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The Weight of the World and its New Ugly

zombiegirlzombiegirl beating the drum of the lifelessin a dry wasteland Veteran
edited April 2013 in Buddhism Today
In light of the tragedy at the Boston Marathon, I've been thinking about being aware of the world's suffering and whether or not it can become a negative. Isn't there always just some new ugly? It never seems to end...

Every time something like this happens, someone will always bring up awareness of all of the other miseries in the world happening outside of our limited scope. Living in a country like the US where things like this don't happen too terribly often, it's easy to forget about the worse living situations in other countries when they aren't right in front of your face. Is this a good thing or is this a bad thing?

My grandmother used to criticize me for watching violent movies. She would say to me, "Why do you want to put all that awful stuff in your head?" Sometimes, I think she was overreacting a little, but there have been certain movies and things in the media that I really wish I could un-see. There have been times that I wish I hadn't put that awful stuff in my head. Certain things can really stick with you and haunt you and I don't always think it's for the best. Has anyone here ever seen the horror movie (not to be confused with the comedy) The Girl Next Door? If you haven't... just don't.

It's important to be aware... It's important not to be blind to others' suffering... But sometimes, it just feels like such a burden knowing of all these awful things. Is it wrong to feel that way? These days I find myself avoiding the news in general because it's just too depressing. Does it help me to know the awful rape statistics of India? I can't see how that knowledge could enhance my life... it just makes me angry, makes me sad. Is sometimes wishing for ignorance selfish? It probably is... If we consider the war in Iraq, feeling this way could potentially lead to extreme nationalism when you aren't aware of our running death toll. But sometimes I just wonder if keeping up to date with all of the new ugly in the world is really necessary to keep me humble. Is knowing the ugly necessary for compassion? Don't the Buddha's teachings prepare us enough?

Maybe the problem is because I think too small and too limited. Some people probably learn about the injustices of the world and vow to make a change. Some people probably feel more connected to the world at large and don't feel as helpless as I do... Perhaps. But maybe being small and limited is okay too. There is certainly no lack of suffering in the world... my city, my neighborhood, these places are not exempt just because they could be worse.

What do you guys think? Anyone else struggling to keep that seed of optimism alive against the horrors that seem so much louder?
MaryAnneriverflowInvincible_summermaartenCinorjerDaltheJigsawYaskanericcris10sen
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Comments

  • @zombiegirl

    I can relate to every word you wrote. I also struggle with my self over this being "selfishly unconcerned" or is it really "compartmentalizing for the sake of sanity"? Being a glass-half-full kinda gal, I'm going to go with the sanity story. :)

    I stopped watching the nightly news, the weekly 'news' magazine shows (60 Minutes, 20/20, etc) and the 24/7 cable news channels years ago. I think it was right about the time of the first Iraq war (1991) when I suddenly realized there we were... there I was! ... watching an entire WAR on TV like it was a video game!
    The absurdity and the ... craziness.... of that was undeniable.

    Now of course you just can't miss the really BIG stories. The bombings, the terrorism, the wars, and other true atrocities of the world near and far. But I read/watch, then I think about what I can do (or can't do) about it, and then I try to move on as quickly as possible. I try not to dwell on these things. Sometimes I do well, sometimes I fail at it....
    riverflowzombiegirl
  • As a side note:
    For FACEBOOK users, one way to retain some sanity when one finds themselves bombarded with nothing but tragedy and heartache all around them;
    Review your FB newsfeed and remove all those friends, acquaintances, family members etc who post mostly horror stories, tragedies, animal and child abuse photos and graphic headlines, etc on a daily or near daily basis. All those "Please LIKE this photo...." (and something wonderful will happen) over pictures of maimed babies or dead mothers.... It's horror porn, pure and simple. Clean [those people] off your newsfeed! You'll feel a world of relief. They can still remain your "friends", but you only need to read their stuff if you feel like it (and actually go tho their FB page).

    I got so sick and tired of seeing this Tragedy Porn every morning with my first cuppa coffee and first click on FB, that I purged my newsfeed of these heartache- wallowers.
    MUCH BETTER! :D
    nenkohaistavros388lobsterInvincible_summer
  • personperson Don't believe everything you think The liminal space Veteran
    In Gestalt psychology the view is that our minds take in information as a whole first and then parses things out into details. Take this picture as an example:

    image

    Our minds take in the whole image, meaning the white background as well as the dot, and then it picks out the dot as different from the whole. To relate this to the negativity of the world the vast majority of our experience is people working and living together peaceably and harmoniously (background), so when there is something negative that is what stands out from the norm and what we notice. As has been pointed out this is what sells in news and so it seems like this sort of behavior is greater than it is.

    Violent crime in the US is at the lowest levels in 40 years. The author of the article looked into the stat and only found one major article reporting that fact.

    Violence is much, much lower today than it has been throughout history. Stephen Pinker gives a TED talk about it.



    Jimmy Carter's foundation has reduced the number of Guinea worm cases from 3.5 million in 1986 to 542 cases last year. http://www.cartercenter.org/health/guinea_worm/mini_site/index.html

    There are plenty of really positive stories but they don't get talked about that much.

    image
    MaryAnneriverflowzombiegirlSimon
  • karastikarasti Breathing Minnesota Moderator
    Honestly, I actually find myself much more able to be peaceful and optimistic than I did, say, 10 or so years ago. I won't use 9/11 because it's such a massive anomaly. But in the past, other things, the Columbine shootings, the sniper shooting, the anthrax scares, all those things, I got sucked into. Even if I shut off the tv, I thought and thought and thought about it. I worried, I worried for my kids, I worried for everyone and everything, and I cried, and lost sleep and so on. Even if I wasn't watching, I was immersed in it, the good and the bad.

    I don't do that anymore. I following running events so I was checking online for the results of the race periodically and then I saw what happened. I turned on the news, and I watched for a little bit. I looked for the helpers and they were everywhere. I actually felt the news did a better job with this than with most other such things. There were many stories of the helpers and the heroes and the good in humanity. I watched some with my 16 year old and we had a good discussion around it. After a little while, I shut the tv off and went on with our evening. I pay little mind to the details about the actual event, because half the time they are wrong and overall they just don't matter. I found the sign the little boy made to be quite profound. It just seems like so many who desire peace are the victims of violence. Seems it is a lesson we need to grasp.

    This morning I did a very long metta and tonglen meditation. From my lovely children to my parents, my grandma, my extended family, my town, the victims of the bombing, the helpers, the families of the victims, the whole country. Even the person/people who committed the act. I've actually had an ability to cultivate a lot of peace in myself, and when I meditate I send it out there. There is a lot of hurt and fear in our world. Hurt and fear cause people to perpetrate such acts, and it causes more hurt and fear for others. It has to stop somewhere. As much as I can possibly manage, it stops with me. It stops with my children. I do whatever I can to cultivate and maintain peace within myself, my family, and my friends. I'm not going to live my life in fear over every backpack that is sitting somewhere, every public gathering, every day my children go to school, movies, field trips and so on. I don't want to live that way, and I don't want them to live that way, so I just refuse to give into that fear that is so well propagated in our culture. The fear stops here.
    riverflowlobsterzombiegirlInvincible_summer
  • The fear stops here.
    The joy, the peace, the equanimity starts with us.
    How do we find and generate these qualities?
    Metta and tonglen seem an excellent way . . .

    “Be the change that you wish to see in the world.”
    Mahatma Gandhi

    Vastmindriverflownenkohai
  • ^ one of my all-time favorite quotes, Thanks, @lobster!
  • fivebellsfivebells Veteran
    edited April 2013

    What do you guys think? Anyone else struggling to keep that seed of optimism alive against the horrors that seem so much louder?

    It's important to distinguish between repression and suppression.
    "Now when a monk... attending to another theme... scrutinizing the drawbacks of those thoughts... paying no mind and paying no attention to those thoughts... attending to the relaxing of thought-fabrication with regard to those thoughts... beating down, constraining and crushing his mind with his awareness... steadies his mind right within, settles it, unifies it and concentrates it: He is then called a monk with mastery over the ways of thought sequences. He thinks whatever thought he wants to, and doesn't think whatever thought he doesn't. He has severed craving, thrown off the fetters, and — through the right penetration of conceit — has made an end of suffering and stress."
    In other words, one consequence of effective meditation practice is the ability to direct awareness to fruitful targets. In practical terms, for me so far, this means oscillating between attention to disturbing material (for the purposes of insight practice) and attention to more peaceful thoughts. The more peaceful thoughts establish the stability and positivity necessary to study the reactions to the disturbing thoughts.
    zombiegirllobster
  • I admit that I don't watch the news and read papers like I used to. I'm not saying that I never do -- I don't want to be utterly uninformed, but at the same time I feel the need to protect my mental health. Too much negative news just feeds into my own anger, and it's not a brief momentary anger it's the kind that hangs around for a long time and is utterly exhausting (not to mention that it does little to encourage compassion). I've also come to recognize when I can better handle really negative stuff and when I can't. For instance, I've been starting to feel better lately and don't want to wreck that, so I'm limiting my news media consumption at the moment.

    I agree that for the most part it's the tragic stuff that gets reported -- in once sense that is understandable, since some of these things are big issues. However, I think news channels broadcasting 24/7 as well as internet new sites that need constant updates to bring in traffic magnify the bad and and offer a skewed vision of the world. As for FB, if someone is constantly bombarding me with stuff I find disturbing, I put them under 'aquaintences' which means they are still my FB friend, but their posts don't show up in my newsfeed -- it's a good way of managing my feed without hurting feelings.
    riverflowzombiegirlMaryAnne
  • There is great freedom in the realization that security does not exist. One less thing to worry and stress about.
    riverflowInvincible_summer
  • genkakugenkaku Northampton, Mass. U.S.A. Veteran
    In Buddhism, I like the saying, "The hard stuff is easy. The easy stuff is hard."

    Does anyone who practices Buddhism ever find him- or herself hip deep in a conversation about the wondrousness of it all? Maybe so, but it gets pretty icky, pretty fast, whereas nitty-gritty uphill efforts against 'ego' or 'attachment' or 'ignorance' or a host of other trip-wires make for much better and more credible conversation. Just check out the topics on newbuddhist and you'll see what I mean.

    The hard stuff is easy ... in a Buddhist practice or on the nightly news. It's depressing, painful, bloody, confusing, full of anger, gloomy, greedy and creates a matrix in which anyone might say "ouch!"

    Somehow, this framework needs to be revised. But climbing into the ick-mobile of lavish praise or imaginative realm-making really doesn't cut it unless you consent to be a dimwit. The easy stuff (laughter, love, decency, etc.) is hard ... precisely because it is so easy ... and yet it doesn't last.

    Well, this is one of those bs-all-night topics. The best I can think is that a Buddhist practice can lend a hand. Practice promotes experience and experience trumps hope and belief, two of the central aspects of uncertainty and sorrow.

    The best I can think of is Martin Luther King Jr.'s observation, "It's not what's wrong with the world that scares people. What really scares them is that everything is all right." This is the kind of observation that is easy to quote but takes a bit of practice (maybe Buddhist practice) to actualize.
    howMaryAnneInvincible_summerlobster
  • This point is a problem for me also. It's all too easy to lose balance by mentally and emotionally engaging with news and analysis on the Net and other media. I believe that information consumption should be purposefully limited by individuals (but not eliminated!). It should be approached like eating-- take in the food you need and that is as natural as possible because otherwise you'll hurt the body.

    When we read, watch or listen, it ain't nothing-- it's gazzillions of cells and chemicals that create our personalities moving and firing. With the advent of mass media, and especially the Internet, it is now possible to pump oneself with more data in an hour than one's grandparents could in a month. My point is that it's way more stimulation than our brains evolved to handle. I think that is why it is so easy to cloud one's mind while on some news website.

    As for worrying that turning off that TV is disengaging from the suffering in the world, I do not think that flooding one's brain with digitized presentation of that suffering helps much. There's plenty of suffering in our "real" lives-- us, families, work places, institutions and communities. It's good to be informed but each one of us needs to find the reasonable degree of informed-ness -- otherwise, dwelling on "issues" out there can easily take away the bulk of our life force that can be used to actually make things better.

    Internet etc are very powerful tools that can be used skillfully and unskillfully. As with any powerful tool, we must take great care when wielding them. As I look around me (and within me), I can see quite a bit of room for improvements in that department.
    personriverflow
  • howhow Veteran Veteran
    Perhaps I'm living in some deluded form of escapism but my world does not look worse for wear than it ever did. The effective news reporting of stories that cry out for attention has changed but not the events of the world. How folks view the world has changed because of this but again, not the world itself.
    When I see the news, I mostly see the business of "attention grabbing" about the news. When folks over focus on such stories, I try to return it to the story of this moment of exchange between us because that's the thing I can actually do something about.



    and @lucy-Begood, you're my hero with that load you've taken on.
    Invincible_summerlobsternenkohai
  • pegembarapegembara Veteran
    edited April 2013
    Mind precedes all mental states. Mind is their chief; they are all mind-wrought. If with a pure mind a person speaks or acts happiness follows him like his never-departing shadow.

    Dhp1

    So watch your mind states.
  • A lot of my optimism comes from watching children. They are such good examples of how beautiful human beings are, and I think our true nature is close to that of a small child.
    karasti
  • This world is a house of darkness. To search for light is to search for an illusion - it is an exercise in futility. As Buddhists, let us just accept that samsara sucks and try to get out of it. Let worldly people worry about the world.
  • robotrobot Veteran
    music said:

    This world is a house of darkness. To search for light is to search for an illusion - it is an exercise in futility. As Buddhists, let us just accept that samsara sucks and try to get out of it. Let worldly people worry about the world.

    You live in a horrible place. It must be very hard.
    Some people are unable to change their circumstances for any number of reasons.
    Life over here is the opposite from where you are seeing it from.
    It is so beautiful here, and so interesting in many ways, so alluring, that the desire to stay is very strong. I have to look for the dark side. It's well hidden. Without the media or travel one might think the world is a lovely place.
    I feel sorry about your situation.@music.


    lobster
  • robot said:

    music said:

    This world is a house of darkness. To search for light is to search for an illusion - it is an exercise in futility. As Buddhists, let us just accept that samsara sucks and try to get out of it. Let worldly people worry about the world.

    You live in a horrible place. It must be very hard.
    Some people are unable to change their circumstances for any number of reasons.
    Life over here is the opposite from where you are seeing it from.
    It is so beautiful here, and so interesting in many ways, so alluring, that the desire to stay is very strong. I have to look for the dark side. It's well hidden. Without the media or travel one might think the world is a lovely place.
    I feel sorry about your situation.@music.


    You are right. Disease, tsunami, hurricanes are all illusory. Nobody ever suffers, nobody ever dies. Earth is beautiful.
  • robotrobot Veteran
    music said:

    robot said:

    music said:

    This world is a house of darkness. To search for light is to search for an illusion - it is an exercise in futility. As Buddhists, let us just accept that samsara sucks and try to get out of it. Let worldly people worry about the world.

    You live in a horrible place. It must be very hard.
    Some people are unable to change their circumstances for any number of reasons.
    Life over here is the opposite from where you are seeing it from.
    It is so beautiful here, and so interesting in many ways, so alluring, that the desire to stay is very strong. I have to look for the dark side. It's well hidden. Without the media or travel one might think the world is a lovely place.
    I feel sorry about your situation.@music.


    You are right. Disease, tsunami, hurricanes are all illusory. Nobody ever suffers, nobody ever dies. Earth is beautiful.
    I was at the celebration of life for a friend last weekend. The cancer got to him at 60.
    He loved it here. Made the most of his family and friends. Loved the sea and the woods.
    It was a beautiful spring day and the hall was full of hundreds of people to enjoy sharing in stories and pictures of this well loved guy.
    We have storms over here too. People come from miles away to look at them. Fishermen get killed sometimes or unwary tourists.
    But you are right too. There is horrible things happening to people all the time. I hear about it when I'm driving in my truck.
    It's all illusory and its all real. So we agree.
    riverflowInvincible_summernenkohai
  • CittaCitta Veteran
    Well said.
  • karastikarasti Breathing Minnesota Moderator
    Agree with @riverflow.
    Of course bad things happen. With that, good things happen. You wouldn't even register all those things as bad if you didn't not know good was out there, too.
    This year we've had a really long winter. Lots of snow. Not always easy for those of us who like to be out in the warm sunshine, but ideal. We've been in a drought the past many years which is causing many issues for the animals and crops. As a result of our long and snowy winter, our drought has eased. The risk of wildfire is down, the likelihood for a strong berry and nut crop is good. This should be a better summer and fall for many beings compared to the last 2 years. Then you look 300 miles to the west, and our snowy winter is looking to cause yet another record flood in North Dakota. One man's heaven is another man's hell.
  • howhow Veteran Veteran

    @Music
    All hells are self orgasmic and you could walk away from this one by simply unclenching your grip on it. Of course you would say that what I see as hell, you see as just having a more realistic view of life.
    Over & over, folks have asked you if you've considered helping others as a way of not supporting whatever holds you in this darkness.
    And then I thought that you actually love your perceptions of this world too much to do anything that might threaten them.

    Hope that's not true.
    vinlynInvincible_summerriverflownenkohai
  • BonsaiDougBonsaiDoug Simply, on the path. Veteran
    For every yin there is a yang. You can't have beauty without ugliness; good without evil.

    And that's as philosophical as I'm gonna get today. :)
    riverflowJeffrey
  • genkakugenkaku Northampton, Mass. U.S.A. Veteran
    @how -- Please don't tell me to surrender my worries! Who would I be without my worries?! :)
  • riverflow said:

    music said:

    You are right. Disease, tsunami, hurricanes are all illusory. Nobody ever suffers, nobody ever dies. Earth is beautiful.

    Why this tireless insistence on manichean purity? Either the world must be a total paradise or it must be total hell, where any admixture of the two is unacceptable and inadmissible. It is your own absurd expectations that infects your mind with nihilism.

    The hell you perceive is not "out there" somewhere, but in the fabrications of your own mind--by craving for a world which adheres to some human standard of "perfection."
    Even if one accepts the good with the bad, the bad clearly outweighs the former. And I am not even referring to specific tragedies, like tsunami or disease, but to the very nature of existence. Of course, you won't get this and will go on and on about mental fabrications even though what I say pertains to the objective world out there. I am done.
  • CittaCitta Veteran
    Promise ?
    vinlynInvincible_summernenkohaikarasti
  • vinlynvinlyn Colorado...for now Veteran
    edited April 2013
    We all get negative sometimes, but @Music, your negativity seems pervasive in a way that adds to the negativity in the world. While it's hardly as deep as the messages by many great world and religious leaders, I'll simplify by using some very old MUSIC: "You've got to accentuate the positive, Eliminate the negative, And latch on to the affirmative, Don't mess with Mister In-Between. You've got to spread joy up to the maximum, Bring gloom down to the minimum, Have faith or pandemonium's liable to walk upon the scene."

    And I think key phrase there is: "Bring gloom down to the minimum". No, we can't eliminate negativity. But what are you doing to hold it down to the minimum? You can make a change in your immediate surroundings. You. You. You.
    Invincible_summer
  • @music, you can't speak of good and bad in terms of the 'objective world'* without some objective measure which you correspond in some way with good and bad. What is your objective measure?

    *I prefer to refer to it as the world of shared experience
    Invincible_summerriverflownenkohai
  • personperson Don't believe everything you think The liminal space Veteran
    how said:


    @Music
    All hells are self orgasmic and you could walk away from this one by simply unclenching your grip on it. Of course you would say that what I see as hell, you see as just having a more realistic view of life.
    Over & over, folks have asked you if you've considered helping others as a way of not supporting whatever holds you in this darkness.
    And then I thought that you actually love your perceptions of this world too much to do anything that might threaten them.

    Hope that's not true.

    Looking at myself as an example I'm going to speculate that the reason @music holds to his view so tightly is that accepting the possibility of people being good and kind would mean lowering his defenses against letting others in and possibly being hurt. I'm guessing much hurt and pain and not much affection in his past.

    Just speculation based upon my own life.
    riverflowzombiegirl
  • In my practice, nihilism and Dharma are mutually exclusive. You can call me wrong and quote the Buddha himself to back up the claim, but this will not change the fact that in my practice, nihilism and Dharma are mutually exclusive.
  • karastikarasti Breathing Minnesota Moderator
    @music I too would like to know what you are basing your observation and conclusions on. I see the complete opposite in the world as you.
  • vinlyn said:

    We all get negative sometimes, but @Music, your negativity seems pervasive in a way that adds to the negativity in the world. While it's hardly as deep as the messages by many great world and religious leaders, I'll simplify by using some very old MUSIC: "You've got to accentuate the positive, Eliminate the negative, And latch on to the affirmative, Don't mess with Mister In-Between. You've got to spread joy up to the maximum, Bring gloom down to the minimum, Have faith or pandemonium's liable to walk upon the scene."

    And I think key phrase there is: "Bring gloom down to the minimum". No, we can't eliminate negativity. But what are you doing to hold it down to the minimum? You can make a change in your immediate surroundings. You. You. You.

    *sighs* I am not talking about the negative stuff at all. Even if everything in the world changes drastically - and becomes paradise tomorrow when you wake up - there will be something else (perhaps boredom that comes from lack of conflict) to torment us. So the very nature of the material world is to give us pain in some form or the other.
  • CittaCitta Veteran
    That sounds like a description of Dukkha. The the 1st Noble Truth echoes that.
    But there are three more Noble Truths.
    nenkohaiInvincible_summerstavros388
  • Apologies if that post sounds a bit p!ssed--that isn't my intention--it was just a bad time in my life...
  • riverflow said:

    Apologies if that post sounds a bit p!ssed--that isn't my intention--it was just a bad time in my life...

    No need to apologize. I understand and sympathize. I have accepted the darkness, within and without, whereas you are trying to overcome it. I wish you well.
  • CittaCitta Veteran
    I think the reverse is true @music.
    I think that riverflow has accepted the fact that sentient existence is characterised by Dukkha..and that there is a way through.
    Whereas you are constantly disappointed by looking for happiness where it cannot be found.
    riverflow
  • DaltheJigsawDaltheJigsaw Mountain View Veteran
    Yea, the world definitely has something new and depressing to share. It's also difficult as it rubs off you oh, so well, but I suppose trying to focus on yourself foremost is important. Once that can be achieved you can go out into the world and help balance the scales? Who knows...
  • I haven't overcome samsara, to be sure. But I have overcome hell--even if only by "accident." Trying to escape suffering is suffering. I know now there is a path--not to escape suffering but to transform it. Every day is another step on that path which I accept with gratitude.

    In retrospect, I understand it this way: The fragmentation of an ontological whole into subjects vs. objects is an error. Every attempt to bridge this gap within that framework will inevitably fail. The problem is not in the subject or the object, but the ontological assumptions underlying "subjectivity" or "objectivity" as absolute realities. Taken to a consistent extreme, it is only natural that it leads to despair and nihilism. The Buddhadharma is, in this sense, a process of healing ("salvation," salvus) this violent rupture, the real-ization of a seamless whole (or emptiness) which precedes this delusion of separate and essentialised subjects and objects.

    I know that sounds like a clumsy, jargon-filled mouthful, but it is hardly a clinical matter to me.
  • The optimist believes we live in the best of all possible worlds.
    The pesimist fears that's true.
    personvinlynlobstermaarten
  • seeker242seeker242 Zen Florida, USA Veteran

    In light of the tragedy at the Boston Marathon, I've been thinking about being aware of the world's suffering and whether or not it can become a negative. Isn't there always just some new ugly? It never seems to end...

    That is probably why they call it the "neverending wheel of suffering" that is samsara. :) But if you think about it really, there is nothing really new going on here IMO. The world has always been this way.

    It can become a negative if you give it "inappropriate attention" as the Buddha called it.
    'He insulted me, hit me, beat me, robbed me' — for those who brood on this, hostility isn't stilled. 'He insulted me, hit me, beat me, robbed me' — for those who don't brood on this, hostility is stilled.
    Brooding on this ugly can easily be negative. But, simply being aware of it, not necessarily so IMO. There is a big difference between "brooding" and "awareness".
    But sometimes, it just feels like such a burden knowing of all these awful things. Is it wrong to feel that way?
    Don't think so. Consider the story of Thousand-armed Avalokiteśvara. Love this story. :)

    One prominent Buddhist story tells of Avalokiteśvara vowing never to rest until he had freed all sentient beings from samsara. Despite strenuous effort, he realizes that still many unhappy beings were yet to be saved. After struggling to comprehend the needs of so many, his head splits into eleven pieces. Amitabha Buddha, seeing his plight, gives him eleven heads with which to hear the cries of the suffering. Upon hearing these cries and comprehending them, Avalokiteśvara attempts to reach out to all those who needed aid, but found that his two arms shattered into pieces. Once more, Amitabha Buddha comes to his aid and invests him with a thousand arms with which to aid the suffering multitudes.
    Good story!
    I just wonder if keeping up to date with all of the new ugly in the world is really necessary to keep me humble. Is knowing the ugly necessary for compassion? Don't the Buddha's teachings prepare us enough?
    Is knowing the ugly of the word really something different than Buddha's teaching? It seems to me that it's the same thing. When he spoke about suffering and the 1st noble truth, he wasn't speaking about some obscure philosophy in a textbook or something. He was speaking about these real life things that happen every day. People dying, people killing each other etc, etc. When you say "new ugly" I keep thinking to myself, new? What here is new? People have been doing things like this since the dawn of humanity! You can change some things, but you can't change the 1st noble truth to make it not true. Or something like that. :)
    riverflowzombiegirlInvincible_summer
  • zombiegirlzombiegirl beating the drum of the lifeless in a dry wasteland Veteran
    @seeker242 Thank you for some great points. I just wanted to clarify that by "new ugly" I meant the new media sensationalized ugly of the moment. This is how it often appears to me... every time a child is abducted, every time there is a shooting, a bombing, etc... There seems to be a point where the media is no longer offering news, rather, they're just obsessing in the horror in a way that is almost pornographic (as others have pointed out). I'm sure, all of these things that happen have happened before, but it's the NEW(s) of the moment.
    riverflowInvincible_summer
  • seeker242seeker242 Zen Florida, USA Veteran
    One of the reasons why I really don't care to watch the news much anymore. :)
    stavros388
  • DakiniDakini Veteran

    In light of the tragedy at the Boston Marathon, I've been thinking about being aware of the world's suffering and whether or not it can become a negative. Isn't there always just some new ugly? It never seems to end...


    My grandmother used to criticize me for watching violent movies. She would say to me, "Why do you want to put all that awful stuff in your head?" Sometimes, I think she was overreacting a little, but there have been certain movies and things in the media that I really wish I could un-see. There have been times that I wish I hadn't put that awful stuff in my head. Certain things can really stick with you and haunt you and I don't always think it's for the best. Has anyone here ever seen the horror movie (not to be confused with the comedy) The Girl Next Door? If you haven't... just don't.

    I'm very selective about the images I allow myself to be exposed to. Precisely because you can't "un-see" what you've seen. Images can be traumatic, and invasive. Mindfulness is about the choices we make day-to-day.

    As to the larger question, it's good to be aware of one's tolerance level. Each of us can only do what we have the strength to do, and that strength/resilience level is different for everyone. So we shouldn't feel badly if we feel like we can't handle as much as the next person. Comparing isn't helpful. Self-care comes first. If we allow ourselves to be drained, we won't be of any use to anyone.

    riverflow
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