Hey Cheyenne,
Most people see the self as something that we possess or own: myself. Through practice and on the advice of many teachers (including teachers who are not "teachers"), I gone in search of this self, and I can't find a self that belongs to me, that I own. The circumstances of my birth do not belong to me--including my DNA coding. The location of my birth and my parents' choices in rearing me do not belong to me. Even the choices I've made--thoughtful and well-intentioned as I've tried to make them--are at least partly determined by conditions that do not belong to me. In the end, I simply can't find one thing about myself that I can call uniquely and separately my own--yet here I am: marvelous activity. Who knows anything other than this?
Welcome and gassho,
Michael
Sattoday
Most people see the self as something that we possess or own: myself. Through practice and on the advice of many teachers (including teachers who are not "teachers"), I gone in search of this self, and I can't find a self that belongs to me, that I own. The circumstances of my birth do not belong to me--including my DNA coding. The location of my birth and my parents' choices in rearing me do not belong to me. Even the choices I've made--thoughtful and well-intentioned as I've tried to make them--are at least partly determined by conditions that do not belong to me. In the end, I simply can't find one thing about myself that I can call uniquely and separately my own--yet here I am: marvelous activity. Who knows anything other than this?
Welcome and gassho,
Michael
Sattoday
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