Wanting and Suffering
Wanting and Suffering
im hoping this is the right place to post this. so ive been pondering something in my meditation time that im having a hard time wrapping my head around. my basic is that wanting causes suffering. so the less you want things in life the better. well ive been wanting a girlfriend as soon as i was old enough. my problem is, the wanting is causing me pain. so is the solution to get the girlfriend by whatever means necessary or is it to not want the girlfriend in the first place? is there a middle path i can take where this isnt such an issue? the pressure from my family doesnt help either as they believe i need a girl in my life to be happy. any insight you guys have would be great. thank you
- PadmaVonSamba
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Re: Wanting and Suffering
Are you talking about a relationship with someone
or trapping a rabbit?
or trapping a rabbit?
EMPTIFUL.
An inward outlook produces outward insight.
An inward outlook produces outward insight.
Re: Wanting and Suffering
a little of both. although trapping the rabbit would probably be easier to deal with...
Re: Wanting and Suffering
"Not wanting the girl-friend in first place" is the right answer. Cope with it better, because the girls can sense your pain and urge. That is scary for them.
My son is 20 years old and he suffers from not having a girlfriend as well. But he learned: "Never chase a chick." Because relationships do not work like that.
My son is 20 years old and he suffers from not having a girlfriend as well. But he learned: "Never chase a chick." Because relationships do not work like that.
Re: Wanting and Suffering
Well this is a tricky one indeed... I hope it won't be interpreted as a heresy when I write that for some people a certain amount of samsaric experience might be a prerequisite to sincere practice. I know exactly what your dilemma is.
When I was younger I had great difficulties sorting this out. I wanted to practice, I knew intelectually that wanting is suffering, but it was not embodied knowledge, it was just a concept. I just felt not wanting girls was too much to ask from myself back then. I had to see for myself whether sensual pleasures really are ultimately unsatisfactory. So I dedicated some five or six years to a not so much a hedonistic rather than a scientific survey of the sense sphere. This was not limited to girls only but to senses in general. My aim was to deconstruct sensory experience and grasp its inner dynamics. The deeper I delved into the pleasant sensations, the more I started noticing their drawbacks and flaws. Ultimately the complexity of the experience grew so much that it became very tiring and also frustrating when things were not going right. I got so disgusted with samsaric pleasures that I had to conclude that Buddha was 100% right in everything he said about sense desire. Now I knew for myself and the first hand experience became the rock-solid basis for my practice. Having directly known the limitations of sensual experience, I naturally started to gravitate towards that which is beyond senses.
I don't preach this as a universal guide since everyone is different, but I reckon intelectual or analytical types may benefit from this approach. Those with strong saddha can probably avoid these unnecessary digressions, but as for myself I don't think I could have succeeded without direct empirical knowledge of the senses...
When I was younger I had great difficulties sorting this out. I wanted to practice, I knew intelectually that wanting is suffering, but it was not embodied knowledge, it was just a concept. I just felt not wanting girls was too much to ask from myself back then. I had to see for myself whether sensual pleasures really are ultimately unsatisfactory. So I dedicated some five or six years to a not so much a hedonistic rather than a scientific survey of the sense sphere. This was not limited to girls only but to senses in general. My aim was to deconstruct sensory experience and grasp its inner dynamics. The deeper I delved into the pleasant sensations, the more I started noticing their drawbacks and flaws. Ultimately the complexity of the experience grew so much that it became very tiring and also frustrating when things were not going right. I got so disgusted with samsaric pleasures that I had to conclude that Buddha was 100% right in everything he said about sense desire. Now I knew for myself and the first hand experience became the rock-solid basis for my practice. Having directly known the limitations of sensual experience, I naturally started to gravitate towards that which is beyond senses.
I don't preach this as a universal guide since everyone is different, but I reckon intelectual or analytical types may benefit from this approach. Those with strong saddha can probably avoid these unnecessary digressions, but as for myself I don't think I could have succeeded without direct empirical knowledge of the senses...
Re: Wanting and Suffering
The desire to have a girlfriend is natural. Natural selection. Desire to have sex is part of our desire to procreate.
It's a pleasant desire and worth pursuing but if you make it as the be all and end all you are setting yourself up for a fall.
You will cling to her.
You got to just enjoy the moment.
Attachment is the source of all suffering.
I don't know how Buddhist the above is!
It's a pleasant desire and worth pursuing but if you make it as the be all and end all you are setting yourself up for a fall.
You will cling to her.
You got to just enjoy the moment.
Attachment is the source of all suffering.
I don't know how Buddhist the above is!
Re: Wanting and Suffering
The ideal Buddhist solution is to realize that getting one isn't going to bring any real or lasting satisfaction to begin with anyway, so there's really no point in wanting that that much. Especially so when you have the bliss and happiness that comes from a dedicated daily meditation practice as that far surpasses most all other kinds of happiness.
One should not kill any living being, nor cause it to be killed, nor should one incite any other to kill. Do never injure any being, whether strong or weak, in this entire universe!
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Re: Wanting and Suffering
terrybodi wrote: ↑Tue Apr 06, 2021 12:29 am im hoping this is the right place to post this. so ive been pondering something in my meditation time that im having a hard time wrapping my head around. my basic is that wanting causes suffering. so the less you want things in life the better. well ive been wanting a girlfriend as soon as i was old enough. my problem is, the wanting is causing me pain. so is the solution to get the girlfriend by whatever means necessary or is it to not want the girlfriend in the first place? is there a middle path i can take where this isnt such an issue? the pressure from my family doesnt help either as they believe i need a girl in my life to be happy. any insight you guys have would be great. thank you
"By whatever means necessary" sounds a little crazy. You don't want to be the crazy guy, lol.
Have you tried letting go of the wanting?
If the sensation is too intense, relax... breathe to soothe the pain. There are ways like this to help diminish the attachment until it becomes very subtle, almost imperceptible... or gone.
Having a relationship from this place is much more healthy and nourishing. The other way will just make you and everyone else miserable. If you want to be in a relationship, make it easy on yourself. And the girl too.
Re: Wanting and Suffering
meh. Renunciation isn't about denying your desires (or aversions, as the case may be). Its about seeing through attachments and aversions and realizing their ultimate futility. Renunciation in that case is effortless. When the Buddha left home, it was a consequence of complete disenchantment with all of it.terrybodi wrote: ↑Tue Apr 06, 2021 12:29 am im hoping this is the right place to post this. so ive been pondering something in my meditation time that im having a hard time wrapping my head around. my basic is that wanting causes suffering. so the less you want things in life the better. well ive been wanting a girlfriend as soon as i was old enough. my problem is, the wanting is causing me pain. so is the solution to get the girlfriend by whatever means necessary or is it to not want the girlfriend in the first place? is there a middle path i can take where this isnt such an issue? the pressure from my family doesnt help either as they believe i need a girl in my life to be happy. any insight you guys have would be great. thank you
We're not self flagellating penitents. Loosening of attachments and aversions is a side effect of a more profound insight into reality.
At least that's my take these days.
There is no suffering to be severed. Ignorance and klesas are indivisible from bodhi. There is no cause of suffering to be abandoned. Since extremes and the false are the Middle and genuine, there is no path to be practiced. Samsara is nirvana. No severance achieved. No suffering nor its cause. No path, no end. There is no transcendent realm; there is only the one true aspect. There is nothing separate from the true aspect.
-Guanding, Perfect and Sudden Contemplation,
-Guanding, Perfect and Sudden Contemplation,
Re: Wanting and Suffering
Develop your Spiritual qualities through Buddhism. As you become more and more in tune with who you are, you’ll find how and who you really want and need in your life, and the type of relationship you want. And the person you are looking for will most likely be there for you because that is how Metta works. Without Dharma this is difficult. Best Wishes .
Om Mani Padme Hum.
Om Mani Padme Hum.
- PadmaVonSamba
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Re: Wanting and Suffering
When I read:
“...is the solution to get the girlfriend by whatever means necessary or is it to not want the girlfriend in the first place?”
That tells me your whole approach to romance needs some adjusting.
First, you don’t “get” another person. Maybe that’s just a figure of speech, but think about what kind of attitude that’s really about. You will be more likely to find yourself in a meaningful and intimate relationship if you just naturally relate to other people based on who they are and not on what you think you want.
As Princess Jasmin said (in Disney’s Aladdin)
“I am not a prize to be won!”
Second, it’s not an either-or situation of “whatever means necessary vs. not at all”.
Think more about what you can offer another person and less about what you can take from them.
EMPTIFUL.
An inward outlook produces outward insight.
An inward outlook produces outward insight.
- LastLegend
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Re: Wanting and Suffering
Practice to obtain samadhi [at awareness; this is not final samadhi] first then if you want fruit of your merits will bloom you can have women or be reborn in heavens.terrybodi wrote: ↑Tue Apr 06, 2021 12:29 am im hoping this is the right place to post this. so ive been pondering something in my meditation time that im having a hard time wrapping my head around. my basic is that wanting causes suffering. so the less you want things in life the better. well ive been wanting a girlfriend as soon as i was old enough. my problem is, the wanting is causing me pain. so is the solution to get the girlfriend by whatever means necessary or is it to not want the girlfriend in the first place? is there a middle path i can take where this isnt such an issue? the pressure from my family doesnt help either as they believe i need a girl in my life to be happy. any insight you guys have would be great. thank you
It’s eye blinking.
Re: Wanting and Suffering
LOL. This.PadmaVonSamba wrote: ↑Sat Apr 10, 2021 3:54 amWhen I read:
“...is the solution to get the girlfriend by whatever means necessary or is it to not want the girlfriend in the first place?”
That tells me your whole approach to romance needs some adjusting.
First, you don’t “get” another person. Maybe that’s just a figure of speech, but think about what kind of attitude that’s really about. You will be more likely to find yourself in a meaningful and intimate relationship if you just naturally relate to other people based on who they are and not on what you think you want.
As Princess Jasmin said (in Disney’s Aladdin)
“I am not a prize to be won!”
Second, it’s not an either-or situation of “whatever means necessary vs. not at all”.
Think more about what you can offer another person and less about what you can take from them.
There is no suffering to be severed. Ignorance and klesas are indivisible from bodhi. There is no cause of suffering to be abandoned. Since extremes and the false are the Middle and genuine, there is no path to be practiced. Samsara is nirvana. No severance achieved. No suffering nor its cause. No path, no end. There is no transcendent realm; there is only the one true aspect. There is nothing separate from the true aspect.
-Guanding, Perfect and Sudden Contemplation,
-Guanding, Perfect and Sudden Contemplation,
Re: Wanting and Suffering
This is a very bad advice, especially on a Buddhist forum. Buddha himself stated that even "being re-born as a Brahma is too low of a goal"... Brahma gods are beyond sensual desire, so the goal of being re-born as a sensual deva is no goal at all compared to that...
Practice to obtain samadhi [at awareness; this is not final samadhi] first then if you want fruit of your merits will bloom you can have women or be reborn in heavens.
There is a story about Buddha and his cousin who was reluctant to practice the dharma and was keen on sensual pleasures, especially women. He was engaged to the most beautiful girl in the city. One day, the Buddha took him to one of the deva realms, the sensuous heavens, and showed him the nymphs that lived there. His cousin was enchanted by their beauty and he himself admitted that his fiance appeared as a hiddeous monkey next to these nymphs. Buddha told him that if he gains merit and takes up spiritual practice, he will be reborn in these heavens. His cousin joind the monastic community, but as soon as other bhikkus learned about his intention of practicing for the sake of being reborn in sensual heavens, they started to mock him and make fun of him. After some time, the cousin developed his practice to a higher degree and saw for himself that sensuality is nothing compared to higher states and final liberation and renounced it altogether.
- LastLegend
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Re: Wanting and Suffering
He can make a choice.anagarika wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 9:48 amThis is a very bad advice, especially on a Buddhist forum. Buddha himself stated that even "being re-born as a Brahma is too low of a goal"... Brahma gods are beyond sensual desire, so the goal of being re-born as a sensual deva is no goal at all compared to that...
Practice to obtain samadhi [at awareness; this is not final samadhi] first then if you want fruit of your merits will bloom you can have women or be reborn in heavens.
There is a story about Buddha and his cousin who was reluctant to practice the dharma and was keen on sensual pleasures, especially women. He was engaged to the most beautiful girl in the city. One day, the Buddha took him to one of the deva realms, the sensuous heavens, and showed him the nymphs that lived there. His cousin was enchanted by their beauty and he himself admitted that his fiance appeared as a hiddeous monkey next to these nymphs. Buddha told him that if he gains merit and takes up spiritual practice, he will be reborn in these heavens. His cousin joind the monastic community, but as soon as other bhikkus learned about his intention of practicing for the sake of being reborn in sensual heavens, they started to mock him and make fun of him. After some time, the cousin developed his practice to a higher degree and saw for himself that sensuality is nothing compared to higher states and final liberation and renounced it altogether.
It’s eye blinking.
Re: Wanting and Suffering
Of course, the Buddha gave advice not only to monastics, but also to laypeople with lower aspirations (basically for a happy re-birth, not necessarily for final liberation). But the very essence of the Buddha´s teaching is the gradual transcendence of the senses, not their gratifaction (however refined). There is a story about a virtuous monk who dies during meditation and is re-born in one of the sensual heavens. He is extremely disappointed as he was keen on practicing the dharma which is very difficult in these worlds. Getting entangled and eventually lost in sensual pleasures is a very real possibility and I would say that a serious practitioner should always bear the great picture in mind.LastLegend wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 11:31 amHe can make a choice.anagarika wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 9:48 amThis is a very bad advice, especially on a Buddhist forum. Buddha himself stated that even "being re-born as a Brahma is too low of a goal"... Brahma gods are beyond sensual desire, so the goal of being re-born as a sensual deva is no goal at all compared to that...
Practice to obtain samadhi [at awareness; this is not final samadhi] first then if you want fruit of your merits will bloom you can have women or be reborn in heavens.
There is a story about Buddha and his cousin who was reluctant to practice the dharma and was keen on sensual pleasures, especially women. He was engaged to the most beautiful girl in the city. One day, the Buddha took him to one of the deva realms, the sensuous heavens, and showed him the nymphs that lived there. His cousin was enchanted by their beauty and he himself admitted that his fiance appeared as a hiddeous monkey next to these nymphs. Buddha told him that if he gains merit and takes up spiritual practice, he will be reborn in these heavens. His cousin joind the monastic community, but as soon as other bhikkus learned about his intention of practicing for the sake of being reborn in sensual heavens, they started to mock him and make fun of him. After some time, the cousin developed his practice to a higher degree and saw for himself that sensuality is nothing compared to higher states and final liberation and renounced it altogether.
- LastLegend
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Re: Wanting and Suffering
Does OP want to pursue enlightenment?anagarika wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 11:43 amOf course, the Buddha gave advice not only to monastics, but also to laypeople with lower aspirations (basically for a happy re-birth, not necessarily for final liberation). But the very essence of the Buddha´s teaching is the gradual transcendence of the senses, not their gratifaction (however refined). There is a story about a virtuous monk who dies during meditation and is re-born in one of the sensual heavens. He is extremely disappointed as he was keen on practicing the dharma which is very difficult in these worlds. Getting entangled and eventually lost in sensual pleasures is a very real possibility and I would say that a serious practitioner should always bear the great picture in mind.LastLegend wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 11:31 amHe can make a choice.anagarika wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 9:48 am
This is a very bad advice, especially on a Buddhist forum. Buddha himself stated that even "being re-born as a Brahma is too low of a goal"... Brahma gods are beyond sensual desire, so the goal of being re-born as a sensual deva is no goal at all compared to that...
There is a story about Buddha and his cousin who was reluctant to practice the dharma and was keen on sensual pleasures, especially women. He was engaged to the most beautiful girl in the city. One day, the Buddha took him to one of the deva realms, the sensuous heavens, and showed him the nymphs that lived there. His cousin was enchanted by their beauty and he himself admitted that his fiance appeared as a hiddeous monkey next to these nymphs. Buddha told him that if he gains merit and takes up spiritual practice, he will be reborn in these heavens. His cousin joind the monastic community, but as soon as other bhikkus learned about his intention of practicing for the sake of being reborn in sensual heavens, they started to mock him and make fun of him. After some time, the cousin developed his practice to a higher degree and saw for himself that sensuality is nothing compared to higher states and final liberation and renounced it altogether.
It’s eye blinking.
Re: Wanting and Suffering
He's asking in a Buddhist forum, so we can presume he's soliciting a Buddhist perspective on his dilemma. If all he wants is tips on being a rapture engineer, there are better places.LastLegend wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 11:44 amDoes OP want to pursue enlightenment?anagarika wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 11:43 amOf course, the Buddha gave advice not only to monastics, but also to laypeople with lower aspirations (basically for a happy re-birth, not necessarily for final liberation). But the very essence of the Buddha´s teaching is the gradual transcendence of the senses, not their gratifaction (however refined). There is a story about a virtuous monk who dies during meditation and is re-born in one of the sensual heavens. He is extremely disappointed as he was keen on practicing the dharma which is very difficult in these worlds. Getting entangled and eventually lost in sensual pleasures is a very real possibility and I would say that a serious practitioner should always bear the great picture in mind.
There is no suffering to be severed. Ignorance and klesas are indivisible from bodhi. There is no cause of suffering to be abandoned. Since extremes and the false are the Middle and genuine, there is no path to be practiced. Samsara is nirvana. No severance achieved. No suffering nor its cause. No path, no end. There is no transcendent realm; there is only the one true aspect. There is nothing separate from the true aspect.
-Guanding, Perfect and Sudden Contemplation,
-Guanding, Perfect and Sudden Contemplation,
- LastLegend
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Re: Wanting and Suffering
What are you talking about?Queequeg wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 2:51 pmHe's asking in a Buddhist forum, so we can presume he's soliciting a Buddhist perspective on his dilemma. If all he wants is tips on being a rapture engineer, there are better places.LastLegend wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 11:44 amDoes OP want to pursue enlightenment?anagarika wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 11:43 am
Of course, the Buddha gave advice not only to monastics, but also to laypeople with lower aspirations (basically for a happy re-birth, not necessarily for final liberation). But the very essence of the Buddha´s teaching is the gradual transcendence of the senses, not their gratifaction (however refined). There is a story about a virtuous monk who dies during meditation and is re-born in one of the sensual heavens. He is extremely disappointed as he was keen on practicing the dharma which is very difficult in these worlds. Getting entangled and eventually lost in sensual pleasures is a very real possibility and I would say that a serious practitioner should always bear the great picture in mind.
It’s eye blinking.
Re: Wanting and Suffering
What are you talking about?LastLegend wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 2:57 pmWhat are you talking about?
There is no suffering to be severed. Ignorance and klesas are indivisible from bodhi. There is no cause of suffering to be abandoned. Since extremes and the false are the Middle and genuine, there is no path to be practiced. Samsara is nirvana. No severance achieved. No suffering nor its cause. No path, no end. There is no transcendent realm; there is only the one true aspect. There is nothing separate from the true aspect.
-Guanding, Perfect and Sudden Contemplation,
-Guanding, Perfect and Sudden Contemplation,