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submitted 1 year ago by metic@lemmy.world to c/buddhism@lemmy.world
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"As long as you're not finding contentment in wholesome phenomena it means you're still within the domain of sensuality, because one of the defining traits of sensuality is to expect things to provide you with pleasure or, rather, that pleasure is the result of things you're engaged with. But wholesome states don't work like that, which means you can stay with wholesome states all you want but they won't provide you with pleasure. You need to discern the contentment.

That's quite an important thing, but the practice of meditation usually revolves around replacing the pleasures you're used to with a new set of pleasures – more peaceful, more refined, but still expecting meditation to give you the pleasure back. You get the pleasure back only once you start discerning it on the basis of wholesome, and that pleasure is the pleasure that is not underlined by craving, which is the pleasure of sensuality, so having non-contentment in wholesome states means being still within the sensuality even if you're perfectly restrained.

It still belies the attitude of restrained in order to get more, the attitude of expecting things to do it to you.

You need to develop (contentment in wholesome phenomena) through that discernment of wholesome, the sensual seclusion, the sensual freedom – unless that's done it won't happen to you because whatever happens to you is going to be on account of sensuality."

Paraphrasing Ajahn Ñāṇamoli in 'Discussions From a Mountain Top #11':

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jg4X-jHR9cw

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Buddhist Resources (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by ComradeMiao@lemmy.world to c/buddhism@lemmy.world

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by kaxora@lemmy.world to c/buddhism@lemmy.world

I am anyway trying to reduce my screen time and time on Reddit, and the new changes they're making spurred me to check out Lemmy when I heard about it. I like the simple feel of it and hope that it will create smaller, tighter knitted communities, encourage individual posting (I never posted on Reddit but it feels more acceptable here somehow), and also help to further reduce my screen time.

I'm glad to see there's a Buddhist instance here. I think this may be the first or second post ever on this instance, so for the sake of encouraging conversation I would like to ask those who may see this post:

  1. What sect of Buddhism do you subscribe to? What do you like most about that sect?
  2. What is one way you have incorporated the teachings into your life recently, or one thing you would like to incorporate?

For me:

  1. Tibetan Buddhism (Gelug tradition). I like the fact that it purports that enlightenment can be achieved in just one lifetime; that negative karma can be purified; and that bad things happening is just our negative karma ripening, which means you are paying your karmic debt in those situations. It's very motivating for this lifetime.
  2. I am trying to be more mindful in everyday life because I don't meditate much at all, and I think mindfulness is the next best thing.

I hope this instance / community grows in the future!

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