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21st June 2012 17:03
Link to Post #1
Avalon Member
Teachers (Revisited)
There has been an ongoing conversation/debate here, largely between me and Pie'n'eal (Tony), who'm I have much love and respect for by the way. Often times I feel we are saying basically the same thing, but maybe talking past each other. So please bear with me, but I want to try it one more time.
This is the direction I wish to come at this from. My official schooling really ended at the end of 8th grade, with 6th, 7th and 8th being private schools thank god. 9th and 10th were spent mostly skipping school, and smoking pot. So that was that. I knew the 3 R's atleast. Reading, Riting, and Rithmatic.
I had the required teaching, and that teaching had come to it's completion.
As is evidenced though, it doesn't take a Master's Degree to to be able to effectively communicate with others, even on a forum with this high level of intellect.
For a decade or more I delved pretty deeply into Zen and Buddhism. This was a much needed teaching that I could not do myself, and I'm grateful for it. Those teachings still guide much of what I do day to day, although it's not so much of a conscious endeavor, it's now a way of life. Those great teachings gave me the gift of the 3 R's of the spiritual realms.
As is evidensed though, it doesn't take a lifetime in a monastery to be able to effectively communicate with others, even on a forum with this high level of spirituality.
So here's my bottom line with teachers. A teacher is needed to teach basic music notes and theory, but even graduates of Juilliard will likely never be mistaken for a Mozart or a Bach. It takes them just so far, and then it's basically "that's it kid, that's all we've got, the rest is up to you now".
I see people who choose to be lifetime academics, and I feel sorry for them. Their innate potential is forever limited to what acadamia has to offer, much of which is memorization, and not creativity.
I feel the same even with the greatest of Spiritual Teachings. I have all the respect in the world for them, of course, but I also think that they can be taken too far, and with too much diligence. Just like at Juilliard, even the best of teachers there would have to admit to even the brightest graduating student:
"Kid, that's all we've got, if you wanna be a Mozart, the rest is up to you now".
Cheers,
Fred
Last edited by Fred Steeves; 21st June 2012 at 17:12.
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21st June 2012 17:27
Link to Post #2