Bodhisattva
May 21st, 2007I sat next to a bodhisattva today, on a twenty minute inter-island flight. I had an aisle seat, she was sitting beside me, and her companion had the window. It was impossible not to eavesdrop on an energetic and animated conversation that began with a deep examination of their personal emotional needs, their experience with channeling, insight on her past lives, their struggles to find the perfect romantic partner, and other subjects that discretion suggests I not repeat here.
Then, perhaps halfway through the flight, he leans toward her and asks her to accept what he is about to say with an open mind. “I truly believe you are a bodhisattva.†She laughs pleasantly and agrees. The talk moves on.
Far be it from me to claim expertise on any religion, but I do happen to know that a bodhisattva is a Buddhist figure, commonly conceived as one who is on the way to becoming a Buddha, but “delays his own final and complete enlightenment in order to save all sentient beings out of his enormous compassion.†(dictionary.com) So a bodhisattva is a very powerful spiritual being. As an example, the Dalai Lama is considered by many to have this status.
I admit I tried to sense a spiritual aura… just in case. Perhaps I am just deaf to such things. Still, I imagine spirituality as something conveyed more in emotion than in words. The talk-talk-talk of the bodhisattva and her companion was quite incredible to me — both for its simple abundance, but also that such confessions and discussions should be made in a public place.
Perhaps in their enthusiasm, they simply forgot I was sitting beside them. But even enlightened beings might do well to remember the value of a little discretion.
Posted on: Monday, May 21st, 2007 at 8:44 am
Categories: General, Maui.
July 11th, 2007 at 4:18 pm
Actually, that definition of bodhisattva isn’t one that’s accepted by any of the Mahayana (that is, bodhisattva) traditions. The Mahayana tradition is that a bodhisattva is someone who is trying (sattva) to become a Buddha (bodhi) for the sake of all living beings, and that the way they will help all living beings is to become a Buddha. Delaying your enlightenment so that you can help others is said to be like trying to teach someone how to play a violin when you haven’t actually learned how to do it yourself.
At least they were talking about something relatively entertaining. My seat-neighbors are usually talking about their upcoming sales prospects. :’)