Pathless
Fiercely Interdependent
Some heated debate about this subject in toujour's thread on the colorbar. In case people would like to continue discussing the subject, I am creating this new thread.
First, I would like to thank everyone for their input and also humility. It seems that we are all in agreement that there are several different points of view in play here. I will attempt to summarize at least two:
My personal practice these days revolves not around sitting meditation or even a Dharma center, necessarily, but around service. I am active in my small community because I am passionate about certain issues: the environment, peace, free speech, human rights, and others. Right away you can see that I have many attachments--many passions . These are things that, for me, when I work to promote them, bring a sense of fulfilment and well-being. Perhaps, then, I am attached to those feelings as well.
The way I see it, since I did not sell all my stuff and join a community of monks and nuns (who I might add are attached to their ideas of guru, the right way to practice and think, and selfless service), I have to support myself. Right Livelihood is important to me; that is, I know that I get depressed, frustrated, and even risk dipping into cynicism, if I just go get a job to pay the bills. So, for me, it's very important to find work that makes me feel good about what I am doing with my time.
The point I am clumsily attempting to make is that it seems that we are always going to have some kind of attachments, if we simply look at them as things to be abandoned or transcended. Perhaps taking a view of attachments simply as across-the-board things to be thrown away and transcended so that we can reach Nirvana is not quite complete.
When I think deeply of attachments, I think of the suffering that is caused because of such attachments. Then, I begin to look deeply at different attachments and see which ones cause the most suffering; and I look not only at the suffering that the attachments cause me, but the suffering that they may cause other beings as well. From there, I begin to pick my attachments, and perhaps, in a sense, befriend them. My attachemnts and I become well acquainted, and I begin to practice with them, to see how they can benefit me. At the same time, I want to see how my attachments can benefit other beings. Since I know that I currently have a preference (attachment) for working outside because it makes me feel good, and since I recognize that my passion for cleaning up the environment can benefit many people, animals, and plants besides myself, I begin to work towards environmental restoration--so I am working alongside my attachment and letting it play itself out, rather than trying to root it out.
I am attached to the planet I am living on, and I don't see that changing until I die. Not that I shouldn't look deeply into death as well; but while I am alive, I make the decision that I am going to work towards making this planet a more hospitable and friendly place for all of the beings that call it home.
It seems to me that at the root of this debate are two different ways of looking at the world:
Metta,
Pathless
First, I would like to thank everyone for their input and also humility. It seems that we are all in agreement that there are several different points of view in play here. I will attempt to summarize at least two:
- All is illusion and suffering; therefore, we must attempt to transcend attachment, which is a key ingredient to suffering. Only in this way--by becoming a Buddha--will we reach liberation and be able to help other beings.
- Attachment, illusion, and suffering exist at all levels of being, and are relative to experience, context, and other subjective factors. For some, they may appear as obstacles to be transcended; for others, tools to be used to reach greater understanding; for another group, they may even be the raw representation understanding and enlightenment--who knows?
- The common thread that we can find in both these views, if we allow ourselves, is that there are multiple perspectives on attachment which may be equally valid, depending on person, place, time, and other contexts.
My personal practice these days revolves not around sitting meditation or even a Dharma center, necessarily, but around service. I am active in my small community because I am passionate about certain issues: the environment, peace, free speech, human rights, and others. Right away you can see that I have many attachments--many passions . These are things that, for me, when I work to promote them, bring a sense of fulfilment and well-being. Perhaps, then, I am attached to those feelings as well.
The way I see it, since I did not sell all my stuff and join a community of monks and nuns (who I might add are attached to their ideas of guru, the right way to practice and think, and selfless service), I have to support myself. Right Livelihood is important to me; that is, I know that I get depressed, frustrated, and even risk dipping into cynicism, if I just go get a job to pay the bills. So, for me, it's very important to find work that makes me feel good about what I am doing with my time.
The point I am clumsily attempting to make is that it seems that we are always going to have some kind of attachments, if we simply look at them as things to be abandoned or transcended. Perhaps taking a view of attachments simply as across-the-board things to be thrown away and transcended so that we can reach Nirvana is not quite complete.
When I think deeply of attachments, I think of the suffering that is caused because of such attachments. Then, I begin to look deeply at different attachments and see which ones cause the most suffering; and I look not only at the suffering that the attachments cause me, but the suffering that they may cause other beings as well. From there, I begin to pick my attachments, and perhaps, in a sense, befriend them. My attachemnts and I become well acquainted, and I begin to practice with them, to see how they can benefit me. At the same time, I want to see how my attachments can benefit other beings. Since I know that I currently have a preference (attachment) for working outside because it makes me feel good, and since I recognize that my passion for cleaning up the environment can benefit many people, animals, and plants besides myself, I begin to work towards environmental restoration--so I am working alongside my attachment and letting it play itself out, rather than trying to root it out.
I am attached to the planet I am living on, and I don't see that changing until I die. Not that I shouldn't look deeply into death as well; but while I am alive, I make the decision that I am going to work towards making this planet a more hospitable and friendly place for all of the beings that call it home.
It seems to me that at the root of this debate are two different ways of looking at the world:
- A transcendental worldview. Much like the worldview of many Christians who see earth as a testing ground for whether or not a soul is worthy of God, this worldview, when filtered through Buddhism, sees the world as, in essence, pure illusion, ready to vanish in a magic puff of (non-)smoke at the moment of critical enlightenment.
- An immanent worldview. In this view, whether Buddhist, Pagan, or Christian, the reality that we see before us is taken--at least at some level--as truly objective and concrete, and indeed is a real manifestation of cosmic consciousness or God. As such, it becomes important for humans to be stewards of reality, and to work towards its restoration, redemption, or even homeostasis. Also of importance is to comfort other beings and to make reality as joyful as possible. From a Buddhist perspective, a practive of immanence means being in the world, not separate from it, and working actively to create an environment that will be conducive to the liberation of all beings.
Metta,
Pathless