Showing posts with label kama sutra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kama sutra. Show all posts

Friday, September 9, 2011

Mara: Buddhism's Super Devil, Cupid, Lucifer

Ananda W.P. Guruge (U. West, UNESCO, Sri Lankan ambassador) Wisdom Quarterly
Mara Devaputra, or the Super Devil, is more dangerous than the other maras.

The Buddha's Encounters with Mara the Tempter
Their Representation in Literature and Art
The Dictionary of Pali Proper Names (Prof. G.P. Malalasekera) introduces Mara (a Buddhist "super devil" as:
  • "the personification of Death"
  • "the Evil One"
  • "the Tempter"
  • "(the Buddhist counterpart of the Devil or Principle of Destruction)."
It continues: "The legends concerning Mara are, in the books, very involved and defy any attempts at unraveling them."[1]

Analyzing a series of allusions to Mara in the commentarial literature, Prof. Malalasekera further elaborates on his definition with the following observations:

  1. "In the latest accounts, mention is made of five maras -- Khandha-mara, Kilesa-mara, Abhisankhara-mara, Maccu-mara, and Devaputta-mara. Elsewhere Mara is spoken of as one, three, or four."[2]
  2. "The term Mara, in the older books, is applied to the whole of the worldly existence, the Five Aggregates, or the realm of rebirth, as opposed to nirvana."[3]
  3. Commentaries speaking of three maras specify them as Devaputta-mara, Maccu-mara, and Kilesa-mara. When four maras are referred to, they appear to be the five maras mentioned above minus Mara Devaputta.

Prof. Malalasekera proceeds to attempt "a theory of Mara in Buddhism," which he formulates in the following manner:

"The commonest use of the word was evidently in the sense of Death. From this it was extended to mean 'the world under the sway of death' (also called Mara-dheyya, e.g. AN IV 228) and the beings therein.

"Thence, the kilesas (defilements) also came to be called Mara in that they were instruments of Death, the causes enabling Death to hold sway over the world. All temptations brought about by the kilesas were likewise regarded as the work of Death.

"There was also evidently a legend of a devaputta [a "son of the gods," one born among the celestial devas] of the Vasavatti world called Mara, who considered himself the head of the Kamavacara-world [the sense sphere] and who recognized any attempt to curb the enjoyment of sensual pleasures as a direct challenge to himself and to his authority.

"As time went on these different conceptions of the word became confused one with the other, but this confusion is not always difficult to unravel."[4]

What follows from this statement, even though Malalasekera does not elucidate, is that the term Mara, when it occurs in Buddhist literature, could signify any one of the following four:

  1. An anthropomorphic deity ruling over a heaven in the sense sphere, namely, Paranimmita-Vasavatti. He is meant when Mara is called the king of the sensual realm. In this position, he is as important and prestigious as Sakka (King of the Devas) and Maha Brahma (the "Great Supremo") in whose company he is often mentioned in the canonical literature. This Mara, or Mara-devaputta, is not only a very powerful deity but is also bent on making life difficult for spiritual persons.
  2. The Canon also speaks of (a) maras in the plural as a class of potent deities (e.g., SN 56.11) and (b) of previous -- hence, logically future -- maras (e.g., MN 50). According to Tibetan texts, the ascetic Siddhartha could have, with the instructions given by Arada Kalama, become a Sakra, a brahma, or a mara [all of which are best understood as posts held rather than individual historical figures].[5]
  3. A personification of Death is called also the Lord of Death, the exterminator, the great king (maha raja), and the inescapable (Namuci). The preoccupation of the Buddhist quest for deliverance is consistently stressed as escaping the phenomenon of death, which presupposes rebirth. The entire range of existence falls within the realm of Mara on account of the ineluctable presence of death. (Compare with Schopenhauer's concept of "Morture."[6]) All states of existence, including the six [near-Earth] heavenly worlds of the sense sphere, are said to return to the power of Mara, which means into the power of death.[7]
  4. Mara can also be seen allegorically, with almost immediate personification, of the power of temptation, the tendency towards evil, moral conflict, and the influence of such factors as indolence, negligence, and niggardliness. Similar to Satan in Judeo-Christian and Islamic thinking and Ahriman in Avestan [Zoroastrian] thought, though in no way identical, this Mara is described as Papima (i.e., "the Evil One," or simply "the Evil")[8], "Kinsman of Dalliance" (Pamattabandhu), Calumnious or Malicious (Pisuna), and "the Black" (Kanha). Grimm calls this Mara "the prince and bestower of all worldly lust" and distinguishes him from Lucifer of the Bible on the ground that this personification "always remains apparent."[9]

In this work, where the Buddha's encounters with Mara are analyzed as they are presented in literature and art, the main concern will be with Mara as a personification of temptation (No. 4 above). But I will also briefly examine how the other concepts are sometimes subsumed under this and how the literary description or the artistic representation of Mara is conditioned by the merger of three separate concepts as well as by the general body of Indian mythology.

It has to be noted that Mara is another name for the Indian "God of Love" [Cupid], known also as "Lust" (Kama) or "Deva of Lust" (Kama-deva), "Of Five Arrows" (PaƱcabana), "Tormentor of Minds" (Manmatha), Bodiless (Ananga), "Flower-Weaponed" (Kusuma-yudha), and "Dragon-Flagged" (Makara-dhvaja). More

Friday, July 8, 2011

Is Porn Driving Men Crazy?

Text by english.aljazeera.net
Some experts speculate that pornography is making men more interested in perversity and less interested in their own partners.

It is hard to ignore how many highly visible men in recent years (indeed, months) have behaved in sexually self-destructive ways. Some powerful men have long been sexually voracious; unlike today, though, they were far more discreet and generally used much better judgment in order to cover their tracks.

Of course, the heightened technological ability nowadays to expose private behavior is part of the reason for this change.... What is driving this weirdly disinhibited decision-making? Could the widespread availability and consumption of pornography in recent years actually be rewiring the male brain, affecting men's judgment about sex, and causing them to have more difficulty controlling their impulses?

There is an increasing body of scientific evidence to support this idea. Six years ago, I wrote an essay called "The Porn Myth," which pointed out that therapists and sexual counselors were anecdotally connecting the rise in pornography consumption among young men with an increase in impotence and premature ejaculation...

The hypothesis among the experts was that pornography was progressively desensitizing these men sexually. Indeed, hardcore pornography's effectiveness in achieving rapid desensitization in subjects has led to its frequent use in training doctors and military teams to deal with very shocking or sensitive situations.

[The military "trains" teams using "hardcore porn"? Might that have something to do with the outrageous rates of rape and sexual assault against fellow soldiers, both male and female, in today's military?] More
Binge-drinking: Why hangovers and bad decisions don't stop us
(CBS) Ever swear off drinking while battling a nasty hangover? You're certainly not alone. Many drinkers experience regrets over one-night stands, shouting matches, and other drunken antics. So why do people continue to drink? Psychologists may finally have found the answer. Simply put... More

Friday, July 1, 2011

Female Sex Maniac Still on the Loose

Original news item Lite-News (Aug. 13, 2010)
Nikki Lee: "I’ve had sex with 5,000 men in nine years (but never the same man twice)," boasts the 25-year-old beauty therapist and model.


Is it a compliment or a slap in the face to "victims" of promiscuity?

[Some may hail it as the triumph of feminism and gender equality, but others sadly recognize the telltale signs of childhood trauma.] A 25-year-old beauty therapist has claimed to have slept with 5,000 men in just nine years -- or 3,285 days.

Nikki Lee also boasts about having a "personal best" of four men in one night and she claims she has never had sex with the same conquest twice. In an admission that will shock most people, the blonde Essex girl has told how she has had casual sex in nightclubs, alleyways, parks, cinemas, and teen discos since losing her virginity at 16.


"Obsessed" with conquests, objectification, one night stands

Miss Lee, who also works as a model, admits to going on regular sex holidays, where she sleeps with men in clubs, on beaches, and even on balconies. She averages having sex with two men every day and has kept the details of each of them in a little red notebook -- all with scores.

By the time she was 21, Miss Lee claims to have had sex with 2,289 men. Although the admission, made to a weekly real-life magazine, cannot be verified, has been called "emotionally very dangerous" by a relationship expert. More>>

Promiscuity can spread all out of control like an addictive drug to the brain, and we build tolerance. But What the Bleep do We Know?

  • What are we coming to when these are our top artists and celebrities? Ke$ha, Lady Gaga/Beyonce ("Telephone"), Rihanna ("S&M"), Britney Spears, Paris Hilton (night vision technology), Kim Kardashian, gender-bending and celebrity lesbian roles and displays (Sandra Bullock, Annette Bening, Marlee Matlin of "The L Word" fame, child star Miley Cyrus, Vanessa Hudgens, the cast of "Sex and the City," Christina Aguilera, Lindsay Ronson-Lohan, Katy Perry... What would parents do without Rebecca Black, Justin Bieber, prodigy Jason Kertson, and the Jonas Brothers?
  • Country, too: Jessie James' "The Boys of Summer"
  • Problem with sex? Find out at SASH.net
  • No men OR women needed: artificial sperm and eggs created for first time: Sperm and eggs have been grown in the laboratory in a breakthrough process that could change the face of parenthood forever.

If men and boys do it and have for a long time, why should women and girls hold back?

Thursday, June 16, 2011

"Playboy" and Men's Dreams

Crystal left Playboy's founder to make beautiful music with someone else, planning to cash in on a post "runaway bride" spectacle interview (FOX). Men's dream comes undone: Girls not included? Hefner a gay pandaka? Has "Playboy" been nothing but false advertising?

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Playboy founder Hugh Hefner, dumped by his fiancee days before their wedding, said Wednesday he is affixing "Runaway Bride" stickers over her picture on the cover of the magazine's upcoming issue.

Hefner, 85, announced a day earlier that 25-year-old Crystal Harris had "a change of heart," and that Saturday's wedding ceremony for 300 people at the Playboy Mansion in Los Angeles had been canceled.

In an unfortunate coincidence, Harris appears on the cover of the July Playboy issue, hitting newsstands Friday, described as "America's Princess ... Introducing Mrs. Crystal Hefner."

In the interests of journalistic accuracy, Hefner has moved quickly to remedy the situation. More
  • The story, of course, is much funnier and stranger. Crystal Harris planned on abandoning Hugh Hefner at the altar -- in view of cameras for a big pay off selling her interview afterward. And she may have been having an affair with Dr. Phil's son all along.
Mend's Dreams: Runaway Bride uses Porn King
Wisdom Quarterly (COMMENTARY)
The sad thing is that Hugh Hefner has essentially been living the life most men want. He has:
  • a castle in Los Angeles
  • millions coming in annually from destructive but exciting work
  • potency-inducing pharmaceuticals
  • gala parties
  • and, best of all, an endless bevy of newly nubile "playmates" and "bunnies," Scandinavian twins in open marriages and group activities...
If Hef can't get it to work, what hope is there for the rest of us?

When lust (kamachanda, or tanha and lobha, "craving" and "greed") fails us, it suggests that maybe, just maybe, the Buddha was right:

Investing our energies and dreams in developing sensual desires -- and trying to satisfy them -- is not actually the way to happiness.

Craving, in fact, may be the problem causing our "suffering" -- our dissatisfaction, disappointment, and distress.

If that were true, freedom-from-craving would be the solution -- freedom-from-suffering (nirvana).

But what could be the path leading to such freedom? These four assertions are the centerpieces of Buddhism as a path to perfect liberation. But who will strive to be free without first realizing the disappointment of being enslaved to craving?

Friday, June 10, 2011

Key to better Sex revealed in new study

Jennifer Welsh (LiveScience.com, June 9, 2011), Wisdom Quarterly commentary
Spiritual sex: beyond the physical (Dr. Linda E. Savage, AlternativeApproaches.com)

People who can better communicate and understand another person's emotions are more likely to have a satisfying sex life, new research finds.

Personal attributes such as self-esteem and autonomy also play a role in sexual pleasure and health, the researchers said.

"Sexual health includes sexual well-being, and sexual enjoyment is an important part [of that]," said study researcher Adena Galinsky, of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

YodPod, the sun kissed hippie "Source" cult (Guruphiliac)

"How people interact and their ability to listen to each other and take each other's perspective can really influence the sex that they have." [Top 10 Aphrodisiacs]

The study analyzed data from about 3,200 students, ages 18 to 26, who were surveyed between 2001 and 2002 as part of the third wave of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health.

Studying sexual satisfaction
Respondents answered questions meant to gauge levels of autonomy, self-esteem and empathy, along with their sexual health and satisfaction. Autonomy is defined as the strength to follow personal convictions even when they go against conventional wisdom, which usually increases as adolescents age and enter adulthood, Galinsky said.

Communication, empathy are keys to improving sex

Self-esteem is a belief in one's self-worth, which also increases with age. Empathy is the ability to take another's perspective, to see things from their angle and understand and respond to their emotions.

The study found that men were more likely than women to report having orgasms most or all of the time during sex, with 87 percent of men saying so, compared with 47 percent of women in the study. Men were also more likely to enjoy giving oral sex to their partner more than women were, the study found.

"The reality is that the majority of young men really like engaging in activities in which the goal is giving their partner pleasure," Galinsky told LiveScience. "There is a pretty consistent difference between young men and young women." More
Yogi with a Tantrika. Tantra was a Hindu practice adopted into some manifestations of Mahayana Buddhism with the idea of using the world to transcend the world, overriding the supremely enlightened historical Buddha's guidance (lawrencelanoff.com).

Can Sex Really Be "Enlightening"?
Wisdom Quarterly (COMMENTARY)
No, sex cannot not lead to literal enlightenment. In fact, sex (as representative of the bond of sensual desire and craving are the precise impediment the Buddha found to liberation from all bonds.

It is not the Buddha alone who discovered this. Everyone who reaches stream entry, the first stage of enlightenment, finds the same thing. This path is verifiable. Nirvana is experiential.

For all that, the vast majority are not on a direct path, are not fully dedicated to the goal of making an end of all suffering. And the rest of fear liberation and put it off because we think seriously setting off on the path means no more sex.

There is sex. And it can accompany us. Most people will attain as householders. The direct path is abandoning the burdensome household life, and that means taking up spiritual practices that increase one's chances of reaching distinction in meditation in this very life. If craving is an obstacle, pretending one can use sex to reach enlightenment is a frustrating delusion.

Since most of us will be householders and still wish to advance, still wish to have sex (and more of it and better versions of it), we can certainly practice more "enlightened" sex. What would that be? The third Precept is to undertake the training rule to abstain -- not from sex but -- from sexual misconduct.

That's easy to do. We assert that, in workaday life, sex is fine (moral, normal, healthy). Can we limit our sex to people who are able to give consent by virtue of the fact that they are not in a relationship or state that prevents them from giving such consent?

Going beyond that, can we have sex because we want to advance our interest in pleasure and the other person's equally?

Is it possible to not only avoid harm but to do good by establishing connection, compassion, caring, and carnal bliss?

Of course it's possible? Ten people cannot give "consent." Who are the ten? Those dependent on (1) mother, (2) father, (3) brother, (4) sister, (5) relatives, (6) other guardians, (7) a ruler or institution [e.g., because of being a convict or patient who has lost that privilege while under the custody of an official entity, as happens in our modern penal system, just as in days of old], (8) spouse, (9) fiancee [betrothed in a relationship], (10) future spouse [because of being promised in marriage [as by parental arrangement or obligation].

This is the literal, bottom line rule. The spirit of it should be understood to avoid confusion and the condemnation of what the Buddha was liberating us from by explaining the Five Precepts.

Unlike Christianity (a mangled form of the Wisdom of the East in the hands of those wishing to dominate, control, and enforce personal moral behavior in the name of emperors and a patriarchal Church), which says "sin" is what angers or displeases God, the Buddha saw "bad karma." He saw that certain actions are not capable of resulting in the search for happiness that motivates them (when their karmic-results are met with).

He warned of the inevitable consequences of such actions -- like sexual misconduct -- in a sutra that lists the "Ten Courses of Unwholesome Action" (Numerical Discourses, Book of Tens). These actions are called "courses," Bhikkhu Bodhi explains in his audio commentary to the Middle Length Discourses, because they have the strength to generate rebirth in "unfortunate destinations" if they ripen near the time of death. There are ten wholesome courses explained as well.

It is no coincidence that Hinduism has an "eightfold" path or that Christianity has ten "commandments." Both traditions, Patanjali in the first case and Talmudic/Zohar/Mosaic/Old Testament composers in the second, were heavily influenced by the success and widely influential teachings of the Buddha that spread without keeping the attribution and reference to Buddhism that may have originally been acknowledged.

It can be that Christianity (and Islam and Judaism) fails miserably in getting this across about sex. So we are left feeling guilty and ashamed of natural human desire. But such desire is not limited to the human plane. Craving for sensual pleasures in general, and sexual pleasure in particular, is characteristic of the Sense Sphere (Kama Loka). This sphere includes lower heavenly planes as well as the animal and other subhuman planes.

Sex is transcended in the brahma plane of what becomes the Fine-Material Sphere (Rupa Loka). Brahmas are exalted devas, "light beings." Almost all of the heavenly planes are referred to as deva planes even though there is yet one higher spheres that transcends even the brahmas. That is the Immaterial Sphere (Arupa Loka).

Sex and Heaven
If one wishes to be reborn on Earth, sex free of sexual misconduct is fine. Our obsession/guilt/remorse/shame are not! These are forms of mental karma that are very detrimental. Such psychological activity does not remain mental but gives way to verbal and physical expression that make it worse.

If one wishes to be reborn in the Sense Sphere heavens, sex free of sexual misconduct is fine. (There is sex and much better sex than we have here on Earth in some higher worlds).

If one wishes to be reborn not only among deities (devas, literal physical beings called "shining ones," which we would likely call angels) but divinities (brahmas) or even as a divinity -- literally not just close to God but as a God -- one needs to set sex and obsession with sensuality aside.

Hindu Brahmins in particular long for such rebirth, considering it liberation from samsara. The Buddha pointed out that this liberation (moksha) is not actual liberation; rebirth are not brought to a final end by such a rebirth.

If one wishes to be reborn among or as a divinity, one needs to develop the absorptions (jhanas) and bring them up and hold them at the time of death. This is the course of action, the weighty karma, that leads to rebirth in those happy, exalted, long-lived worlds.

But these worlds are not and do in and of themselves lead to final liberation -- nirvana. Nirvana is attainable here and in the lower (sub-brahma) deva worlds.

Bearing this in mind, what need is there to feel guilty about sex or to shame others in some Puritanical way that hypocritically runs in our American psyche/zeitgeist. It is not this way in England and France, although it does seem to be in Germany and Italy and everywhere else that does not think through the consequences of reinterpreting and rebranding Buddhism as Judaism, Christianity, Catholicism, Islam, and Hinduism.

So many of our world traditions are trying to get at the same thing. But they hamstring themselves by speaking of "sin" as the fetish and preference of a personal God as if that itself made things good and bad. Creator (genetic manipulator and helper of human advancement from some extraterrestrial plane) or not, karma was not created. The Truth is uncreated.

And the Truth enlightened ones see is that actions motivated by the wide categories of attraction (both sensual, fine material, and supersensual), aversion, and delusion result in grief, result in unsatisfactoriness. Motivation, zeal, passion for the good, intention for liberation, a wish to do what is beneficial (dhamma-chanda) are all forms of desire and attraction; they are not being called lust (kama-chanda).

People seem fond of condemning the teaching that bad karma is undergirded by greed, hatred, and delusion by asserting that "greed" (desire) can be good as if that revealed a contradiction the Buddha had not thought of.

The Buddha and Buddhism and Buddhists distinguish lust and greed from will and wholesome intention, and it is only misguided philosophers (often Western) who act as if Buddhism is praising apathy, non-striving, and psychological emptiness (ennui).

The Buddha, bodhisattvas, and Noble Ones (ariyas, arhants, and pacceka-buddhas) are ardent and diligent. Even those who only attain the absorptions are similarly conscientious, consistent, and persist in the pursuit of the good.

Sex does not have to derail that. The question is this, do we rule sex in our lives or are we ruled by sex? Is it a joyful activity, an ambivalent and shameful one with misgivings, an obsessive compulsive behavior that consumes us, or something we can renounce and do without even as we engage in it? Renunciation is letting go of attachment even if we do not let go of a possession or activity. This is moving towards "enlightened" sex.

Meditators should temporarily abandon and set sex aside. The mind hindered and propelled by sensual craving is going in the opposite direction of absorption (serenity), realization (insight), and nirvana (final liberation). It is not Buddhist. Nevertheless, the person engaged in sex can use that to do good, to bring about the sort of happiness characteristic of the Sensual Sphere, uniting, bonding, connecting, sharing, enjoying and bringing about joy, feeding on bliss.

Such bliss is less dependable and less enjoyable than absorption bliss -- which is "detached from sensuality, detached from unwholesome states of mind [greed, hatred/fear, delusion] and accompanied by applied and sustained attention, born of detachment [temporary renunciation of our possessions and obsessions], and filled with rapture and joy." And this is merely the first of eight absorptions that are progressively more blissful and joyful. So it is often said in Buddhism, "There is no way to happiness; happiness is the way!"

For those with no idea such serene meditative states exist, of course their focus and sometimes obsession is going to be on getting pleasure wherever pleasure is available. And if we seek to make them feel guilty for the pervasive impulse in this sphere, we do more harm than good. We do not bring about virtue in our children, friends, or family members. We bring about the opposite.

And so our world -- our corner of it in the heart of the American Empire, which looks, acts, and feels a lot like the hypocritical Holy Roman Empire good Jesus was railing against in his day [like the temple brahmin priests (brahmana) and the establishment the Buddha rejected as a shramana, a free (possessionless) renunciate -- is not improved. But tolerance and offering wisdom and compassion can help the world.

VIDEO: Amazing Fire Ceremony, Japan's Saifukuji Temple