Even if there is no one around to project negativity in our direction, we can perceive the moment such that we generate suffering. For example, you think of someone you don't like and you get upset (i.e. suffer). This could be someone who has never even met you and does not know of your existence. This particular example is far more significant than the example of people who are negative with us as it has everything to do with US (i.e. the way that we think). Hence the Buddhist emphasis on right view.
--Kourosh
90 percent of daily thoughts are redundent -- re-cooked and reheated from the year, day or moment before. We can find freedom by releaseing but instead we like to cling and consequenctly suffer. It's so simple yet the lot of us don't get it.
-- Fabrice (Brent met while traveling in India)
--Kourosh
90 percent of daily thoughts are redundent -- re-cooked and reheated from the year, day or moment before. We can find freedom by releaseing but instead we like to cling and consequenctly suffer. It's so simple yet the lot of us don't get it.
-- Fabrice (Brent met while traveling in India)
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