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William Parker

Brunswick Heads Male

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    William Parker and Annetta are now friends
    Feb 5
    William Parker is now friends with Tim McLoughlin, Paul Overend, Priti Vaishnav and 3 more
    2 more…
    Jan 29
    William Parker is now friends with David Brazier, Mani Kumar Gurung and Sally Sizemore
    Jan 19, 2024
    William Parker is now a member of Buddhist Psychology
    Welcome Them!
    Jan 16, 2024
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    • Annetta

    • Sally Sizemore

    • Paul Overend

    • Mani Kumar Gurung

    • Tim McLoughlin

    • Sandra Alarcón Sánchez

    • Sonia Gobbato

    • Alejandro Ashley

    • Yaya de Andrade

    • Iris Hoka Dotan Katz

    • Priti Vaishnav

    • David Brazier

    All Friends

    Gender

    Male


    Location

    Brunswick Heads


    Are you interested in joining the Two Year Online Buddhist Psychology diploma Programme

    Yes


    What Buddhist sangha, if any, do you belong to? If none, write "none".

    Triratna


    Your personal website

    https://mandala-of-love.com/


    Are you a

    Other


    Regarding Global Sangha, do you

    Wish to receive GS Newsletter & Podcasts


    Your history with Buddhism/Psychology & interest in this network:

    I am 65, and have been a Buddhist in various ways since my 20's. I lived and worked in the communities and businesses associated with Sangharakshita's Triratna Community (previously the Friends of the Western Buddhist Order). I broke off all connection with Triratna in the late 80s, but about five years reconnected with old friends from my twenties and have also rejoined their ordination request program. This has led to a general re-engagement with that tradition - though I still have my criticisms. For many years I worked in inpatient and community mental health services as an Occupational Therapist. Now, in retirement, I am drawn to writing on themes of Buddhist psychology and have a website at https://mandala-of-love.com/. I am very engaged by the five skandhas and Five Wisdoms, and the corresponding ideas in the work of Carl Jung. While I love Carl Rogers and Eugene Gendlin, and have studied them deeply, I find that I need a psychology that is unapologetic about the existence of a transcendental or dharmic order in the universe and in Consciousness - a dharmakāya or dharmadhātu, if you will. While I am not very familiar with traditional Pure Land Buddhism, I feel totally in alignment with the practical and philosophic emphasis of other-power - and keenly aware that this is often missed or misconstrued in Western approaches. Indeed, it was the self-power emphasis of the Theravada (and the correspondingly fierce and overly heroic framing of Mahayāna and Vajrayāna) that led to my disillusionment with the FWBO in my late twenties. My daily meditation practice is a form of the brahmavihāras. I have developed a very personal form of engagement with those practices, which is based on the mandala of the ten archetypal Buddhas. It is most definitely an other-power practice. It begins with a time of resting in the love of Amitabha, and then cycles through the devotion-receptive moods of the 'self-regarding' brahmavihāras - resting 'in' the benevolent transcendental reality, however tentatively. I then move on to the 'other-regarding' aspects - and to a sense of resting 'as' the benevolent transcendental reality, to the extent that I can. To be clear, I should emphasise that it is a humble, undramatic, and non-heroic practice. It is very similar to Eugene Gendlin's practice of resting 'as' the clear space - but uses the mandala framework as a way of getting consistently, in a systematic way, and to a place mental and emotional stability. I have, in the past, also been a passionate student of Marshall Rosenberg's Nonviolent Communication (NVC) model, and find that this sits very well within a Buddhist psychological understanding. Although I am not an accredited teacher, I have explored these approaches deeply and have taught both NVC and Gendlin's 'Focusing' self-empathy practice, in a small way, and have explored the connection between these two models.


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