to it. Also, Siddhartha’s life mirrors the river in that his past selves such as the Brahmin, the shramana, and the rich man are not completely separate, but separated only by shadows and nothing really substantial. I think that the river is right; that there really is no past or future, because all of these supposedly different points in time are actually the present. What we think is the future right now will become the present eventually, and what is perceived as the past was once the present; therefore everything is the present and there is no time, like the river says.
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Death of Ego R.K.
Death of the Ego JR
Siddhartha's Life
Siddhartha's recap of his life
Siddhartha’s recap of his life
In the chapter, By the River, Siddhartha has a sudden awakening and thinks back on his life. Siddhartha thinks about how as a child and man, he had been so dedicated to his meditating, and attaining the life of an ascetic. He had once gained the wisdom of the great Buddha and learned about the unity that the whole world has. From Kamala and Kamaswami he learned the pleasures of love and learned how to be a businessman. He had now become one of the child people. He had lost all of his knowledge and inner thoughts. After losing all of these things, he realized he has to experience all of these things, in order to re-awaken, and hear om again. He thinks that the path he is following may just be a circle, but he is going to follow the path anyways. This is important because it is the first time he sees his mistakes, and knows he has to do something about it. Siddhartha sees that maybe all of the things he has done in the past are not mistakes. They were just things that he had to experience himself in order to see that he needed all of those things to help him become a child again, and re-learn what he has already been taught. My opinion on this is that Siddhartha’s recap is correct because I think you have to learn things by experience. Without learning from your mistakes, you cannot really see what is wrong and right. Becoming a child again would probably be the best thing for him so he can have a fresh start, and do the right things this time.
The Ferryman's Virtue
Ferryman Virtue-Sarah Barr
The ferryman’s virtue is to listen. The ferryman says that he has learned to listen from the river and so will Siddhartha. That is the only thing that he can do really well, he is not good at talking or teaching. Siddhartha is impressed about how well he can listen and he wants to learn. The ferryman says that he can not teach him how he must learn it from the river. This is important because this is not the only thing he can learn from the river he can learn other things too. Listening is just one thing that the river will teach him. I think this is important because listening is something that is not easy to do and Siddhartha is impressed on how well he can. The ferryman can also listen to the river which is something that very few people can do. Since the ferryman can do this he tells Siddhartha that he can listen to the river too and that will help him become a better listener.