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Holistic Thinking

3 Jan

If-you-only-look-for

Actualizing our Human Potential

30 Dec

Actualizing our Human Potential

We live our lives in relationship; we have a choice to live in dependence, independence, or interdependence.” Stephen R. Corey6

What is necessary to change a person is to change his awareness of himself’ Abraham Maslow7

Everyone seeks natural wellbeing, peace, and harmony, which is inherent in all of us. However, often it seems impossible for us to know how to develop and be peaceful and harmonious with our self, as well as, with the people and world around us. Indeed, when we normally crave for having something or reject what is contrary to our preferences and desires, we start generating heightened tension and negativity in our mind and easily become agitated. The common result is stress, anxiety, disappointments, conflict, and even depression. In fact, personal peace and harmony cannot co-exist with such a negative state of mind and emotion. So, we ask ourselves, how can I not react heedlessly to things I crave or do not like? How can I remain in my natural potential of ease, happiness, goodwill, and wisdom and not create heightened tension? The answer is in the teachings of the Buddha.

The Buddha’s original teachings are not a theistic doctrine divinely revealed to Siddhartha, the Buddha to be, as he meditated under a tree, as some might think. Nor do they constitute only a philosophy. Rather, the Buddha’s teachings foreshadowed modern psychology in many ways and are profound and unique in the history of humankind. This book will not only show important connections between the Buddha’s teachings and psychology, but aid in the psychological and emotional well-being and, ultimately, the enlightenment of the readers of this book. Through the teaching of the Buddha, we can eliminate the ignorance that causes us to act unwholesomely which creates unhappiness and suffering. The teachings are a system for self-transcendence by purposely transforming self-knowledge to understand the reality of our true nature. By doing so we learn to act in accordance with this reality, resulting in our leading a productive, harmonious life of wellbeing and contentment.

Buddhism shares with modern psychology a strong belief in our ability as human beings to transcend our historical patterns and fully actualize our special human potential. This optimistic approach is central in Buddhist teaching, which “aims at producing a state of perfect mental health, equilibrium and tranquility” [8] In fact, the Buddha has long been described as the peerless physician (bhisakko) and unrivaled healer. In the Four Noble Truths, like a physician, he first diagnosed the dis-ease of suffering (dukkha); next he discovered the cause of the illness (craving or misplaced desire, ignorance) that prevents us from attaining our fullest potential of well-being; then he discovered the cure (enlightenment), and lastly prescribed the remedy -The Eightfold Path. His focus of investigation was, “Both formerly & now, it is only dukkha that I describe, and the cessation of dukkha.”SN 22.86.

Dukkha, often translated as suffering, has no single English word that adequately captures the full depth, range, and subtlety of the general emotional pain that it describes. Its translation includes many negative mental/emotional states such as dis-ease, uncertainty, alienation, irritation, dejection, worry, despair, fear, stress, anguish, and anxiety. The teachings that the Buddha proclaimed, known as the Dhamma, are a powerful therapy and method of treatment for the gradual transformation of our cognitive apparatus to cure the deep dissatisfaction of dukkha that normally afflicts us all. The Buddha’s treatment purposely develops and cultivates a peaceful mind based on a daily ethical practice; a mind firmly concentrated and calm; mindfulness which easily discerns the arising and disappearing of what is wholesome or not and the purification of the mind through the elimination of mental defilements. The tranquil, natural, wise, and fully conscious mental state created by advancing through the transformation and purification of our mind is metaphorically referred to as an inner refuge or sanctuary which is always accessible to us. The Buddha provided a comprehensive plan to transform and transcend the ignorance that creates the dis-ease of cravings of desires, aversions, and obsessions in our life, thereby, liberating our innate potential for inner peace, happiness, well-being, compassion, knowing, and wisdom – our true natural and original mind.

A transformative cognitive process attains the Original Mind. While our current mental and physical state is strongly determined by the automatic habits created by our past thoughts and actions, our future development is firmly established through our thoughts and actions in the present moment. To progress, simply making resolutions to change, however, is not enough. So long as unwholesome habits remain in the non-conscious, eventually they will express themselves, no matter how earnest the resolutions we have promised. It is essential, therefore, that we bring a knowing awareness to the conditioned reactions of our Citta or mind/heart, which then gives us the opportunity to intervene and alter our previous conditioning. This book will explore numerous proven interventions to do that.

The Buddha’s Way to Awakening is a sequential cognitive cultivation process (Bhavana), with each step smoothly transitioning to the next. In addition, accompanying each successive level of cognitive transformation, are refined positive emotions including bliss, equanimity, and compassion. The suttas affirm that the attainment of the final state of Nibbāna is by means of development: “He should train himself towards Nibbāna” – SN 10.62. The attainment of Nibbāna is the insightful transformation of one ego state to another until, finally, “He (the Arahant) understands.” Indeed, the Sanskrit word ‘Buddha’ literally means one who has awakened. One awakens and leaves behind the distorted reality when one develops insight and understands the truth behind suffering. Awakening was the final radical insightful cognitive transformation that created the Buddha’s understanding of undistorted actuality. Once understood, it fosters new wellbeing of living and will not be forgotten.

Transformation, Interbeing and No-Self

The empirical reality, which we access through our six senses, consists of a never-ending, ever-fluctuating field of vibrational activity. There is no inherent permanence, not only in anything that we experience, think, or are but also in existence. The Buddha and modern science say that all existence is in flux, it is only vibration. Everything that exists is in motion, vibrates, and transforms. The Buddhist doctrine of Annicca, or universal transformation, describes this perspective. Numerous recent scientific discoveries confirm what the Buddha taught more than 2500 years ago. Michael Talbot suggests, ‘Even the world we know may not be composed of objects. We may only be sensing mechanisms moving through a vibration dance of frequencies.’ 9. Renowned physicist Nikola Tesla reportedly observed, ‘If you want to find the secrets of the universe, think in terms of energy, frequency and vibration.’ Also, biochemist Mae-Wan Ho wrote, ‘One comes to the startling conclusion that the coherent organism is a macroscopic quantum object, it has a macroscopic wave-function that is always evolving, always changing as it entangles its environment. This wave-function is the unique, significant form of the organism. In the quantum coherent state the organism is maximally sensitive and can best respond to opportunities and cope with all contingencies. It is source of the organism’s remarkable flexibility, resilience and creativity’ 10.

There is a growing consensus in Western thought and science that field-based relationships are fundamental, a condition described by the Buddha as dependent co-arising, or interbeing. We can understand our world and ourselves more deeply if we think in terms of dynamic patterns of relationships rather than of reified essences or entities. Ryuei Michael McCormick also explains this in a descriptive manner: ‘So nothing exists as a static, isolated entity. Everything arises and ceases depending on causes and conditions which themselves arise due to causes and conditions. There is no ultimate ground or primordial cause, but a network of causes and conditions. This undercuts the view of metaphysical selfhood, fixed entity, or substance underlying the constant change which is life.11 We gain the necessary insight to realize Anattā (no-self) through effort, self-responsibility and ego transformation through the cultivation provided by the practices of the Eightfold Path.

Of all our preconceptions about ourselves, the most basic and what we each give the highest importance to is the self. Even though the Buddha has shown how our common belief of the self is a misunderstanding, nevertheless we dedicate our lives to seeking its fulfillment, considering that as the way to happiness. For most of us, the thought of living in a different way seems unnatural or even impossible. As long as we are compelled by the illusion of an inherent self, we remain driven by our wants, fears, and identities, alienated and in opposition to the world and from understanding the interbeing of life. By awakening and emerging from this ignorance and obsession of self, we truly find release from bondage, enabling us to step forth unencumbered into the world, to be open and compassionate to life, to others, and to find real wellbeing. With this release, we understand that what we call ‘self’ is, in fact, merely an ephemeral abstraction, a script in constant change. This is right understanding. The Buddha said, ‘Right Understanding comes first’. Since the Buddha’s precept of ‘no self’ is radically different from basic beliefs of the Western culture, we need to have right understanding to trust and correctly follow the Eightfold Path.

With a similar perspective to Annica, modern science views humans as homeostatic, coherent, dynamic organisms which exist and constantly interact and transform in a field of the intricate web of life. However, we misinterpret our aware agency (the capacity of exerting influence) and mistakenly create the cognitively abstracted representation of an ‘I’ as our permanent self. In fact, since the ‘I’ is a cognitively created abstraction, a concept, and a narrative, the entity we call our self is only a character in the constantly evolving mentally devised story of our life. It is also helpful to understand, as S.B. Klein wrote, that the self-narrative is platformed or supported by one’s memory 12. The memory of our emotional, cognitive and behavioral tendencies created through repeated past reactions and experiences, conceives a perceived continuity of a participant, which becomes petrified as a continual identity – a static entity. Through the Buddha’s remedy of the Eightfold Path, we replace the dis-ease generated by our conviction of being a static, afflicted, and isolated self, with a refined understanding of the dynamic interconnectedness and impermanence of all experience.

The only real solution to suffering is cultivating the Citta by knowing, dis-identifying, and transforming our cognitive apparatus. This is accomplished by a profound change in lifestyle through various direct behavioral interventions and a regular Bhavana practice. While meditation is the best-known tool of this practice, ethical and virtuous behavior is also necessary. A restrained and orderly mind is expressed through the proper application of moral virtue in everyday life. By consequence, this natural mind is associated with a calm mind, as well as a compassionate and prosocial motivation. Compassion is the feeling of concern for oneself’s and another sentient being’s suffering, which is accompanied by the motivation to help. The follower of the Eightfold Path establishes together all facets of the path: the practice of sīla (ethics or morality), samādhi (concentration), and paññā (wisdom).  There is a stable unification when the natural mind, the calm established mind, and the knowing mind are together as one. Each of the three aspects supports the others like the three legs of a tripod.

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Life Cherishes Itself

30 Dec

What-we-label-as-the

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Enlightenment of Awakening

17 Dec

via Enlightenment of Awakening

Enlightenment of Awakening

17 Dec

When our actions are based on empathy and compassion we naturally want ourselves and all other sentient beings to be well, happy and free from suffering. This intention of goodwill to all men, women, and creatures is based on the natural state of being without ignorance. This natural state of mind and emotions can be accomplished through the gradual and progressive transformation of dis-identification and non-attachment to the pragmatic, relative yet necessary conceptual world. After transcending the attachments and identifications to conceptualization and objectification and the duality of the subject/object, one can and will continue to participate with others in the construction and origination of these images and stories while, at the same time, knowing that it is all a sort of magic show, thereby, give up the attachments, dogma, and identifications with the stories and characters that are created in our minds. This is the Enlightenment of Awakening to seeing things as they are. This is understanding the non-substantiality of all forms.

Image 30 Nov

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PEACE AND PROSPERITY

17 Nov

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The definition of Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and getting the same result, but expecting a Different One. Albert Einstein

Watching the Armistice Day ceremonies this year I was reminded of the famous H.G. Wells comment about World War I being ‘the war to end all wars.’ One understanding of Wells’comment is that especially Europe but also the whole world was so devastated both in terms of the killing of sentient beings and destruction of habitats, humanity would never again allow themselves to engage in such suicidal and destructive behavior. Even after the war, the League of Nations was developed to resolve conflicts between nations in a rational and fair manner rather than through conflict. However, as we now know only 20 years later the whole world launched itself into an even greater and more destructive conflict of war and mass destruction and annihilation.

In a longer review of human history, this horror of war has been written about and discussed since time immemorial. For example, 16th-century Protestant theologian Martin Luther wrote, “War is the greatest plague that can afflict humanity; it destroys religion, it destroys states, it destroys families. Any scourge is preferable to it.” The grief and destruction of life and property of all national conflicts have raised innumerous voices to the heavens with prayers and pleading to the favored gods to stop the enemy from proceeding in the annihilation of the population and destruction of the Homeland. These pleads for divine intervention to halt the carnage have been put forth by all people of the different religious points of view but to the avail of none. Even the gods were pleaded to provide victory over the enemy in what was thought to be a just cause for the participation or even beginning of the war. Again victory was not given, nor suffering alleviated by divine powers.

All the realities of these wars have been created in the mind and emotions of Humans. They are conflicts of ideas, identities, and cultures. All the past and present world-wide pain and weariness, fear and anxieties, the bloodshed and destruction, the misery of millions of human beings, the waste of mankind, are but the consequences of false philosophies and foolish thinking. The needed radical reformation is not to destroy things or people, but the group of dysfunctional and wrong ideas that have continually created this suffering. The record suggests that no matter how atrocious war becomes, humanity will never say, “Enough is enough.” Even the atrociousness of World Wars I and II, with the use of the ultimate horror of nuclear bombs, did not convince humankind to put away war.

 Indeed, the lesson of history continues to be so poignantly clear in the Armistice memorials that a different approach must be incorporated in the human project of existence. A different approach not based on merely good intention and hoped for cooperation among different political, religious, and ethnic groups. Nor can the prayers for divine intervention be considered any more effective and just in the controlling of humankind’s immaturity, ignorance, greed, anger and foolishness. It is clear that a radically new perspective must be promoted and implemented in the education of not only ethics but the comprehension of the reality of this world and the human construction of their world. As Wells came to see, it will require a complete change of human nature and a defeat of all ideas that lead to violence and war.

In that case, what would be the foundation of such a grand perspective? I propose that this perspective has already been clearly enunciated as well as established in human thoughts and condition. It is a perspective based on human insight into the conditions and workings of the human mind and emotions. And while this is an ancient wisdom, it is also modern and is verified through contemporary science and the social sciences. One innovator and teacher of this perspective which I describe as Transcendental Idealism was the Buddha. However, since the Buddha taught observable truths and empirical observations, he is not the only human in the past or in the present who has gained the insights and understanding of this perspective. I would also add that basically since the Buddha refused to attribute any divine intervention in human affairs, this perspective can be best understood and appreciated as a holistic Transcendent Psychology. Therefore, the total responsibility, as well as the possibility of the course in human affairs on all levels, is based on human knowledge, intent, and morality. Indeed, the path of human existence is solely in the hands of humans. This is a path that requires a training, a discipline, a giving up of selfish immaturity and foolish living to achieve a human existence of well-being, happiness, and wisdom.

While this project of the human construction of peaceful coexistence and dignity and prosperity for all sentient beings might at first glance seem if not impossible, very difficult. However, that is a pessimism based on a misunderstanding. A misunderstanding of what the principles of a life based on Transcendental Idealism and a course based in Transcendent Psychology requires. Recognizing it is a very different even radical approach how to live our lives as successful and prosperous human beings, but, as history has shown us and human behavior even today continues to destroy and murder and annihilate and create massive suffering not only for all sentient beings but even the earth upon which we live- it is absolutely necessary. The course is clear and the guidelines are well situated and proven. What is needed as in any important human endeavor is not only the desire, in this case for peace, prosperity, happiness, and well-being of all sentient beings on this earth but also the correct effort and knowledge for success. The simile which expresses well what is needed to reach this new phase of harmonious human existence on earth is that of the butterfly. To actualize its beauty and freedom it must emerge from the darkness of a cocoon. However, through the natural process of giving a birth to itself, with the correct effort and intention, the butterfly slowly emerges from the cocoon into the mature and capable butterfly. To reach the ability of peace, prosperity, happiness, and well-being for all, humanity now needs to follow the path away from immature greed, anger, and ignorance into the light of the day and out of the darkness of the cocoon. What ultimately needs to be changed is the way we understand and think about existence — certain ideas and beliefs have to be renounced, which will change our human character and end further wars.

This opportunity of living in a world without the horrendous suffering and destruction of war and conflict created through ignorance has long been recognized by visionaries as a possibility because it is solely in the hands of human beings to do this. It is only through the taking of responsibility for our actions and thoughts and emotions and living in a way that we create not only our own peace, prosperity, happiness, and well-being but to see that by not including others in this vision we are still living in the cocoon, in ignorance, selfishness, and in anger which is based on our own mindset rooted in suffering and unhappiness. The lesson is that our deep happiness depends on our mental/emotional state as well as living conditions. And in both cases, we have the possibility of creating positive, realistic and pragmatic mental states as well as living conditions that promote, foster and sustain our well-being as well as that of others. This project only depends on our doing it, there is no other force in the universe to helps us. And this is the tragedy as well as sadness and frustration that many have written about in the past, that our suffering is created by ourselves and, therefore, the ending of our suffering is also possible by ourselves together.

We must look to each other to remove the ignorance and hindrances to our vision of a life on earth without the suffering created through wars, greed, hatred, ignorance, and injustice. As Wells’ wrote during WWI: ‘This monstrous conflict in Europe, the slaughtering, the famine, the confusion, the panic and hatred, and lying pride, it is all of it really only in the darkness of the mind. At the coming of understanding, it will vanish as dreams vanish at awakening. But never will it vanish until understanding has come.’ For the mind enmeshed in ignorance, greed, and anger feeds on itself and, therefore, has difficulty letting go and rising above the quagmire in which it remains. This difficulty needs an empathetic and compassionate approach to assist in showing how it is possible to live in a world without the pain and distrust and suffering created through the ignorance. And the path can be clear and successful without much difficulty. What is difficult is allowing oneself to give up the hatred, the anger, the greed, the points of view of egoism and selfishness – like those of a child. The process is away from that, and instead, the whole movement is a development of maturity of perspective and therefore action with wisdom.

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#MeToo and human liberation | openDemocracy

5 Nov

via #MeToo and human liberation | openDemocracy

#MeToo and human liberation | openDemocracy

5 Nov

“My hope is that now men will once again put at the forefront of their personal agenda the unlearning of dysfunctional masculinity that will expunge the power and control mandate.”

Source: #MeToo and human liberation | openDemocracy