Hello wonderful Sangha members [emoji120][emoji4]. Sorry to run a little long here.
Recently I have been very aware of dukkha in my life. It seems that no matter what I do I have a gnawing feeling of disappointment, dissatisfaction, apprehension, and the urge to take the edge off (junk food binge, buying the next shiny thing I don't need, selfish self-indulgence, etc...)
I've spent much of my life in the vicious cycle of feeling the need to numb out dukkha, but ofcourse am always left with yet more dukkha afterwards. Now that I am a practicing Buddhist, I am trying my best not to numb anything out and to be less extreme in the selfish pleasure seeking department.
That being said, I am curious how to live with these feelings? Sometimes they can be overwhelming and very uncomfortable. Is this just what reality feels like?
Based on posts I've read in the forums I know there is no getting rid of dukkha, just learning to live with it and accept it for what it is.
I am working on accepting it, and just sitting with the feelings, but I'm curious what you all do to deal with Dukkha in your day to day lives and in your daily zen practice? Do you have a method or practice that helps you live with it/accept it?
Anyone's experience or insight on this topic is greatly appreciated. Thank you all for this community!
Gassho,
John
Sat today
Sent from my PVG100 using Tapatalk
Recently I have been very aware of dukkha in my life. It seems that no matter what I do I have a gnawing feeling of disappointment, dissatisfaction, apprehension, and the urge to take the edge off (junk food binge, buying the next shiny thing I don't need, selfish self-indulgence, etc...)
I've spent much of my life in the vicious cycle of feeling the need to numb out dukkha, but ofcourse am always left with yet more dukkha afterwards. Now that I am a practicing Buddhist, I am trying my best not to numb anything out and to be less extreme in the selfish pleasure seeking department.
That being said, I am curious how to live with these feelings? Sometimes they can be overwhelming and very uncomfortable. Is this just what reality feels like?
Based on posts I've read in the forums I know there is no getting rid of dukkha, just learning to live with it and accept it for what it is.
I am working on accepting it, and just sitting with the feelings, but I'm curious what you all do to deal with Dukkha in your day to day lives and in your daily zen practice? Do you have a method or practice that helps you live with it/accept it?
Anyone's experience or insight on this topic is greatly appreciated. Thank you all for this community!
Gassho,
John
Sat today
Sent from my PVG100 using Tapatalk
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