You are viewing a single comment's thread from:

RE: Annica: Buddhism and The Law of Impermanence - How to Free Your Mind

in #buddhism7 years ago

Dukkha Dukkha Dukkha is all i see. Although i do comprehend. Nice write. In advaita it flips the scrypt to "nothing is truly impermanent" & "all times, things, etc happen now" which also ties nicely into quantum physics. Ty <3

Sort:  

Dukkha ceases to arise with practice and study :)

No it doesn't. Only death.

Let me rephrase that. It does cease to arise but I did not mean permanently. First of all, what enlightenment means is that dukkha absolutely will never arise again. So, then the question becomes is enlightenment truly possible? I can only speak for myself, I'm not enlightened so my answer to that is that is what the Buddha taught and that is the aim of Buddhism. I do know that I suffer much less than I used to. I'm a completely different person since taking up Buddhist practice which is why I continue to do it - I want the continued benefits. I experience dukkha at least 80% less then I did 5 years ago.

The Buddha also taught about consciousness and rebirth and I do not believe in that because I have no evidence for it.

As far as is the promise of enlightenment - which is the complete eradication of dukkha - true? I have never met an enlightened person. If I do I'll let you know :)

I hear you. I suffer less as well. I love buddhism. Facts are wonderful.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=GVCeCqwAkFE

This is great thank you for sharing. He he...brilliant :) I love that what he says about "seeking." I have never labeled myself a seeker and have no desire to go to India lol.

"That which you are seeking is seeking you." ~Rumi.

I love this! 💗

I thought you would like.