Samantabhadra wrote:I wasn't trying to insult you. I was drawing attention to your obvious lack of either knowledge or attention to detail (take your pick) regarding something you claim to be a major part of your life, and the clear hypocrisy this entails with respect to your interactions with DrW.
And it was neither. Thanks for asking instead of assuming, however.
That said, I'm willing to grant that my outlook comes primarily from Tibetan influence, so I won't comment on "beginner's mind," except to note that there's a very important difference between being willing to make mistakes and being sloppy--just as there is a difference between being "unorthodox" in one's methodological approach and mixing the genuine Dharma with your own mistaken ideas. Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche recently circulated a teaching reiterating precisely that point.
In any case, you're welcome.
You said in the other discussion we were having that you had read Shunryu Suzuki, so I assumed you had read about "...Beginner's Mind"; it is largely considered his opus. In the book, such sloppiness is actually somewhat praised, as it is indicative of the ability to be wrong, to explore ideas, to avoid fixations with orthodoxy that is limiting and restricting, which was why I thought it was amusing enough to use Bhodi, instead of Bodhi. I have tried to minimize any ego, so the accusation of either sloppiness or stupidity does not really bother me in either way, and you are perfectly free to make the accusation as you see fit, but the issue was actually neither.
Honestly, I’ve found a little too much on Orthodoxy in some Tibetan strains, which is why I was drawn to Zen instead. You can also combine Zen with almost anything, there is a lot of tolerance there I have not seen elsewhere.