Welcome home! Please contact
lincoln@icrontic.com if you have any difficulty logging in or using the site.
New registrations must be manually approved which may take several days.
Can't log in? Try clearing your browser's cookies.
I'm new to Buudhism and I nearly gave up recently as the point I've got to I interpreted it to mean we shouldn't mourn death. I can't remember exactly what I read but it was about attachment to feelings.
I thought about it a little more and I then wondered how often we actually choose to feel sad etc. Lots of people I know (well mainly women) choose to watch certain films as they make them cry.
The thing that actually scares me about taking Buddhism further is that if I want to become enlightened it comes at the expense of not being able to love somebody to the extent that we virtually become the same person, how when they are gone part of me will be gone and I will be inconsolable for a time.
0
Comments
We come to slowly replace "selfish" love with "selfless" love, or unconditional/universal compassion, the greater kind of love that doesn't depend on someone loving us back. We become like mothers to their children, in relation to others (even strangers). And of course when you love the world, the world loves you back. It's becoming "family" with everyone, instead of just a small group of people. You're becoming one with all of humanity and life! If you've ever read the teachings of Jesus, or read about him, it's like this... considering everyone to be your family, to love everyone.
These things happen naturally as we come to see things how they really are, and it leads to a great peace because life doesn't have to be such a struggle, such a pain in the ass. Life is beautiful and wondrous, and we should embrace it with our entire heart, our entire being.
As it is, as it is. Let all things be as they are.
That is the problem. When alive, one cannot let go but when facing death, hopefully there is realisation/acceptance that one cannot hold one simply because nothing belongs to us.
Also Buddhism isn't about should or shouldn't. It's about seeing things as they are. If there is reason to mourn, there is reason to mourn, if there is not, there is not.
http://viewonbuddhism.org/attachment.html
Have a good one!
http://webspace.ship.edu/cgboer/buddhapsych.html
Cheers