Flying Monk
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Hmm... / Religion

By Liz Prescott, Journalist






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    I am on the plane to Atlanta. I have been reflecting upon the Buddhist concept of Emptiness over and over. If you are not familiar with Emptiness, it is one of the major facets of Buddhism, and also one of the most enigmatic. I can perceive it intellectually, though somehow I cannot experience it emotionally.

    It has a great deal to do with the concept of Self, or rather Non-Self. Something to do with what really makes up a human personality and its connection with the outside world. We are supposed to be kind to each other because we are part of each other. Yet, somehow the idea of all of us living as one entity is a bit much for my Westernized mind to wrap itself around. My first instinct is to separate my world into "mine" and "theirs." I am completely at a loss.

    Then, I look out of my window. From up here everything makes sense. As we ascend into the air, I try to focus on individual cars until my eyes cant strain to see them anymore. Then I look at house lots with buildings that are so similar it appears to be a Monopoly board: trees blocked into unnaturally geometric boundaries.

    I look beyond and see the vastness of everything. The world is so big, and yet I can still see the small dots of cars plodding along the road. Inside the cars and Monopoly houses dwell people with their own lives, their own triumphs, and their own struggles and pains.

    I see people going through the motions of life seemingly unaware of the other little dots, unaware that they all have the same end. I see countless people denying their own death. If there is a god, this must be the way he sees the world.

    Are we really as unique as we like to think we are? Each battle we fight has been fought before us: breakups, life decisions, poverty, losing a loved one. Although these can all be life changing events to an individual, its comforting to note that this battle has been fought and won hundreds of times before and perhaps is being fought at the moment you are fighting it. This is the nature of a personal battle. Nothing is really new.

    The only new triumphs to be made are the triumphs of society as a whole: global alliances, scientific epiphanies, and integration. None of these can be done alone. We move as a single organism. When humanity makes a change, this is new. This is lasting.

    As I look at the world below me, I look into myself. I cannot pinpoint myself. I am a thought. I am a sensory experience. I am a feeling. A physical characteristic.* Really, I am very little other than a piece of a global puzzle. Some of us spend our lives searching for the other pieces in the form of soul mates or work.

    Little do we know that the pieces surround us every day, and all the pieces search for us.

     

    *(Batchelor, Stephen. Buddhism without Beliefs).




    AUTHOR: Liz Prescott

    TAGS: Religion         

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    Elizabeth Prescott




    Elizabeth Prescott says on 2004-08-04 08:41:52 about
    You're right. Introspective reflection is an integral part of Buddhism, but altruism is the ultimate goal. Self-reflection is meant to discipline one's self out of a habitual pattern of self-centeredness which we all fall into at one time or another. So by reflecting on the self, we essentially realize how connected we are to others. Perfection of self is actually a discarding of the self, or at least a discarding of selfish desires. After all, the Noble Truths state that desire is the cause of suffering. I believe that letting go of our individual cravings can lead to freedom from this suffering. One way to do this is to examine our Emtiness.
    Thank you for your comment.






    Elizabeth Prescott




    Elizabeth Prescott says on 2004-08-04 08:40:59 about
    You're right. Introspective reflection is an integral part of Buddhism, but altruism is the ultimate goal. Self-reflection is meant to discipline one's self out of a habitual pattern of self-centeredness which we all fall into at one time or another. So by reflecting on the self, we essentially realize how connected we are to others. Perfection of self is actually a discarding of the self, or at least a discarding of selfish desires. After all, the Noble Truths state that desire is the cause of suffering. I believe that letting go of our individual cravings can lead to freedom from this suffering. One way to do this is to examine our Emtiness.
    Thank you for your comment.






    James Sanders




    James Sanders says on 2004-08-04 07:14:46 about The Individual
    It seems you are putting a lot of emphisis on, not really self denial, but the understanding that the self is second to the whole. This could be true, but is it not also a facet of Buddhism to perfect the self (in one sense or the other?) I may be mistaken but it is almost comical that we should minimize ourselves for the benifit of the whole; but to ultimately better ourselves. It appears that the goal has become to secretly perfect "the stillness" in the shadows of an introverted cacoon and emerge as a unique and beautifully understanding butterfly (which of course has been done before, because it all has been done before.) At any rate, the goal is commendable and perhaps it is the means that benifits the individual. Which is to say the struggle weakens us for the good of others but having struggled that makes us stronger.









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