silvershe-wolf (
silvershe_wolf) wrote2008-03-28 04:43 pm
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Suffering
A very well known part of Buddhist wisdom is the idea that ‘life is suffering’. In fact, the word Buddhists use is actually 'dukkha' which may be more closely translated to ‘unsatisfactory’. But, I am not actually going to talk about Buddhism as such here (after going to a Buddhist centre for over a year now I still know very little about the ‘religion’), but about my own personal feelings on this idea.
When I first picked up a book on Buddhism and read those words ‘life is suffering’, I honestly felt this enormous sense of relief. Like, really? It’s not just me then? I guess the thing is with suffering is that we tend to get so wrapped up in it. We concentrate so much on the pain itself and the perceived cause of it that we seem to block out the rest of the world entirely. I was amazed a while back when I met up with a friend of mine (who was visiting from uni) and she was having money troubles. I was pretty ill, as I often am, and all she did was talk about money and how lucky I was because I had some. She was genuinely jealous of me!
At the time I was shocked. How could she not see the pain I was in? But then I realised that we all do this to extent really. We focus so much on our particular cause of suffering that we become rather blinded to everyone else’s.
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I think the phrase what doesn't kill you makes you stronger is very true.
And yes if you can open your heart to others to comfort each other's suffering then the world has to be better for it.
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And yes I think suffering can make you stronger, but some people view 'strength' in a way I don't really agree with. I meet so many people who have had difficult lives and have become cold and unkind, even violent, and labeled it as 'strength'.
I see strength as going through hard times, but using those experiences to open your heart up to others and see how they suffer too. As you say, if everyone did that, there would be a lot less pain in the world.