Dear Loving and Loved,
Our topic this time is LOVE ... Chapter 8, "What Do you Mean When You Say Love/Realms Worldly People Love, He Doesn't Love" ...
Has Buddhist Practice had positive effects on how you love? Less clinging? More allowing? More other directed?
This is the point when I must remind folks that Mahayana Practice allows one to be "non-attached" ... not completely "detached" from those one loves. I sometimes say this ... Easier said than done!
Gassho, J
SatToday
Our topic this time is LOVE ... Chapter 8, "What Do you Mean When You Say Love/Realms Worldly People Love, He Doesn't Love" ...
Has Buddhist Practice had positive effects on how you love? Less clinging? More allowing? More other directed?
This is the point when I must remind folks that Mahayana Practice allows one to be "non-attached" ... not completely "detached" from those one loves. I sometimes say this ... Easier said than done!
Our way is to be "non-attached", not "detached" and "unattached". That means that one can emotionally savor, to the marrow, what is happening in life right now ... and one can commit to that and pour oneself into that ... but just do not cling to that, be willing to let it go. Appreciate this life while it is here (for our self for for those selfs we love) ... and when it is over, release (feeling grief when grief at loss of those we love is called for). Feel all emotions, yet simultaneously see through them as mental theatre, do not be imprisoned or made a puppet, seek to keep moderation and balance (although ... even then, moderation may not always be best when it comes to love).
I think of this quite frequently as our son gets bigger. He is getting older, a time of bitter-sweet happiness. I do not want to be emotionally detached from that, but neither do I want to cling to this moment, try to keep him from growing up, and be unwilling to see it all pass.
Early Buddhism did emphasize emotional detachment more than the later Mahayana. As I said, now we tend not to see our thoughts and emotions (i.e., the "self") so much as the "enemy" as bits of theatre that have to be seen through, handled wisely, not allowed to tie us up. That is a big difference. Same with ordinary life, which is no longer seen as something to "escape", but as something to also be seen through, handled wisely, not allowed to tie us up.
I think of this quite frequently as our son gets bigger. He is getting older, a time of bitter-sweet happiness. I do not want to be emotionally detached from that, but neither do I want to cling to this moment, try to keep him from growing up, and be unwilling to see it all pass.
Early Buddhism did emphasize emotional detachment more than the later Mahayana. As I said, now we tend not to see our thoughts and emotions (i.e., the "self") so much as the "enemy" as bits of theatre that have to be seen through, handled wisely, not allowed to tie us up. That is a big difference. Same with ordinary life, which is no longer seen as something to "escape", but as something to also be seen through, handled wisely, not allowed to tie us up.
SatToday
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