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Spiritual Awakening

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Spiritual Awakening Through Our Bodies: Oppression & Liberation Within Zenju’s The Way of Tenderness she speaks to a reengagement with how spiritual awakening is understood within Buddhist discourse. In particular Zenju challenges the gap distancing spiritual awakening from our everyday experiences. Instead, Zenju argues to inextricably link spiritual awakening and everyday experiences: “awakening does not come in a blind, euphoric, or empty world” (2015, 7). Further, Zenju’s engagement with spiritual awakening creates space in which to critique Buddhist discourses that serve to oppress bodies, as well as to recover Buddhist discourses that serve to liberate bodies. The same Buddhist discourse can be used to both liberate and oppress people, …show more content…

Spiritual awakening can only emerge from embodied experience. This does not imply however that our embodied experiences of suffering must be held firmly, in order that we may be awakened or that our experiences deemed valuable. Instead, Zenju puts forth that spiritual awakening allows for life affirming fluidity (2015, 30). It is this life affirming fluidity that comes from complete tenderness: “on the way of tenderness we allow rage and anger to flow in and out again, in and out again, instead of holding on to it as proof of being human” (2015, 30). Tenderness and spiritual awakening then can emerge as a Buddhist discourse meant to lessen suffering. Zenju, however, does not see the lessening of suffering as removing oneself from the embodied experiences and emotions that arise within our lives. Instead, Zenju puts forth that spiritual awakening and tenderness center life affirmation, thus allowing for suffering, but diminishing its hold on our …show more content…

Zenju argues for a different interpretation of Heart Sutra’s emptiness. Liberatory emptiness for Zenju is that which allows for our hearts to hold no ideas regarding others or the world in which we live (2015, 105). The emptiness of hearts will allow for one to view and treat others, as well as ourselves, with compassion. The illusions and distortions spoken of by the Buddha can be viewed as false from a heart of emptiness. Rather, our hearts will be empty of these illusions freeing us from the suffering caused by the internalization of inferiority and superiority (2015, 106). When our hearts are filled with these illusions we not only cause harm and suffering to ourselves, but we reproduce and reinforce the harm and suffering of

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