A deeper sense of happiness
BUDDHISM TEACHES THAT THE MIND, NOT THE WALLET,
IS THE PATH TO CONTENTMENT:
Pankaj MISHRA
WALKING out of a Buddhist bookstore in San Francisco early this
month, I heard from the radio of a passing car the voice of U.S.
President George W. Bush giving his annual State of the Union
speech.
For a second, the word compassion seemed to hang in the clear
air. This ideal, greatly cherished by Buddhists, is ?one of the
deepest values? of America, according to the President.
Immersed in Buddhist literature for the past few years, I have
come to know well how words suddenly lose their familiar meanings
when encountered in a different society or culture.
I was not surprised when reading Bush?s full speech to encounter
his own special meaning of such resonant words as ?compassion? and
?freedom.?
For instance, his compassion was aimed at ?any citizen who feels
isolated from the opportunities of America.?
He didn?t specify what those opportunities are. But they can be
summed up in four words: the pursuit of happiness. These words
describe much more than an individual or collective aspiration.
They describe an ideology, a distinctively American attempt to
give meaning to life. But people from older, traditional societies
cannot be blamed for finding it a bit strange.
For happiness seems something very private in the U.S., best
pursued by what Bush prescribed as a patriotic duty immediately
after 9/11.
This view of the good life assumes that we have a birthright to
happiness, and that suffering is an unfortunate and avoidable
aberration, likely to be removed by political and economic change.
Nothing could be further from the Buddhist view of compassion and
happiness. In a famous Buddhist story, a young woman wanders the
streets of a town with her dead infant in her arms, asking everyone
she meets to bring him back to life.
Someone directs her to the Buddha, who listens patiently and then
promises to help if she brings him a mustard seed from a household
that has never witnessed a death. The young woman knocks on many
doors.
By the time she returns empty-handed to the Buddha, she has begun
to grasp his lesson: all things in the world are impermanent, and to
be ignorant of this fact is to be trapped in an endless cycle of
craving, frustration and suffering.
The Buddha brought consolation to many people as he travelled
around North India in the 6th century B.C. This was a time when the
old tribal societies were cracking up, a new urban civilization was
emerging, along with fast-expanding human desires, and rulers
dreaming of empire were waging destructive wars.
The Buddha was one of the many new agnostic thinkers in North
India who responded to the suffering of people uprooted from their
tradition-bound worlds.
But he didn?t diagnose this suffering in sociological
abstractions, as a consequence of social and economic injustice,
widening racial or class gaps, or poverty.
He witnessed the emergence of the new rootless, ego-driven
individual as it broke free from old close-knit societies and became
afflicted with craving, pride, jealousy and hatred while acting upon
its newly expanded world.
But unlike such modern thinkers as Hobbes and Marx, the Buddha
didn?t assume that a model of society was needed that could contain
the rampaging egos of human beings.
He proposed none of the massive restructurings of society
familiar to us in our own times: revolution, socialism, democracy,
capitalism or regime change. He insisted that suffering is a mental
experience, born from desire, attachment, hatred, pride and envy.
These were the ?negative emotions? that distort and confuse the
mind and lead it into a pursuit of such goals as power, possessions
and sensuous pleasures. When thwarted, they lead to frustration and
suffering; and even when fulfilled, they can only turn into another
source of unhappiness, for the happiness they bring is always
fleeting.
Buddhists claim that to realize fully the impermanence of
ordinary happiness is to make the first step toward real, enduring
happiness. The first step is meditation. To sit still and observe
that one is neither identical with one?s thoughts and impulses as
they arise continuously and discursively in one?s mind, generating
desire, anxiety, fear and guilt, nor indeed limited by them, is to
be aware of the possibility of controlling one?s thoughts and of
moving toward a new kind of spiritual freedom.
For Buddhists, the highest form of happiness lies in this inner
freedom rather than the freedom to acquire and consume. Happiness is
determined by one?s state of mind rather than by external events. It
is not subject to time and decay, or dependent on the acquisition of
things and people.
Today, it is what recommends Buddhism to so many people living in
societies built around the endless stimulation and satisfaction of
individual desires, but which seem to bewilder and oppress people as
much as or more than the simpler world to which the Buddha offered
his unique therapy.
Courtesy: TIME ASIA
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