I Want & Happiness Are Not Compatible

in #life7 years ago

Buddha's Four Noble Truths

From Wikipedia :

idam dukkham, "this is pain"
ayam dukkha-samudayo, "this is the origin of pain"
ayam dukkha-nirodha, "this is the cessation of pain"
ayam dukkha-nirodha-gamini patipada, "this is the path leading to the cessation of pain." The key terms in the longer version > of this expression, dukkha-nirodha-gamini Patipada, can be translated as follows:
Gamini: leading to, making for[web 13]
Patipada: road, path, way; the means of reaching a goal or destination[web 14]

Or more simply:

Life is suffering
The cause of suffering is craving, desire or preference
We can control our suffering through controlling our need for desire much of this is due to ego
There is a path from suffering - All paths lead up the mountain

It seems that it can be expressed very simply as in:

Buddha.jpg
*photo credit Guardado desde, lh5.googleusercontent.com

We don't get happy from external things. We are happy because we enable ourselves to make the conscious choice that we are happy. To foster this take practice that practice is the path that the Buddha talks about. One method might be

  1. When you notice that you are happy concentrate on the how you feel physically. Note where in your body that the sensations arise from.
  2. Experiment with creating those feelings often soon you will be able to manifest the physical sensation of being happy.
  3. Consistently do this practice with persistent intent
  4. Detach yourself from your own, "story and drama"
  5. Just be happy.
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Love this! So insightful! Great post:-)

I spent many years thinking that happiness would come when I got that girl / guy, car, job, money. Happiness came when I just rather feel that way and that I had the permission to be happy just because I wanted to. It takes determination not to get sucked back into suffering. Our desires and preferences have been ingrained in us since birth.

My view is, there are skilfull desires, and unskilfull ones. To lump them all together and strive not to want anything at all, will not help yourself or anyone else. All paths certainly don't lead up the mountain; it is very easy to be on the wrong path, or to stray from the right path, or not to be progressing along any path at all. The quote in the picture is not the Buddha's words.

It is a paraphrase I think. I also think provided that you consider the great wheel of karma that all paths do lead up the mountain. Life is a series of lessons. It is through our karma and coming into it that we reach the dharma. My main point is that desireless is; moksha or liberation, that desire is often a construct of the ego and its sort of Maslowvian up bringing. Many people die little deaths along the way on their paths and that leads to little bits of enlightenment. Much like the addict who hits rock bottom and finds compassion for themselves and grows to love themselves and others. The only time that we have is now. It is in each moment that we have to be conscious as we can. We cannot address unintended consequence ie best intent worst possible outcome. We can only choose how we see things. Our pronouncement of good or bad. These tie us to suffering. Life is our path, it is the curriculum of karma. There is a little bit of a trick to this. If you strive not to want you still are wanting. It is only when it becomes a state of beingness that we are liberated. You can want to be happy. You have to be happy. Or you suffer endless circling on an asymptotic curve. Wanting to be happy is only the approximation of being happy. Principally I am saying that happiness comes from within.

moksha definition:

release from the cycle of rebirth impelled by the law of karma.
the transcendent state attained as a result of being released from the cycle of rebirth.

It is a paraphrase I think.

The 'quote' does not approximate any of the teachings of the Dharma. When the Buddha was asked if there is a self or not, he refused to answer. Which is not to be confused with the principle of not-self, i.e. identifying with functions of the self, as the self, for example consciousness and feelings.

I also think provided that you consider the great wheel of karma that all paths do lead up the mountain

The Buddha said that even to be born human with the ability to be able to practice is an extremely rare privilege.

The Buddha's last words were I exhort you: All compounded things are subject to vanish. Strive with earnestness! The 6th of the Noble Eightfold Path is Right Effort. Progress on the path is not just going to happen, it needs a decision, commitment and it needs active effort.

To understand the Second Noble Truth that all desire is the cause of suffering, is a misunderstanding. What it really means is a selfish clinging, with identifying with transient phenomena as yourself, that is the cause of suffering or stress. So to have a motivation, to want something in itself, is fine, what matters is the outcome that is wanted, and the way in which it is wanted. In other words, if the aim is to alleviate suffering to self and / or others, and there is not a selfish identification or clinging to the goal, then that is positive and in fact it should be part of the Path. For example, the Bodhisattva's vow to delay their own Nirvana in order to be reborn, to liberate all sentient beings. This is something that is wanted, it is a completely noble thing to want, and whether it actually happens or not is not another something that the ego clings to.

Tell me, do you have a practice, do you meditate, do you follow the Precepts?

I sit regularly. Mine is a path of service for the most part.

Good, see if you can improve it to sitting every day. This is the best book on meditation that's ever been written, IMHO. Strive with earnestness!

cool I did not know that @iamwne thanks good post

Lord Buddha is great

Great,post love your stuffs,keep it on buddy