how should i practice?

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villkorkarma
Posts: 506
Joined: Sun Jan 31, 2010 9:43 pm

how should i practice?

Post by villkorkarma »

dont generate anger so often you can.
dont supress your feeling.
dont express your feeling.
be with the reality as it is instead!

The short version:
There is what is called indifference, apathy, numbness. In this, there is no joy and no suffering, no happiness but no sadness either. This is how many people interpret Nibbana too -- as the numbness of experience. But it isn't. It's possible to develop such numbness, but that numbness is itself merely a subtle form of dukkha.

In the case of equanimity, there is joy. Not ecstatic joy, but tiny joy. Whereas in numbness is a subtle form of dukkha, equanimity is a subtle form of happiness. And whereas numbness is ignorance reborn, equanimity is associated with wisdom.

The longer version:
To understand equanimity, one must first understand real happiness. I actually do not think it is possible to truly know what equanimity is without at least attaining the first jhana. Perhaps that's wrong. It's just... Equanimity is built on top of the happiness born of mindfulness and morality.

It's like smelling the flowers, enjoying nature, a warm coffee or shower in the morning, the pleasant feel of a human touch -- all without delighting in them. One can be swept away by the simple joys and have ecstasy even over nature, then reality comes along to remind you of the first noble truth: suffering. One develops equanimity first by practicing mindfulness until one realizes the infinite happiness born of concentration, but then, seeing the danger of it, one practices restraint. Because the happier one is, the sadder one can become. So, you take that happiness born of concentration and you squeeze it, tighter and tighter, smaller and smaller. You squeeze it, because you know, "I love this happiness. I really do, but I know it's impermanent and notself. If I hold onto it and delight into it, it will eventually fade and I will be disappointed." So you make it smaller, so that the disappointment is smaller.

Eventually, you may come to a point where people wonder if you're even happy, because you don't seem to be. But you are. It's just a subtle form of happiness (and actually -- you're smiling all the time -- crying too, but they're tears of joy). But it is also supreme happiness because it stays with you, and doesn't come and go like the intoxication of drugs or the intoxication of delight in every day experience.
one suffer because one hasnt existed long : )
Individual
Posts: 1970
Joined: Mon Jan 12, 2009 2:19 am

Re: how should i practice?

Post by Individual »

You should be yourself and act normal, not imitating others... There are three important virtues: cleanliness, order, and sincerity, but of these three, the greatest and most important is sincerity:
To thine own self be true, and it must follow, as the night the day, thou canst not then be false to any man.
You should be true to yourself and true to your others, and not try to be anybody or anything else than what you are and what you have that makes you happy.

Unless it seems useful for a good purpose.

You see, the world is like the Matrix. Some of us are real people, but most the people you see are like zombies. Not zombies like they don't feel pain or have feelings (they do), but zombies in that they have no control over their lives and what they think and feel, and have very little perception. In reaction to dhamma, more often than not they simply copy it out of obsession. Eventually, this corrupts it by flooding it with the same data, cutting off the flow of information, like a DDOS attack on computer systems... If that's a bad analogy, think of it like this:

You like a file on your hard drive. So you copy it. Then you copy it again and again. Eventually, your hard drive would be full and how would that be any good?
The best things in life aren't things.

The Diamond Sutra
villkorkarma
Posts: 506
Joined: Sun Jan 31, 2010 9:43 pm

Re: how should i practice?

Post by villkorkarma »

very true dhammalaw i think, be your self so often as you can, and just follow the dhamma!
one suffer because one hasnt existed long : )
Individual
Posts: 1970
Joined: Mon Jan 12, 2009 2:19 am

Re: how should i practice?

Post by Individual »

villkorkarma wrote:very true dhammalaw i think, be your self so often as you can, and just follow the dhamma!
:namaste:
The best things in life aren't things.

The Diamond Sutra
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