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Derive meaning from emptiness
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My life is peaceful and I am more kind to everyone around me. Not only that I am much more happier.
The fruits of meditation, ethics, compassionate action, and wisdom teachings are beneficial to me. Not only that it has given me a larger perspective of Buddhism, which is an all inclusive view of all the schools.
And it only has been getting better.
So from my personal experience and insights, yes it has really helped. Now will it totally irradicate ignorance and all the kleshas?
Only time will tell. Until then I have my bodhisattva vows, working on the six perfections, following the four noble truths, examining dependent origination, and emptiness teachings will do.
If it were merely an idea then it would be meaningless for me to spend my time talking about it and reading up on it and such.
But to be honest with you the teachings have helped with my life greatly. With an open mind and heart. What more do we need?
Do you not see the disconnect between an object that is constantly moving at a rate of 3 trillionths of a second and how we view it as permanent/abiding?
This may be extremely limiting, but what experience is outside of the six sense realms?
Is experience dependent on contact, six senses, six objects, and six consciousness?
what is not perceivable is not knowable.
we work with what we have: six sense, six objects, six consciousness and contact, feeling, craving, becoming and suffering.
what is outside of this? and if there is something does it matter? does it liberate? does it bring about the cessation of suffering?
The mind clings to self, thus suffers. The self is posited as an entity that is permanent, independent and unitary. If such self exists it could not interact with anything else, nor would change. On the basis that the self is constantly changing, it is a projection of mind, thus lacking inherent existence. It exists only as a nominal projection on the basis of body and mind.
Another way to frame this is the teaching of non-self. In the seeing, there is only form, no seer. The subject was just an assumption based on minds conditioning to cling.
If emptiness is realized this solid self that we posit. For instance we hit our foot on something and we feel pain. that solid self. with the direct perception of emptiness that self is seen to be lacking of a reference point. when it is looked for it isn't anywhere. yet, there is still the sensation of self posited by mind/body.
The self is just misperception, thus with clear seeing ignorance is pulled out from its core.
This doesn't mean self doesn't exist. This means our projections of what self is are seen to be not solid, but instead it is a process. Thus there isn't anything to let go because it never existed how the mind posited it to begin with.
Not sure why I am typing all this out but this is not much of a belief. In meditation and in daily life I still find it funny that this "I, MY, ME" is projected onto experience after the fact. Yet with mindfulness one can see how contact becomes feeling and how feeling turn right into craving and clinging.
With the wisdom of emptiness and with Rigpa (don't kill me for using this word) one can see how consciousness does not grasp at objects, but normal mind does grasp at objects. Also rigpa is empty. Thought I'd throw that in there for you.
Fix me please.
They do teach other teachings in Mahayana, other than emptiness.
Habits are countered by developing the six paramitas and morality.
What Buddhism do you study and practice? How is your Buddhism working for you?
knowledge is gained via three methods:
reading or hearing.
critical thinking and reflection
direct perception in meditation and off meditation
How does your Buddhism work?
Now when we look at a empty bowl, we are looking at it from subject-object duality, moreover we are saying empty bowl meaning the bowl is having nothing in it, or the bowl is filled with space in it. When we fill water in it, that space in bowl is replaced by water.
If we said bowl is empty meaning bowl is empty of inherent existence - which is ultimate truth, so even after bowl filled with water, then also the bowl is empty of inherent existence.
This is all based on my understanding.
form is emptiness: no soul in things, things are made from parts
emptiness is form: without the things there is no emptiness found. emptiness is there because things are there. it is an concept which can be applied to things.
how can this strange concept help?
if i feel bad and i think "ahh, why do i have to be such an *random insult*" i can remember my self that there is no hard coded core inside of me that forces me to act like i do. i can change my behaviour and i can change my life.
that my bad feelings doesnt have an inherent existence which is permanent, doesnt mean they just dissolve and i am happy from this insight. but it gives me the confidence that i can work and them and change them.
Wisdom conditions morality and morality conditions wisdom.
In Mahayana the goal is to manifest all the positive qualities of the a Fully Enlightened Buddha. This occurs prior and even far after the initial realization of emptiness.
Because all things are empty of inherent existence, all things are possible. Meaning is possible only because things lack inherent existence. If a thing had inherent existence, we could only have one meaning attributed to such things. Not only do we have one, we have many. And on the basis of one and many, an independent or inherently existing thing cannot have intrinsic meaning/essence.
Why? Because it is dependent on a mind to perceive meaning. Emptiness is the ground, or to put more poetically the groundless ground.
I didn't take that sense of meaning in the OP. I understood it as what is the use of the realization of emptiness.
The goal isn't to adhere to a series of beliefs in order to comfort oneself. The goal is to implement the teachings to bring about a transformation in ones mind to live a happier more fulfilled life and eventually enlightenment.
In that context a realization of emptiness that isn't a one off simple experience but a cultivated, experiential view of the world that loosens ones grasping on experience as so solid where events effect our minds so intensly. So that is the use of understanding and realizing emptiness.
What is the meaning of virtue to a psychopath? Maybe its a way to get people to do what they want. Maybe its seen as a delusion that some people cling to to make themselves feel better.
What is the meaning of virtue to a monk? A way to help oneself and others and to attain enlightenment.
Meaning doesn't exist in and of itself. The meaning of any phenomena (including emptiness) depends on other factors.
if there is no cause is there an effect?
I'm curious as to your view of the OP. I only remember reading about your disagreements to other people's views.
that makes everything kinda useless...
why not make the best of it...and help yourself and other people??
Saying everything is kinda useless can be mistaken for nihilism. When the mind is empty, is it useless? Would a bowl even be useful without its emptiness? Emptiness is what gives the world usefulness. When the question arises, "Is this all there is? You are born, grow old, and die, and that's it?" then you are pointing to form. To appearances. But form is inherently empty. When a baby takes his first breath, what is being born? An individual body, a collection of cells that means only that the world has another mouth to feed? That's looking at form only.
Is this all there is? Yes, this moment is all there is, and it's glorious. What will you do with this moment? It's empty. Only you can fill the emptiness with meaning.
"Buddha says everyone has Buddha-Nature (potential to be enlightened). Master Joju says a dog has no Buddha Nature. Which one is right, and which one is wrong? Understand and you find the true way." (another saying by Master Seung Sahn)
Yes, impermanence can be very liberating.
Spiny