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We fail as Buddhists because we lack courage - the courage to sit through an entire session, facing our emptiness without seeking escapes. We don't do that. We are too scared to face our emptiness, which is why our 'meditations' are full of thoughts running here and there.
The answer therefore is not more practice, but more courage.
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You may find it interesting.
Have you seen the film: National Treasure - where every clue leads to another clue, and the father gets really frustrated at his son for continuing the family's tradition of looking for lost treasure. What makes the film interesting is that it is about a path of adventure…
When there is nothing to strive for - lets tell each others stories, to relieve the boredom, or go out there and do something.
The path is a long one, but I think that once we reach that marking-post of overcoming that very fear that you describe - the fear of facing the reality of emptiness - we have made a huge breakthrough.
It sounds like you're having trouble in your own practice though (as we all do from time to time).
Some unsolicited advice - we don't "fail" unless we totally abandon the practice. And even then, we may not fail because the abandonment may just take us where we need to go at that time.
The old Zen master was dying. One of his students came to him solicitously and asked, "Do you have any last words for us?" The Zen master replied, "Yes. I am afraid of dying." The student was aghast. Here was a man who had spent a lifetime investigating the matter of birth and death ... a fearless and determined man. "But master," the student sputtered, "how can this be so?!" The old man looked at his student sadly. "You don't understand," he said as if the fault were his own, "I am afraid of dying really. I am afraid of dying really!"
Gassho
8fold path. Emptiness is only the 6th step of the eight one.
I would like to recommend you reading the Dighanikayo, the Loner Collection od the
Pali-Canon. Be carefull with the translation. Look for the qualifications of the translator.
Compare several translations in Englisch.
anando
The emptiness of our own inherent existence.
It's not courage, it's patience.