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by heuan
3076 days ago
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my tl;dr .... The author told us to do three things: 1 - Evaluate your good/bad actions, morning and evening. Makes you act according to your "standard" more. 2- Practice feeling bad about people in difficult situations. Makes you automatically have those feelings without practice (more empathetic). 3 - Blame something external for your boredom/listlessness. Makes you cope with it better. Last one seemed a bit odd tbh. |
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But one thing I feel is lacking in most western movements: The handling of emptiness. If you really think about consequences of actions and how small one is compared to the whole, one cannot avoid realizing how meaningless and heartless the world is. Facing this void and not running away is one of the hardest challenges a human can cope with. We have a very deep desire to see some meaning in life, even if there isn't.
Zen at least admits this and offers ways to interact with this void and one's own growing understanding of it. I think these monks don't because they simply assume the meaning is to show how good you are so you can receive redemption after death.
So I think that would've been a great point three of the article instead of handling boredom, which in some way is also about handling the meaningless, but on a less deep understanding of it. If you are bored you still believe other people are doing meaningful things.