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by proc0
1859 days ago
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It's very hard to overstate the profundity of Buddhism. The author embarked in self-reflection journey with this article, and I think had he kept going he would have bumped into Buddhist teachings. Suffering is the foundation of experience. The author could not have arrived at his conclusions without suffering through what he did first. It's a contradiction like many Buddhist teachings. By embracing suffering, you somehow avoid it. |
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Buddhism can very easily be made an analogy with programming and book writing:
"You have the perfect program not when you cannot add anything more to it but when you cannot take anything more away from it."
Their core philosophy basically is: let go, don't hold on to things, don't pile things up (no matter what type). It very often boils down to "find your true self, unburdened with many things you attached to yourself as you grew up". So at the core is the concept that you should minimize your persona until you cannot minimize it further.
I dig that a lot and I am seeing it as an universal principle in all areas of life. And it doesn't mean to "remove" your core traits. It means remove everything that isn't actually you. How do we find these things? Well, it's a lifetime journey but there are good ways to do it.
(This also reminded me of property-based testing where the testing framework is always shrinking a case that failed your tests until it finds the minimum value that can reproduce the failing test.)
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> It's a contradiction like many Buddhist teachings. By embracing suffering, you somehow avoid it.
Nothing contradictory about it. It seems that Buddhism (and other systems of belief) postulate that one of the traits of our Universe is: if you are not afraid of X, then X will be hitting you less. Kind of like school bullies, I guess?
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Sure, all of that is pretty abstract and philosophical. But as we go through life, we do start spotting patterns. The fact that they don't have a nice tidy name in Wikipedia doesn't devalue them.