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Fellow Travelers |
Rev. Gregory Gibbs |
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Buddhism and Human Feelings |
A Distorted View
There is a wide-spread impression amongst non-Buddhists that the
Buddhist religion disregards human feeling. The notion of
Buddhism as an aloof teaching that prizes detachment developed in
Europe in the nineteenth century. This distorted view of Buddhism
was largely propagated by British and German diletantes who had
studied only the Theravadin approach as they found it in Thailand
and Sri Lanka. This concept of Buddhism as preferring a dry and
unfeeling way of living is built upon a misunderstanding of the
objective of the Buddhist religion and a one-sided study of how
monks and nuns address their emotional life. Let me look at these
two areas briefly.
The Objective of Buddhist Living
The common (distorted) view of Buddhism which I am trying to
correct presumes that the purpose of Buddhists is a detached
life. But, Buddhist philosophy actually views detachment as an
extreme as destructive as attachment. The historical Buddha,
Sakyamuni, tried to guide us on a middle path between attachment
to pleasures and possessions on the one hand and an ascetic
detachment on the other. Both of these extremes are unworthy
according to Sakyamuni Buddha.
The middle path is not a middle of the road existence. Rather it
is living in the tension of being drawn toward various extremes.
Walking such a middle path is not an end in itself. Buddhists do
not cherish a life of moderation as such. Rather it is living
moderately and navigating between the extremes which leads us
toward our objective. The objective of Buddhist living is freedom
and realization of the Truth.
Freedom is often conceived in a merely negative fashion --
freedom from... But, freedom is not conceived in merely negative
terms by Mahayana and Vajrayana Buddhism. For us freedom means
limitless potential. The Larger Vehicle of Buddhist teaching
explains freedom as not being bound to some fixed forms of
living, thinking and feeling, but ALSO not being bound to
formlessness. True freedom is not detachment from forms of
feeling, thinking and acting. Rather it is the limitless
potential to flexibly take on new forms of being as situations
and the needs they generate change.
Realization of the Truth is interdependent with true freedom.
Jesus is reported to have said that, "the Truth will make
you free." Buddhists would agree. However, we might tend to
emphasize that FREEDOM WILL ALLOW YOU TO SEE THE TRUTH.
Furthermore, realizing the truth will make us happy. Happy in an
elegant and subtle way that goes beyond the happiness which we
understand in contrast to pain, humiliation and sadness.
There is no way to adequately explain what such a realization of
the truth is like in the language of the unenlightened. Yet,
there is no other language and, as those who battle the AIDS
virus remind us, SILENCE IS DEATH. Therefore, let me break the
'noble' silence of scholastic Buddhism and say that the
realization of the Truth is discerning and non-substantial,
luminous oneness of all persons, places and events. This
realization is fulfilling in a way that is similar to and yet
transcendent of the pleasures and rewards which come to us in our
day to day affairs.
How Buddhists Address Their Emotions
The oldest Buddhist advice regarding emotions is that we might do
well to deliberately cultivate positive emotions. The classic
example of this is Metta meditation, the cultivation of kindly
intentions towards all living beings. This procedure probably
goes back to the historical Buddha, 2,500 years ago.
Once Buddhism had established an elite of educated monks and nuns
the concern with suppressing disturbing emotions became a matter
of some urgency. In particular, monks found it hard to meditate
when they were still moved by sexual desires. The classic way of
suppressing sexual desire was to go to a graveyard at night, dig
up a corpse and watch it decay. The corpse would usually be
buried again before day break and then dug up again the next
night. After watching the progressive deterioration of a woman's
corpse over aperiod of a few weeks a monk would typically find
his sexual desires to have become dormant. This practice was only
engaged in by monks.
With the Chan tradition in China (Zen) an approach of simply
observing the feelings as they are developed. Without trying to
suppress unwanted feelings or trying to cultivate positive
emotions, simple attentiveness to feelings was and is practiced.
The nearly universal experience which comes from this approach is
that the feelings become gentler, softer, more flexible. This is
considered an intermediate or advanced practice of Zen.
Generally, it is taught only following a long period of
concentrating daily on some particular object such as one's
breathing. An almost identical sort of sitting and allowing
thoughts and feelings to unfold, as they will, is practiced in
Tibet and referred to as Dzog-chen meditation. The Tibetans
consider this a very advanced practice and it is only taught to a
person who has spent many years doing rigorous visualizations.
In the Jodo and Jodo Shinshu schools of Pure Land Buddhism the
emotions are similarly allowed to develop naturally. Generally,
unlike Zen and Dzog-chen, no special effort is applied to being
mindful of the emotions. In Jodo Shinshu the natural, relaxed but
devout holding of the Buddha's name in one's mind and heart is
allowed to work its magic off-stage. Without any special effort
to become gentler or more caring, but with a grateful
appreciation for the Buddha's gift of his name, the surrounding
emotional environment, internal and perhaps interpersonal as
well, tends to become more wholesome.
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