Interdependence and FreedomRead the whole article.
What keeps us from tasting our inherent wisdom? Concept. We are generally chasing one conceptual creation after another. This matrix of concept appears in many variations, but its weak point is always the same: it is fabricated. Without really looking at the nature of appearances, we project a meaning-generality onto the world, shaping it with our assumption of independent existence.
The Buddha taught that we can’t realize enlightenment until we experience a very basic truth: everything in the world is interdependent. That is the notion of emptiness. We say something is empty because there is no single entity that is sustained in space independently. If the tree were really there, it would not take seeds, sun, water, leaves, and bark to make a tree.
People sometimes confuse emptiness with “blankness” or “voidness,” as if Buddhists are into nihilism. But we’re not into nihilism any more than we are into permanence. Enlightenment is a level of wisdom that transcends both those concepts.
Concept is what we add to the interdependent nature of things. Moment by moment we look at ourselves and the world and draw an erroneous conclusion. The point of contemplative meditation is to slowly unravel this creative process. Along the path, we discover that we have made many assumptions. The biggest assumption is that the self exists in the way we think. When we die, this concept of self—which we had assumed to be this body with this family and these friends—dissolves and only consciousness remains. That is very destabilizing.
We experience such dissolution in a small way when our marriage breaks up or we crash our car. Suddenly we feel like we’re falling apart, as if our identity is lost—but it was never there. Like everything, it was dependent upon something else. That’s interdependence.
It is our habit to color interdependence with a conceptual overlay. This overlay is hard to crack because it’s been going on for a long time—in fact, endlessly. We might think it won’t be quite as strong tomorrow, but unless we meditate to get a little distance, we’re likely to buy into the conceptual framework by reacting to the world in our usual habitual way as soon as we wake up in the morning.
This is called karma, which means “action.” We are conditioned by lifetimes of karma—habitual action that keeps us in samsara, the cycle of suffering. How do we reverse this process?
Offering multiple perspectives from many fields of human inquiry that may move all of us toward a more integrated understanding of who we are as conscious beings.
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Tuesday, November 24, 2009
Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche - Interdependence and Freedom
A new article from Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche.
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