Dan74 wrote:So instead of engaging in a compassionate and helpful way we will be more likely to withdraw and make some sort of a Buddhist excuse for doing so.
Damned self-conceit. I am sure glad I don't have it like some other people.zavk wrote:Yup... rings a bell loud and clear.Dan74 wrote:So instead of engaging in a compassionate and helpful way we will be more likely to withdraw and make some sort of a Buddhist excuse for doing so.
The aversion also hides self-conceit, a sense of 'Oh, I'm more insightful than others because I'm Buddhist. I know better than to get involve in these sorts of things.'
Whoever lives contemplating pleasant things, with senses unrestrained,
in food immoderate, indolent, inactive,
him verily Māra overthrows, as the wind (overthrows) a weak tree.
Whoever lives contemplating “the Impurities”, with senses restrained,
in food moderate, full of faith, full of sustained energy,
him Māra overthrows not, as the wind (does not overthrow) a rocky mountain. (Dhp vv 7-8")
The only caveat would be with these sort of contemplations is they should be done with the guidance of a teacher. All too easy to get into some sticky mind states.Bhikkhu Pesala wrote:As long as it makes you practise harder, I think it is OK to contemplate the repulsive aspects of sex, food, and other sensual pleasures.
Dan74 wrote:Have you noticed yourself become more averse to all sorts of things in your life since becoming a Buddhist?
As we dislike our own dukkha, hate arises at the same time which results in "double dukkha."
Using insight into self-made dukkha as our next step, we have a chance of changing the discomfort within ourselves from dislike and hate to, at least, acceptance. Eventually a feeling of being at ease with oneself arises, without which meditation cannot flourish.
These are fundamental aspects of ourselves which we need to investigate and experience. Spiritual practice involves one's whole being and the exploration of our reactions, developing sensitivity and vulnerability to others and being able to roll with the punches. We begin to realize that there are certain necessary learning situations in our lives and if we don't make use of them, we will get the same ones over and over again. If we look back for a moment, we may be able to see identical situations have arisen many times. They'll continue to do so many lifetimes, unless we change.
Spiritual practice is not just sitting on a pillow but more an opening of the mind to what is actually going on inside. If that opening is closed the moment we stand up, then we haven't really been meditating successfully. It is not so much how long we can attend to the breath or the sensations but rather how aware and how awake we become. Then we can use that awareness in our everyday reactions and thinking processes.
There is the Cartesian view: "I think, therefore I am." Actually it's the other way around: "I am, therefore I think." Unless we can get some kind of order into our thoughts and emotional reactions which follow the thinking process, our mind will constantly play havoc with our inner household.
The realization of where our dukkha comes from must be followed by the understanding that disliking it will not make it go away; only letting go of wanting makes dukkha disappear, which means unequivocal acceptance. Accepting oneself results in being able to accept others. The difficulty with other people is that they present a mirror in which we can see our own mistakes. How useful it is to have such a mirror. When we live with others we can see ourselves as if it were a mirror-image and eventually we learn to be together like milk with water, which completely blend. It is up to each one of us to blend; if we wait for others to do it we are not practicing. This is a difficult undertaking but also a very important one.
Eventually we will create the inner comfort to expand our consciousness and awareness to an understanding of universality.
Dan74 wrote:Have you noticed yourself become more averse to all sorts of things in your life since becoming a Buddhist?
I have and it's not necessarily a bad thing for sure, if it gets us to drop some bad habits and develop more wholesome behaviours. But if we become averse to the sort of things that are part and parcel of our lives as lay people, in the hope that one day we might become monastics, then this is living in fantasy and not what the Buddha taught, is it?
I wanted to ask people if they've experienced this kind of a half-way renunciation, which is not a good thing I think, because we are not really renouncing, but rather we are cultivating aversion to what we do, to our repsonsibilities and our actual environment. So instead of engaging in a compassionate and helpful way we will be more likely to withdraw and make some sort of a Buddhist excuse for doing so.
I am sure getting rid of this idea made you a better Zen student! Besides great Zen masters of the past have not only generally been renunciate monks but have also gone through periods of very intense practice before teachings such as "Everyday mind is the Way" were appropriate.Goofaholix wrote:When I first started practice I did so because I was so disillusioned with the world and my lot in it, naturally there was a lot of aversion I had to work through. As time went on I discovered there was a lot of joy in an unattached experience of the world, I discovered many of those things weren't that bad but my earlier attachment or reaction to them made them so.
Dan74 wrote:Have you noticed yourself become more averse to all sorts of things in your life since becoming a Buddhist?
I have and it's not necessarily a bad thing for sure, if it gets us to drop some bad habits and develop more wholesome behaviours. But if we become averse to the sort of things that are part and parcel of our lives as lay people, in the hope that one day we might become monastics, then this is living in fantasy and not what the Buddha taught, is it?
I wanted to ask people if they've experienced this kind of a half-way renunciation, which is not a good thing I think, because we are not really renouncing, but rather we are cultivating aversion to what we do, to our repsonsibilities and our actual environment. So instead of engaging in a compassionate and helpful way we will be more likely to withdraw and make some sort of a Buddhist excuse for doing so.
Does it ring a bell for anyone?
_/|\_
LauraJ wrote:
Hi Dan,
First off, great question. I've now developed a real aversion to false speech and gossip. So much so that it makes me feel a little ill to be around it. I hope that's normal![]()
Kindly,
Laura
)Dan74 wrote:Like Bikkhu Pesala above says, we should bring mindfulness to aversion as it arises and observe it carefully (and without aversion)
_/|\_

extraordinary
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