The following words came from a post on COMPASSION and largely relates to the Buddhist spiritual path - however, it doesn't matter what religion and beliefs you have, whether you are a fully fledged Christian, Muslim, Jewish, Hindu, Sikh, Baha'i, Jain, Agnostic or Atheist we can all learn about compassion and how this will affect your life and those around you.
All the great religions teach us about many things including forgiveness, hope, love and compassion therefore it doesn't matter where the message comes from - its about how YOU live your life and how you can enrich not only yourself but all those you love and everyone you meet - can't be bad can it?
1. Live
with compassion
Compassion
is one of the most revered qualities in Buddhism and great compassion is a sign
of a highly realized human being.
Compassion
doesn’t just help the world at large, and it isn’t just about the fact that
it’s the right thing to do. Compassion, and seeking to understand those around
you, can transform your life for a number of reasons.
First,
self-compassion is altogether critical towards finding peace within yourself.
By learning to forgive yourself and accepting that you’re human you can heal
deep wounds bring yourself back from difficult challenges.
Next, we
can often be tortured because of the fact that we don’t completely understand
why people do certain things.
Compassion
is understanding the basic goodness in all people and then seeking to discover that basic goodness in specific people. Because of this,
it helps you from going through the often mental torture we experience because
we don’t understand the actions of others.
But even
more than that, expressing compassion is the very act of connecting wholeheartedly with others, and simply
connecting in this way can be a great source of joy for us.
The
reasons for practicing compassion are numerous and powerful. Seek to live in a
way that you treat everyone you meet as you would yourself. Once you begin
trying to do this, it will seem altogether impossible. But keep at it, and
you’ll realize the full power of living with compassion.
2.
Connect with others and nurture those connections
In
Buddhism, a community of practitioners is called a “Sangha”. A sangha is a
community of monks, nuns, laymen, and laywomen who practice together in peace
towards the united “goal” of realizing greater awakening, not only for
themselves but for all beings.
The
sangha is a principle, which much of the world can greatly benefit from. People
come together in groups all the time, but it’s usually for the purpose of
creating monetary riches or obtaining substantial power and rarely towards the
united goal o1f attaining peace, happiness, and realizing greater wisdom.
The
principle of the sangha can be expressed in your own life in many ways. The
Sangha is ultimately just one way of looking at life, through the lens of the
individual “expressions” of the totality.
By
living in a way that you’re fully aware of the power of connecting with others,
whether it’s one person or a group of 100, and seeking to nurture those
relationships in the appropriate way, you can transform your life in ways that
will pay dividends for years to come.
3. Wake
up
One of
the most powerful points on this list, the power of simply living in a way that
you’re fully awake to every moment of your life, pretty much couldn’t be exaggerated even if I tried.
Mindfulness,
greater awareness, paying attention, whatever you want to call it- it changes
every facet of your life and in every way. It’s as simple as that.
Strive
to live fully awake to each moment of your daily life and overcome your
greatest personal struggles, find a great sense of peace and joy, and realize
the greatest lessons life can teach you as a result of living fully awake to
the present moment.1
4. Live
deeply
To live
deeply, in a way that you become keenly aware of the precious nature of life,
is to begin down the path of true peace and happiness.
Why?
Because to live in this way is to gradually
become aware of the true nature of the world. This will happen essentially in
“sections” of the whole, such as realizing your interconnectedness (you begin
to see how everything is connected to everything else) and impermanence (you
begin to see how everything is ever-changing, constantly dying only to be
reborn in another form).
These
realizations are the bread and butter of Buddhism and all spiritual practice.
These “sections of the whole” are fragments of the ultimate realization, ways
for us to understand that, which can’t be fully understood in the traditional
sense.
By
living in a way that you seek to realize these various “qualities of the
ultimate” you find greater and greater peace in realizing the natural way of
things. This cultivates in us the ability to
savor every moment of life, to find peace in even the most mundane activities,
as well as the ability to transform your typically “negative” experiences into
something altogether nourishing and healing.
5.
Change yourself, change the world
Buddhists
understand that you can hardly help another before you help yourself. But this
isn’t referring to you gaining power or riches before you can help others, or
living in a way that you ignore others.
This is
mostly referring to the fact that because we’re all interconnected, by you
helping yourself you create an exponentially positive effect on the rest of the
world.
If you
want to make an impact on the world, don’t falsely convince yourself that it’s
“you or them”. You don’t need to drag yourself through the mud to help those
around you. If you do this, you’ll greatly hamper your ability to create a
positive impact.
At the
deepest level of understanding, by making it about
you you’re also making it about them because you know there’s no separating
“you” and “them”.
Take
care of yourself and seek to be more than just a help, but an example of how to
live for others to follow and you’ll create waves of exponential possibility
that inspires others to do the same.
6. Embrace death
Death is
an often - taboo topic in Western society. We do everything we can to not only
avoid the subject, but pretend that it doesn’t even exist.
The
reality is, this is really unfortunate and in no way helps us lead better lives.
Becoming keenly aware of your own impermanence and deeply understanding the
nature of death with regards to our interconnectedness are both things, which
can help us find great peace.
In
Buddhism, students in many sects at one point or another “meditate on the
corpse” as it were (a practice which is said to have originated at least as far
back as the Buddha’s lifetime).
This is
literally what it sounds like. They meditate on the image of a corpse slowing decomposing and imagine that process through to its end, eventually resulting in a deep and
profound realization on the true nature of death.
That
might sound a little intense to you, but the truth is, if you live you’re
entire life acting as if you’re never going to die or ignoring your own impermanence
then you won’t ever be able to find true peace within yourself.
You
don’t necessarily have to meditate on the image of a corpse, but simply opening
up to yourself about death so that you’re no longer shielding it from your mind
(which you’re likely doing unconsciously, as that’s how most of us were brought
up in the West) can begin to be a great source of peace and help you appreciate
the many joys in your everyday life.
A true
appreciation for life can never be fully realized until you come face-to-face
with your own impermanence. But once you do this, the world opens up in a new
and profound way.
7. Your
food is (very) special
Buddhist
meditative practice, particularly mindfulness and contemplation, helps you
realize the precious nature of the food in front of you. Indeed, with how
integral a part food plays in our lives, to transform our relationship with
food is to transform a key aspect of our entire lives, both now and in the
future.
By
contemplating on the food in front of us, for example, we can come to realize
the vast system of interconnectedness that is our life, and how our food coming
to be on our dinner plate as it is depended on numerous elements coming to be.
This
helps us to deepen our relationship with food, cultivate a deep sense of
gratitude before each meal, and learn to respect the delicate but ever-pressing
balance that is life.
8.
Understand the nature of giving
Giving
is more than the act of giving Christmas and Birthday gifts, it’s also about
those gifts which we give each and every day which we don’t typically see as
gifts at all.
Buddhists
hold a very deep understanding of the nature of giving, particularly in that
life is a constant play between the act of giving and receiving. This doesn’t
just help us find peace in understanding the way of the world around us, but
helps us realize the amazing gifts we all have within us that we can give
others in every moment, such as our love, compassion, and presence.
9. Work
to disarm the ego
The
easiest way to sum up all “spiritual” practice is this: spirituality is the act
of coming in touch with the ultimate reality or the ground of being, and as a
result spiritual practice is the act of overcoming those obstacles which keep
us from realizing that.
The
primary obstacle in our way? The ego.
To put
it short and sweet, the reason the ego is the major obstacle in spiritual
practice, or simply the practice of finding true peace and happiness (whatever
you choose to call it, it’s all the same), is because it’s very function is to
pull you away from the ground of your being by convincing you that you’re this
separate self.
The
process of unraveling the ego can take time, as it’s something, which has been
with us, intertwined with us, for years. But it’s infinitely rewarding and
altogether necessary if we want to realize our best life.
10.
Remove the 3 poisons
Life is
filled with vices, things which attempt to bind us to unwholesome ways of
living and therefore do the very opposite of cultivate peace, joy, and greater
realization in our lives. Among these, the 3 poisons are some of the most
powerful. The 3 poisons are:
1
Greed
2
Hatred
3
Delusion
Together,
these 3 poisons are responsible for the majority of the pain and suffering we
experience as a collective species. It’s perfectly normal to be affected by
each of these poisons throughout your life, so don’t knock yourself for falling
for them.
Instead,
simply accept that they’re something you’re experiencing and begin working to
remove them from your life. This can take time, but it’s a key aspect on the
path towards realizing true peace and happiness.
11.
Right livelihood
We
should all strive to work and make our living in a way that’s more “conscious”
or aware. This generally means not selling harmful items such as guns, drugs,
and services that harm other people, but it goes deeper than that.
There’s
ultimately two aspects to this: making a living by doing something which
doesn’t inhibit your own ability to realize peace and making a living doing
something which doesn’t inhibit others ability to realize peace.
Facing
this can lead to some interesting situations for some people, and as Thich Nhat
Hanh has mentioned this is a collective effort as opposed to a solely personal
one (the butcher isn’t a butcher only because he decided to be, but because
there is a demand from people for meat to be neatly packaged and made available
for them to be purchased from supermarkets), but you should strive to do your
best.
Following
the teaching on right livelihood can help you realize the harmful effect that
your own work is having on you and therefore coming up with a solution can
result in a largely positive shift in your life as a whole. Only you can decide
if a change needs to happen though.
Whatever
the case, seek to make a living doing something that promotes the peace and
happiness of yourself and those around you as much as possible.
12.
Realize non-attachment
This is
a difficult point to put into so few words, but a profound one I felt would be
greatly beneficial to mention nonetheless.
To
realize non-attachment in a Buddhist sense doesn’t mean to abandon your friends
and family and live alone for the rest of your life, never truly living again
just so that you don’t become attached to these desires.
Non-attachment
refers to living in a way that you exist in the natural flow of life and
generally living a typical modern life, building a family, working, etc., while
simultaneously not being attached to any of these things. It simply means to
live in a way that you’ve become aware of and accepted the impermanence of all
things in this life and live in a way that you’re ever-aware of this fact.
It’s
perfectly normal for a Zen student in Japan, once having completed his
training, to actually de-robe and go “back into the world” so to speak. This is
because, once they’ve reached this level of realization, they see the beauty in
all things and are compelled to live fully absorbed in all the beauty and
wonders of this life. From this point on, they can truly “live life to the fullest”,
while not clinging to any of these things.
Keep in
mind, this doesn’t mean that you stop feeling emotions. On the contrary, these
emotions are welcomed and expected, and fully experienced with mindfulness in
the moment of their impact. But this is simply the natural course of things.
Once
these emotions subside though, and when we have no mental formations or
obstructions to block our path, a natural healing process takes place that
heals the wound and allows us to continue on living in peace and joy instead of
dragging us down into darkness.
Wonderful! Add stick control and its all there!
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