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The Solution to Suffering
The solution to suffering is to let go of desire and practice
detachment. This is the implication in the third Noble Truth
which is called nirodha, meaning containment or confinement. One
of the key understandings of this fact of life is that the
challenges of life cannot be avoided, and that we let go of
desire by facing our challenges with nobility, respect, dignity,
openness to learning and receptivity to expansion.
The energies and feelings that arise within us are forms of fire.
We need to control that fire so that it does not get out of
control and destroy us or others. We need to use it as a
spiritual force. We need to harness the energy and consciously
direct it to support the expression of our dream. The fire of our
feelings is no different than the fire of transformation. In
fact, the fire of our feelings is the fire of transformation; it
is just manifesting on a level of effect rather than a level of
cause from which transformational energies originate.
Injustice, cruelty, wars, oppression and the like are caused by
the reactionary feelings not being controlled. These fires are
released in destructive ways rather than used to fulfill the
dreams of well-being and wholeness that exist in the soul of
every human being. Without controlling these reactions their fire
becomes an instrument of the wounds and fears of the unconscious.
Manifesting our dreams as part of the spiritual journey requires
us to channel the energies available to us rather than trying to
eliminate what we might consider to be obstructive or negative
energies. The friction that arises from our obstacles and
challenges, which often are the bases for our suffering, are
essential to the evolution of consciousness. Consciousness only
expands through the tensions of life that motivate us to reach
deeper and higher, resulting in expansion.
When the feelings that arise within us in reaction to the
challenges or afflictions we encounter are not ‘contained,’ we
will likely adopt compensatory behaviour. In other words, if we
experience that which we do not like, we will automatically seek
to balance it, or remove it, with something pleasurable. This
avoidance is usually the basis for greed and pleasure seeking,
which could be a clue to us as to the need we are avoiding.
If we do not ‘contain’ the feeling of loss that we frequently
experience when faced with affliction, we typically go through
denial first, then anger, then blame. These are all clues to a
need that we are not recognizing. We want to have different
experiences, a different life. To blame others, or to blame
oneself, does not get us to the realization that our life is
created through the choices we make. And the choices are
conditioned by the freedom we exercise in facing our reality
rather than running away from it or denying it.
If we do not ‘contain’ the reactions to our affliction we might
seek oblivion. Oblivion is an escape from the hard realities of
life. It is an avoidance of responsibility, and a deviation from
the path. Oblivion is easily seen when induced by drugs, alcohol,
food or overwork. It is less recognized when it is couched in the
language and practice of the spiritual journey. Nirvana, bliss,
meditation, etc. can all be means of escape. When they are, they
are not at all spiritual – i.e., they do not contain the
transformative soul energies; Spirit is absent.
We don’t have to give up the desire we have, but instead let go
of the object toward which the desire is directed. When we let go
of the object (often some thing or action of escape) we still
have the energy with which to work. This way we can look more
clearly at what we are trying to escape from. When we fulfill the
desire, the energy dissipates temporarily, but there is no change
within. As soon as we are going after something pleasing we need
to ask ourselves if we are trying to escape from some suffering
or challenge.
We do not want to make the object of our desire something toward
which we then have an aversion. For then it will still control
us, and the desire will create further conflict. We want to be
sufficiently free to choose so that instead of the desire being a
compulsion it gets transformed into a choice we can call a
preference. Preferences do not control, nor create problems when
what is preferred is not at hand. Frequently our happiness is
dependent upon the fulfilment of desires. Preferences do not have
this controlling grip on us.
When we let go of attachments we can experience Nirvana. Nirvana
is not a far off heaven, or a state of enlightenment that few can
reach, but a clear mental state, infused with the understanding,
power and love of soul, that enables one to control and direct
the fires of the personality to support soul expression and its
dream.
Exercises:
1. What are you attached to that causes you suffering or
restricts you in some way?
2. At least once a day when you feel a desire, do not
automatically reach for your typical object of desire.
Instead, stay with the energy and see what you are trying to
escape from. Then deal with making some constructive changes
in that part of your life.
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This is one of 150 Soul Perspective articles.
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