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Thursday, October 13, 2011

The problem with seeking truth - it is not easy

http://buddhismnow.wordpress.com/2011/10/13/western-cultural-accretions/

"There is a movement towards making Buddhism easy to take, light weight, or as I’ve heard it referred to ‘Buddha-Lite’. It is being packaged, sold, and tinkered with in a way that is bordering on deception; a kind of counterfeit dharma. Somehow Buddh­ism is fashionable, popular, and there are many who are taking advantage of that for financial and prestigious reasons. Publishers also make a point of having Buddhism marketed alongside Mind Body Spirit, New Age, and stress management books.
People say, ‘It’s not a religion, is it? It’s a way of life,’ which is, of course, true, but that means that Buddhism is not divorced from anything one does in life, not that it is materialistic. Buddhism is about getting to the root of existence, the truth of self, our delusions regarding what the self actually is, not how to prop up the ‘self’ and make it feel better. The body is going to die, and the personality is going to disintegrate; we cannot avoid it. Buddhism, traditionally, has always been hard to take; it is not light weight; the point is to realise what is beyond the conditioned mind, to realise without views and opinions, to face the indescribable nature of existence and nonexistence. This is something to experience, not to study, think about or dwell on. We shall probably have to face some disturbing moments of truth in our investigations when the so-called ‘self’ or ego has the spotlight of dharma shone upon it.
In the past, disciples were not enticed to embark on the path by real­ised masters. On the contrary, they were discouraged. Why? ­Because it is not the easy option. One needs to have given up looking for happiness in the world before the right intention is engendered to find liberation and a deeper happiness."

1 comment:

  1. This movement is an exposure of a movement in Consciousness and so can be observed. That which is observed cannot be identified as truly one's self or true nature.

    Spirituality can be a great hiding place because it associates with truth in a way that seems to be a knower of truth - a someone in our own right.
    This too is 'looking for happiness within the world"

    The uncovering of what was hidden is not a failure, but an opportunity to release identification or allegiance.

    The hardest thing about seeking for truth is working out from the presumption that one is not already that which is sought. This implicit division manifests innumerable destinies, none of which reflect a truly unified awareness.

    The humanly hard thing in abiding in a willingness for truth to dawn of itself, is the release of self vanities and arrogances of wishful thought given acceptance and identification. The release of 'self-will'.

    At least it is hard until the spell is broken and the true nature is revealed or accepted.

    I quite agree with your article, but also look to allowing the apparent dilution, defilement or distortion, to be an awakener rather than a seemingly independent fact.

    In Peace

    Brian

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