Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!

Examples: Monday, today, last week, Mar 26, 3/26/04
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.

What, if anything, are you trying to achieve?

BunksBunks Australia Veteran
  1. Why do you practice Buddhism (if you do)?
  2. What are you hoping / expecting to achieve in this lifetime?
Alex

Comments

  • JeroenJeroen Luminous beings are we, not this crude matter Netherlands Veteran

    I always liked the meditative quiet space around buddhist places. The mere look of a sitting Buddha statue carries with it a peace, a contentment, a stillness. That is the spaciousness that attracted me, that told me ‘this you should examine’.

    In this lifetime I would like to achieve peace. Enlightenment and cosmic knowledge would be nice, but I think peace is at least as important. Having looked into the Buddha’s path, I don’t think the lifetimes of practice are for me, but I think we can always determine a good next step. The path will take care of itself if you can determine a good next step.

    BunkslobsterpersonAlex
  • howhow Veteran Veteran
    edited December 2020

    These questions shift like the temporary intersections that our aggregates happen to congregate around in the moment.
    A wink shared between two past lovers while crossing a street.

    Bunks
    1. Because I started when I was in a whole heap of trouble 20 years ago and I feel it continues to be a good practice to this for both mind and body. Also I'm not positive about the cosmic and soteriology/salvation side to it but it could be true. I was just reading a short book of Dalai Lama and in the section on karma/rebirth he talks about how the karmic impressions in this life can be important to take to the next one. Another thing he said is death is not so much to be feared for him and that he thinks maybe it's like changing an old worn out set of clothing for new ones.
    Bunks
  • VimalajātiVimalajāti Whitby, Ontario Veteran
    edited December 2020
    1. For 2.
    2. To be content with not getting what I want, to be content with getting what I do not want, and to be content even when nothing is going on and I'm not up to anything, to be a self-sufficient island both for myself and those I love, and lastly to expand the circle of people whom I find myself able to love.
    BunkspersonlobsterBuddyUk
  • @Bunks said:
    1. Why do you practice Buddhism (if you do)?

    Karma = a sequence of causes conditions & effects, which led to Dharma practice...

    1. What are you hoping / expecting to achieve in this lifetime?

    Deeper experiential understanding...in other words the ultimate answer to life universe and everything AKA 42

    lobsterAlex
  • personperson Don't believe everything you think The liminal space Veteran
    1. To be able to find happiness and contentment within the ups and downs of life, and hopefully pass that on to others.

    2. I have a desire to devote myself to the dharma and eventually teach, at this point though I really don't think I have the needed drive to be able to take that sort of plunge. So I'm happy to leave the world a better place for having been in it while doing ,y best to live a peaceful, stress-free life.

    lobsterSuraShineJeroen
  • A wink shared between two past lovers while crossing a street.

    ?

    What, if anything, are you trying to achieve? (in this lifetime)

    As a headless chicken I might not even get to the other side without dying.
    Therefore:

    1. Why do you practice Buddhism (if you do)?

    Do-do. I iz in it.

    1. Hope to abandon hope. [oops ...] back to the Middle of the Road ... [head missing ...]

    2. ...

  • 1 - Because I finally got sick and tired of the bullshit and wanted answers. Even if it means "I don't know" was the answer

    Tee Hee! Buddhism uniquely does not pretend to have all the answers. It has the best questions.

    2 - Patience, Equanimity, Mindfulness, Compassion, Altruism and to leave this world better than when I entered it.

    I'll join.

  • AlexAlex UK Veteran
    edited December 2020

    Great and useful question.

    In essence, I’m searching for peace, tranquility and equanimity. I could throw out some comments about enlightenment and understanding, but I’m really of a view that I can and do overthink and over-analyse, so peace and some bliss is enough for me. If something else comes, great. But I’m not chasing anything beyond serenity and a calm place to go. And I’m trying not to chase those things too hard either.

    I practice Samatha with the UK Samatha Trust organisation, 2 formal sits per week with them, augmented by my home practice. I occasionally link with Zen, Plum Village or a Pure Land group, all Zoom stuff.

    In these dark times, death is also something that perhaps I think about more and I’m getting older, so it naturally begins to have a higher profile in my thoughts. So, a way of being more comfortable with the concept of death and the pathway to dying is a key component of my meditation and behavioural practice, I’d say. This is the stuff that I feel Thich Nhat Hanh handles very well and articulates simply. Perhaps Pure Land has some comforting aspects here, @Bunks ?

    Like others have said, I love a bit of incense, a Buddha statue and a temple, with the lovely atmosphere those things can bring. I’m not for poring over manuscripts and doctrine, as Ajahn Chah has said.....bring me your doctrinal arguments and I’ll simply point you to the laws of cause and effect.

    I find Buddhism sometimes takes me into complicated territory and my mind gets confused. I like simplicity. Namo Amida Bu.

    I can get too caught up in reading. Time to get caught up in inner space.

    I just think Buddhism and the practice of meditation is good for me and my mind. That simple.

    JeroenlobsterShoshin1
  • JeroenJeroen Luminous beings are we, not this crude matter Netherlands Veteran

    @person if you would eventually like to teach, what would you like to teach? It’s a lot simpler to teach meditation than it is to teach the dharma. I have known a lay teacher who was affiliated with a temple and who did an excellent job teaching introductory courses, is that the kind of role you envisage?

    Bunks
  • personperson Don't believe everything you think The liminal space Veteran

    @Kerome said:
    @person if you would eventually like to teach, what would you like to teach? It’s a lot simpler to teach meditation than it is to teach the dharma. I have known a lay teacher who was affiliated with a temple and who did an excellent job teaching introductory courses, is that the kind of role you envisage?

    Not really, I'm thinking of something where I'm able to actually develop deep dharmic qualities and be able to pass those on. So I guess more like teaching the dharma.

    I think probably a big hang up for me is I just have issues with groups and the groupish mindsets that seem to go along with them.

    lobsterBunks
  • JeroenJeroen Luminous beings are we, not this crude matter Netherlands Veteran

    @person said:
    Not really, I'm thinking of something where I'm able to actually develop deep dharmic qualities and be able to pass those on. So I guess more like teaching the dharma.

    I think probably a big hang up for me is I just have issues with groups and the groupish mindsets that seem to go along with them.

    I once came across a wise quote that said, “you teach what you know”. It seemed interesting to me, because you then first have to explore what you really know. It’s not as simple — at least for me — as just saying I have read about these parts of the dharma, so I will teach them.

    If I really look at the dharma, what parts of it have really worked for me, settled in deeply and shown me things about my life? Those are the things I would be able to teach, and if those things include deep dharmic qualities then so much the better. But I think more often than not they are superficially simple things like ‘letting go’.

    Then there is the issue of breadth, different lessons appeal to different students. In the old days of zen, masters would sometimes send a student who had difficulty to another master. In these modern times you’d have to have a network of fellow teachers that you would respect.

    But where would you get a student? I suppose you could just go to a Buddhist school and put up a notice offering one-on-one tutoring.

    Bunks
  • RixhRixh Australia New
    1. Keeps me happy. I Also believe there must be a state of being beyond the one I was originally born with due to the effects meditation and other practises have had on me. Practicing also keeps me real.
    2. I have to much fear. Not exactly sure of the causes of this dukkha but if I keep working on myself with buddhist methods hopefully something will change.
    AlexJeroenShoshin1Bunks
Sign In or Register to comment.