Happiness doesn't exist (kind of)
Aug. 22nd, 2011 03:30 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
My thanks to
mindways for the pointer to this fine exposition of the heart of Buddhism. While it's by no means the complete be-all and end-all, this nicely summarizes one of the most central tenets. It's very unintuitive to most folks, because it is *so* contradictory to our upbringing, but more and more I've found it to be quite correct...
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Re: The joy of growth
Date: 2011-08-23 02:52 pm (UTC)The key thing is, Buddhism isn't about avoiding sources of discomfort, it's about growing out of the *mindset* of discomfort. That is, dukkha is rarely if ever caused solely by the outside world -- usually, it is more due to how we *perceive* the world and how we relate to it. It has an awful lot to do with how we get our egos bound up in stuff, both good and bad, that turns those things into sources of dukkha.
So the Buddhist attitude (as I understand it, cautioning that I'm still a relative novice here) would say that there is nothing at all wrong with stretching yourself in these ways -- indeed, that the interesting question is *why* stretching yourself is causing discomfort. That usually is due to issues of self-image: excessive attachment to ideas about your own identity. Conquering those false (and often negative) attachments is key to removing the barriers, and letting yourself grow more naturally and easily.
In other words, Buddhism tends to focus on the unease itself, and ask why growth is causing unease in the first place. *That* is the real problem to be overcome, making growth easier and more natural.
Mind, this isn't to say that growth comes without pain or effort. The conversation on the other journal brought up the straightforward example of exercise (a nicely simple analogue to your point), which may require pain in order to improve oneself. But that sort of pain isn't dukkha -- viewed properly, it just plain doesn't *matter* much, and can even result in its own gentle contentment of following one's path well.
Similarly, personal growth may produce uncertainty, but that uncertainty doesn't have to be a source of dukkha -- viewed properly, the uncertainty is simply a necessary fact of life, neither to be chased nor avoided but simply accepted as part of the path. Truth to tell, this is one of the lessons I figured out relatively early, some years ago, and was key to my getting really bone-deep comfortable with the startup life.
Again, all of this goes to why "suffering" is such a poor translation of dukkha -- it just doesn't capture the right connotations. Dukkha is all about the internal world: our excessive attachments, and the way that they prevent us from simply *being* and *doing* happily...