Dropping Out, Like The Buddha

Image of the Week
Image of the Week

Romper con lo establecido, como el Buda
--por Jane Brunette
En una época en la que estar súper ocupado es una insignia de honor y realizar tareas es la mayor virtud, donde algunos activistas promueven los mítines citando a Martin Luther King diciendo: "Para que el mal tenga éxito, todo lo que necesita es que la gente buena no haga nada", hice lo impensable. Me retiré.
No me gustaba pelear, y me estaba deprimiendo. Un día caí en la cuenta de que si quería paz, tenía que dejar de hacer enemigos. Así que renuncié.
Estoy en buena compañía El Buda también se retiró. Era el hippie original.
El Buda era un príncipe que lo tenía todo: poder, prestigio, dinero, placer sensual, pero todas estas codiciadas cosas del mundo parecían insignificantes cuando finalmente se enfrentó a la realidad del sufrimiento, la muerte y la impermanencia. Así que tiró su fabulosa ropa y se fue al bosque en busca de un significado más profundo.


Estoy segura de que hubo personas en su reino que lo juzgaron, que pensaron que su abandono era egoísta. ¿No podría hacer más bien como rey que como yogui errante? Que desperdicio. Pero el Buda estaba buscando algo más radical que ayudar a la gente de su reino a alcanzar la prosperidad temporal. Como yo, él quería terminar con el sufrimiento.
Entonces él se retiró y vagó. Intentó todo tipo de cosas para descubrir la verdad. Era tan apasionado en su búsqueda, incluso probó austeridades extremas, ayunando hasta que se quedó esquelético, esperando que lo empujara a la realización. Finalmente, cuando estaba casi muerto de hambre y delirante, una lechera vino y dijo lo obvio: "Te estás enfermando. Toma unas gachas ".

Me pregunto si la lechera sabía que su simple oferta de comida reconfortante proporcionaba los medios para la percepción clave del Buda. Tal vez se olvidó de ello con prontitud, solo mostró un poco de amabilidad hacia un extraño y luego volvió con sus vacas. No creo que tenga suficiente crédito. Si la lechera no se hubiese mantenido firme en su perspectiva y no le hubiese ofrecido su humilde verdad, entonces el Buda, en su obstinada búsqueda de la más alta verdad, podría haber terminado siendo otro hippie colgado, muerto por sus excesos.
Pero afortunadamente para nosotr@s, el Buda tuvo dudas sobre sí mismo. Escuchó profundamente cuando ella le habló, abierto a la posibilidad de que ella supiera algo que él no sabía. Y luego comió las gachas. Al hacerlo, tuvo una visión profunda en la que basó su filosofía de “El Camino Intermedio”: llegar a los extremos no ayuda. Mejor cultivar el equilibrio. [...]

No me gusta la duda, pero creo que es algo bueno porque mantiene viva la indagación: sé que podría estar equivocada. Eso en si mismo es un logro, teniendo en cuenta lo convencida que solía estar de que mi perspectiva siempre era moralmente correcta y la más verdadera. De hecho, [ahora] estoy bastante segur@ de que, en el fondo, ningun@ de nosotr@s sabe realmente si lo que estamos haciendo, en última instancia ayudará o perjudicará. ¿Podemos admitir eso y aún hacer nuestro mejor esfuerzo con lo que tenemos?



Preguntas semilla para la reflexión: ¿Qué significa para ti "romper con lo establecido como el Buda"? ¿Puedes compartir una experiencia personal de un momento en que abandonaste los extremos para encontrar la paz? ¿Qué te ayuda a cultivar el equilibrio?
Seed Questions for Reflection

What does "dropping out like the Buddha" mean to you? Can you share a personal experience of a time you dropped out of extremes to find your peace? What helps you cultivate balance?

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Add Your Reflection

17 Past Reflections
JS
Sep 13, 2018

I totally agree with author opinion about this subje ct 

KZ
Kz
May 22, 2018

 I've been reading "The Meaning of Mary Magdalene, " by Cynthia Bourgeault.  From this book's perspective Mary was crucial to Jesus' development, insight, blossoming. This perspective resonates with me in a deep way, as yet another truth forgotten (concealed?) by those who write our histories.  Thank you so much for pointing out the crucial role of the 'milk maiden' in the Buddha's journey.  Neither Mary nor Buddha's unnamed 'nurse,' are given proper credit.

WD
walter doege
May 3, 2018

 Meditate on death is a free wisdom

PA
May 2, 2018
I think we have to be clear that "dropping out" in these terms is actually applying strong effort to move in an alternate direction, a direction that would infer an alternative approach to the one we are habitually take. We can "drop out" anytime we are approached with adverse conditions (even as mental thoughts and feelings approach) and see out habitual fears, anxiety, stress, and anger arise. We can "drop out" by stopping instead of reacting and coming back to our breath, a neutral and therefor calming element. We have to become very aware in order to do this and be clear how the current conditions are affecting out body and mind. From this clarity, this understanding, this discernment, and this awareness we then have an option because we are aware and not caught. We can now disengage in whatever way we can in order to come back to our immediate needs and begin the process of balancing ourselves. Far from "dropping out" however, this is actively engaging and looking adversity and s... View full comment
ME
me May 2, 2018

 So beautiful!

RA
May 1, 2018

The most dangerous man is the one with no self doubt.  WIth a little bit of material prosperity in one hand, and enough of a feel of dharma in the other, such a man declares that which he doesn't understand to be either irrelevant, non-existent, or colored wholly with the shade of his own wrong view.  The result is to re-injure the world in the ways one is broken because of the inability to confront the blind spot that self-doubt points toward.  How to wake up such a man before his actions drive past the point of oblivion?  This kind of man is a metaphor for a slightly awakened western civilization as well, possessing prosperity and a little bit of understanding of the subtle, while unconsciously destroying everying it does not understand.

AM
Amy May 1, 2018

 I doubt myself everyday.  I DO NOT, however, doubt God.  In and of myself, I would drop out every chance I got.  Standing on the promises of God, I am able to function/stay the course.  Note ...  we are ALL sinners! (I believe that in God's  eyes, no one of us is less or more in the department of sin.) We ALL are in need of  a Savior.  We need Him   .  and each other for the journey

MM
Michael Mark
May 1, 2018

 Hi - wonderful sharing, thank you. "Dropping out" could remind us to not immediately/mindlessly react to what we perceive as real, that could be a person we think we know, an emotion we are experiencing, a static view. An impulse we feel very strongly about and want to act on can be unwise action. "Dropping back" I think is more the middle path - to 'drop out' seems to imply completley - to withdraw all the way when we know that this is delusional - interconnectiveness/interbeing includes us and we are needed and need to be connected but connected to wisdom. Droppingout like the Buddha means going deeper - afterall he shared and so is present with us today, 2500plus years later.   

MI
May 1, 2018

 BALANCE.....in ALL things.

_/\_

VS
May 1, 2018

 The only Way to save the world is from the inside out. Start by saving your self (for most of us that in itself is a life's time of work), then work your Way outwards toward your family, then your friends, relatives, neighbors, co-workers...

JO
Jo May 1, 2018

 Spot on!

JO
Apr 30, 2018

Matthew 6:24 tells me that I cannot serve two Masters.  From this, Isaiah hits the homerun for peace and balance.  (Isaiah 40 says it all!)  To make straight my personal highway to God (Who is Peace) I try to keep Him the center of my attention.  Going from extremely Catholic to extremely Christian ... cultivated the peace I have in the balance of the two.
When my husband and I were were in the dating phase of our relationship. My focus was on him.  When my husband and I married 34 years ago, my focus was on him.  As a lover of God, my focus is on Him.  Any distractions are meant to be cut away.  In God, the pressure is taken off of me "to perform", In Him I can go anywhere and do anything as HE leads me.  I have GREAT balance when I keep my focus on HIM.     

JP
Apr 30, 2018
 Middle path provides a transcendental perspective and vision. Either or is a dualistic perspective causing split, divisiveness, imbalance, separateness and disharmony. These are the ingredients of pain, suffering and destruction. Religious, political and ideological wars have been wedged through out history by holding on to the bipolar extremist  and rigid positions.The perspective which mindfully relates to opposite perspectives opens an avenue of inclusiveness and connectedness. I have a few friends who hold  the extremist view"our way is the only right way" for every one's salvation. Sadly, such a view excludes others like me who have a different spiritual orientation. It is my position that Truth is one which is realized and expressed in different ways by different people. Dalai Lama calls it "secular spirituality". According to Dalai Lama anyone can follow their chosen spiritual path without  judging and putting down other's spiritual path ways. This is the m... View full comment
JO
Jo Apr 30, 2018

 You are so right on!  amen!

DD
Apr 28, 2018
 Martin Luther King advocated nonviolence.  Speaking truth doesn't mean violence or even anger.  We can object and speak truth nonviolently.  The Buddha didn't face the reality of suffering -- he faced the reality of pain.  The point isn't to end suffering; the point is to end suffering that is ineffective and creates unnecessary pain.  He learned, possibly precipitated by the milkmaid, how to suffer pain efficiently, in a way that is in harmony with life rather than fighting life.  We never know anything for sure.  We definitely can do the best with what we have --  we can do right action.  Dropping out is action, it's not doing nothing.  Dropping out can mean accepting one's truth, not accepting the given story.  I have dropped out of the company line and dropped into my line, and found my peace.  Life is made of opposites or dialectics, such as life and death, individuality and belonging, right brain and left brain, r... View full comment
KP
Apr 27, 2018
 I needed this so very much today, thank you for the perfect reading and reflection. I currently live in Washington DC which given the current political administration is incredibly challenging. Nearly everyone I know is deep in their activism to the point of exhaustion, constantly claiming, "we cannot stop, we cannot rest, we must resist." I am observing them (and myself who chose to sit in compassion for all sides and honestly, that space can come with exhaustion too) I see how so many of the people I care about are sick and tired and need a break. My own Depression returned 2 weeks ago and is the deepest I've felt in quite a while. It was my mind and body reminding me to take a break, to "drop out like Buddha" and to self-care, reflect, sleep, go for walks, and sit in quiet. It was also a reminder to reach out to others for support rather than so often being the source of support. I am moving through one day, sometimes one hour at a time, seeking to be gentle with myself and s... View full comment