Transcending gender: AN 7.51 with gender nonbinary American nun Ayya Soma
SUTRA: "Bound and Unbound"
Ven. Sujato (trans.), SuttaCentral.net, Numerical Discourses (Anguttara Nikaya or AN 7.51, Chapter 5. A Great Sacrifice, Discourse 51, Sahṁyoga Sutta) edited by Wisdom Quarterly
.
How are beings bound and unbound? |
“And what is the exposition of the teaching on the bound and the unbound?
Women
“A woman focuses on her own femininity: her feminine moves, feminine appearance, feminine ways, feminine desires, feminine voice, and feminine adornment.
“She’s stimulated by this and takes pleasure in it. So she focuses on the masculinity of others: masculine moves, masculine appearance, masculine ways, masculine desires, masculine voice, and masculine adornment.
“She’s stimulated by this and takes pleasure in it. So she desires to bond with another. And she desires the pleasure and happiness that comes from such a bond.
“Sentient beings who are attached to their femininity are bound to men. This is how a woman does not transcend her femininity.
Men
“A man focuses on his own masculinity: his masculine moves, masculine appearance, masculine ways, masculine desires, masculine voice, and masculine adornment.
“He’s stimulated by this and takes pleasure in it. So he focuses on the femininity of others: feminine moves, feminine appearance, feminine ways, feminine desires, feminine voice, and feminine adornment.
“He’s stimulated by this and takes pleasure in it. So he desires to bond with another. And he desires the pleasure and happiness that comes from such a bond. Sentient beings who are attached to their masculinity are bound to women.
“This is how a man does not transcend his masculinity. This is how one is bound.
Women Unbound
Buddhism Beyond Gender |
“And how does one become unbound? A woman does not focus on her own femininity: her feminine moves, feminine appearance, feminine ways, feminine desires, feminine voice, and feminine adornment.
“She is not stimulated by this and takes no pleasure in it. So she does not focus on the masculinity of others: masculine moves, masculine appearance, masculine ways, masculine desires, masculine voice, and masculine adornment.
“She is not stimulated by this and takes no pleasure in it. So she does not desire to bond with another. Nor does she desire the pleasure and happiness that comes from such a bond.
“Sentient beings who are not attached to their femininity are not bound to men. This is how a woman transcends her femininity.
Men Unbound
What are women but foul flesh and guts? |
“He is not stimulated by this and takes no pleasure in it. So he does not focus on the femininity of others: feminine moves, feminine appearance, feminine ways, feminine desires, feminine voice, and feminine adornment.
“He is not stimulated by this and takes no pleasure in it. So he does not desire to bond with another. Nor does he desire the pleasure and happiness that comes from such a bond.
“Sentient beings who are not attached to their masculinity are not bound to women. This is how a man transcends his masculinity.
“This is how one is unbound. This is the exposition of the teaching on the bound and the unbound.”
We are not this body or gender
Ven. Nyanatiloka (Anton Gueth), Buddhist Dictionary, edited by Dhr. Seven, Wisdom Quarterly
Am I male or female...or neither? |
Jīva: Life principle, vitality, individual "soul" (self, personality, ego).
"Soul [life] and body are identical" is a wrong view. And "Soul and body are different" is a wrong view.
These wrong views fall under the two kinds of "personality-belief" (sakkāya-ditthi, see ditthi). Whereas the first one falls under the category of "annihilation-belief" (uccheda-ditthi), the second falls under the category of "eternity-belief" (sassata-ditthi).
"In truth, if one holds the [wrong] view that the soul/self is identical with the body, in that case the supreme life [of a Buddhist monastic that leads to enlightenment and nirvana, awakening and liberation] is impossible.
"Or if one holds the [wrong] view that the soul/self is something quite different, also in that case the supreme life is impossible.
Buddhism on sex and gender |
EDITORIAL NOTE: That is to say, the Buddha explains the origination of this being, life, rebirth, self, existence as all depending on the process of Dependent Origination. Things originate depending on necessary and sufficient conditions and not without them. A "thing" does not arise from nothing. Illusion arises, ignorance arises, and that is what passes away. Things (or the illusion of there being independent/separate things) arise dependent on impersonal, impermanent, and disappointing (unsatisfactory, unable to fulfill) factors. Everything is composed of constituents with no existence apart from them. Though this is true of all things (with the sole exception of nirvana, the unconditioned element, which is not a composite "thing"), it is most important to understand that it is true of the "self," "soul," "personality," "ego." In that sense, there is no self, but there is something.
No comments:
Post a Comment