Gautam Buddha Spiritual Materialism - Buddha Quotes -Siddhartha Gautama

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Gautam Buddha Spiritual Materialism Thoughts & Quotes stated by Siddhartha Gautama

Gautam Buddha Spiritual Materialism - Buddha Quotes -Siddhartha Gautama -Trivium Trungpa who is a Tibetan teacher and a book the same title and basically the idea is that we tend sometimes to take a materialistic attitude towards spiritual or ethical kinds of enterprises.

so in the same way that with literal materialism physical materialism we can tend to want to accumulate objects accumulate things buy things own things in the same way we can come to this kind of enterprise with a mind of ownership where we basically think of our path as one of collecting things collecting knowledge.

 collecting teachers good teachers collecting retreats collecting certain kinds of attainments rather than a path of putting these kinds of things to work really in our lives.

Gautam Buddha Spiritual Materialism Thoughts

 a teacher of mine talks about how when he goes on retreats and he goes on a number of them sometimes at the beginning of the retreat he'll be surrounded by people who are talking about all the other retreats they've been on a sort of comparing each other one-upping each other about I was on this retreat.

 I was with this teacher I was on a month-long retreat I was on a two-month-long retreat and so we know that those kinds of things do happen at times and I think they're in general three different ways that spiritual materialism can manifest itself in our lives the first of these.

 I think we can call a kind of clinging to possessions various kinds of possessions that we may feel we have ownership over we may feel that we have ownership over, for instance, our own attainments or our own diplomas.

 we may have ownership over statues that we own that is literal ownership but also we may feel that having gone to a particular school having gone to a particular place on its own gives us a kind of spiritual attainment.

these may be kind of subtle psychological impulses rather than something that's very gross and obvious so we have to it's something we have to keep an eye on in our own selves.

 the second way that these that spiritual materialism may manifest is what I would say a kind of clinging to views that is we may identify with our view of being a Buddhist for instance or being a secular Buddhist or being a secularist or our ideas of about particular philosophical issues within Buddhism.

 say being a Mahayana Buddhist or being at airavata Buddhist or being a non-dualist Buddhist or being a Buddhist who believes in the early texts and we may think that by having these views that alone is enough to give us a kind of spiritual advance and that ownership of these views is clinging to these views is in our best interest that maybe our feeling.

 but that itself is a kind of spiritual materialism the approach to an ethical path or a spiritual path if you like that involves the ownership or identification with particular things or in this case views the third way that this may manifest.

Gautam Buddha Spiritual Materialism Thoughts & Quotes stated by Siddhartha Gautama

 he is in the culling two particular kinds of emotional states that we've achieved or states of meditation that we've achieved so some people may cling to or feel ownership of saying the ability to achieve a one States Janek States being states of bliss or other kinds of positive mental states that occur within deep meditation within a very focused meditation over long periods of time.

 and I've got a video about this kind of concentration meditation which you can see if you're interested in that but we can cling to that we can feel that the mere ability to achieve those states are the having achieved them in the past gives us a kind of a one-up on other people.

 we may also cling to or feel possession of certain kinds of states that we've achieved in the past having to do with let's say the sublime so we may hear of people or me we may ourselves at times talk about how we achieved such a deep sublime state whether it's in meditation or perhaps out in the countryside.

when we're on a walk in the woods or maybe it's going to a museum and seeing a beautiful painting or a beautiful sculpture or going to a concert of some kind and hearing great music and we feel that we touch something sublime during that experience and that that experience collecting that experience.

 as it gave us a kind of spiritual attainment which makes us more spiritually mature or advanced than people who haven't had that kind of sublime experience so in this way we can cling to these three things we can cling literally two possessions things that we own we can cling to views things that we believe or we can cling to.

 let's say experiences things that we experience or emotional states that we're in there we know that we have been in in the past and what unifies these kinds of states is.

 I would say a mind of collecting a mind of ownership a mind of possession that's why Tribune Park called this spiritual materialism because it's a kind of own mind the same way that we may feel that we are better people by having more money in the bank or by having a bigger house or a better car the same way. 

we may think that we're spiritually more advanced people or ethically more advanced people because we've got these possessions whether they be literal physical possessions or other kinds of possessions in terms of the mind and that in a sense of views or experiences and this we should obviously contrast with what I think is a much more true way of looking at at the spiritual path or the ethical path which is that the achievements come in how we behave and how we in fact approach the

Gautam Buddha Spiritual Materialism Thoughts & Quotes stated by Siddhartha Gautama Example

world and in particular in an approach to the world which involves non-clinging within which involves non-possession of the world which involves an equanimity which is relatively speaking without stress a way of approaching the world which is kind which is compassionate rather than being one that is cruel or unkind.

finally a way of dealing with the world which is wise as opposed to one that is unwise and ownership of things whatever things they may be really don't enter into the question as to how we behave in the world now in the present moment.

 I think we all know of people who have had ownership of over all of these things ownership of actual objects ownership of a very good views ownership of great experiences in the past who nevertheless can't quite get to that next level but I don't mean for you to use this kind of these insights about spiritual materialism outside.

 that is to say by judging other people the best way to use them is to use them with yourself how do you approach the world how do you approach these kinds of attainments I've actually been interested to hear about that to hear your comments down below and then in the comments section because I think it's something that we can approach individually thinking of it as our own path and how to make our own path actually more effective.

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