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We would like the society
we live in, and ourselves, to live up to these high-minded ideals; and yet emotionally we
can feel just the opposite. We can feel mean, selfish, critical of ourselves and of
others, deceiving ourselves and getting caught in very gross forms of desire so that we
have conflict going on in our minds. I used to find it very difficult before I understood
what was going on because I had high aspirations and high standards and ideals for my life
and yet always seemed to be pulled down by my emotions. Id get caught in very
immature or selfish reactions and emotional habits and yet ideally I didn't want that. I
wanted to be kind, generous, good and all the rest of it -- so then Id end up with
all this judging going on, judging the emotions are "bad" or thinking that
there's something wrong with me for feeling like this. So thered be a critic saying,
"This is bad. You're a bad person for thinking like this, feeling like this."
And so the conflict goes on. You try to justify it, you rationalise... you may manage to
deceive yourself a good part of the time, but still this confusion arises, an endless
emotional confusion in which one just feels a sense of despair. Theres the sense of
hopelessness that comes through trying to solve one's emotional problems through the
intellect or trying to suppress the emotions, or refusing to acknowledge them. |
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Monastic life can be just based on an ideal of
the good monk or nun and trying to live up to the standards that we read about in the
scriptures. We long to be a really good monk; so then we're shocked and disgusted by our
own emotional reactions, or desires, low, selfish, animalistic desires that we identify
with and try to get rid of and deny. So the Buddha used mindfulness as the means to solve
this dilemma. Mindfulness (sati) is a key word in Buddhist teaching: it means that
when we practise meditation we use the intuitive ability of the mind. We're not
rationalising or analysing anything -- even though we can do these things when necessary
-- because meditation isn't an analysis or a critique or a suppression or a denial of
anything but a willingness to embrace the moment. This intuition is the ability that we
have, when we're receptive and fully awake and aware. |
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