CrawfordHollow wrote:
Vows such as these are likened to a clay pot, once they are broken there is not much you can do to fix it.
GarcherLancelot wrote:I mean does precepts have some "special power" when you break them because it is "DESIGNED" by the Buddha?If someone just randomly make a vow to not drink for example maybe he is just saying it to universe,God or anything he believes in or maybe he wasn't sure and if he breaks it ,will there be any karmic consequences?.. .
GarcherLancelot wrote:So if he breaks it,is the vow still there,any way to "dispel" it?.. .
Btw, do we need to say the vows verbally to take it?
Or just in the mind?.. .
Azidonis wrote: The moment one takes a vow, the entirety of one's conscious awareness seeks to oppose it.
GarcherLancelot wrote:What if one is not sure whether he took a vow or not?As in can't remember?.. .Or taking it while drunk?.. .

PadmaVonSamba wrote:Azidonis wrote: The moment one takes a vow, the entirety of one's conscious awareness seeks to oppose it.
Very interesting.
How do you arrive at that conclusion?
PadmaVonSamba wrote:GarcherLancelot wrote:What if one is not sure whether he took a vow or not?As in can't remember?.. .Or taking it while drunk?.. .
Unless you've had a head injury or something like that, amnesia, or being in a coma,
If you can't remember taking it, you probably didn't.
If you were too intoxicated to remember,
then you couldn't have really taken it (being of sound mind & body)
even though you might have gone through the motions
or had been at a ceremony where the precepts were given.
and in that case you should also check all the various parts of your body
to see if you have any tattoos that you don't remember getting.
Azidonis wrote:PadmaVonSamba wrote:Azidonis wrote: The moment one takes a vow, the entirety of one's conscious awareness seeks to oppose it.
Very interesting.
How do you arrive at that conclusion?
If nothing were opposing it, it would be quite easy to fulfill.
If we pick an aspect of ourselves, and work to fulfill that aspect, then we also have to work with everything within ourselves that is not in accord with that aspect.
To take a vow saying, for example, "I will not drink alcohol", only really means anything to the person who drinks alcohol. If the person has never drank alcohol before, and doesn't intend to, then the vow is essentially worthless to that person.
To the person who does drink alcohol however, any encounter in which they would normally drink alcohol becomes a problem. Their attachment to alcohol becomes a problem, their identification with themselves as a person who drinks alcohol becomes a problem, and even the tendency to think of oneself as an alcohol drinker becomes a problem.
All of this is just dealing with the symptoms of the illness, and not the illness itself. The illness itself is the one that is perpetuating the duality, which leads to the problems that vows were invented to help us deal with. They are medications, not cures.
If you say, "I vow to be a selfless man", that implies that you are not a selfless man now, but will be one in the future. Therefore, as long as you hold yourself to that vow, you are implying yourself as a selfish man, not a selfless man. The vow is fulfilled when the selfish man becomes a selfless man, which implies a transformation of a self.
Seeing that no self, as such, actually exists, the vow is not much more than a means for the appearance of a self to continue perpetuating its illusory existence.
Edit: Of course, I'm not saying that vows are in any way "bad" or "wrong".
Zealot wrote:Some words have power in them more than just letters on paper. Wishing everyone struggling luck.

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