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#759282 - 04/25/12 05:10 PM
Why am I suffering deliberately?
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Gecko
Registered: 03/09/12
Posts: 417
Loc: Mt Tremblant,quebec ,can
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To all,
The main purpose of Buddhism is to rid oneself of all sufferings.I see it as mental and physical. I do not like repeating my physical story,ex athlete,5 heart operations , 8 tares in the knees and one in my left foreharm.
After my 5 th hearth operation the doctor told me I was good for another 20 years.Waited 2 weeks ,joined a gym,and pushed myself ,to the point of my body hurting.I can run ,could not walk 100 feet,that's great but the hurting is there.
Why do I do it? Spoke with my gym sensei,and his answer contained nothing spiritual!
I rarely ask for advise,what would you do if you were me ?
loong
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#759419 - 04/26/12 02:00 PM
Re: Why am I suffering deliberately?
[Re: loong]
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Gecko
Registered: 03/09/12
Posts: 417
Loc: Mt Tremblant,quebec ,can
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To all
Unhappy chidhood, mother mentally sick,self thaught in everything, Tennis, drag racing ,built my own car,semi pro goalie in hockey.As for the heart thing ,all,but all of my family from my father's side died at 60 of a heredity problen. I am the only survivor. Once someone asked me to show my fuzzie side well you are seeing it.Self thaught in Buddhism ,computor.This shell that we might call loong/normand has gone through alot.The real sense of my question was why do I push myself somuch.Iwas called very often a survivor,Oh Norm you'll get through it ,you're a survivor. Like one of you friends mentionned is maybe lack of self esteem. I have succeeded almost everything in my life.How by discipline, total honesty. I thank you for giving me advise,and I hope to receive some more.
With thankfullness _/\_ loong
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#759491 - 04/26/12 05:53 PM
Re: Why am I suffering deliberately?
[Re: loong]
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BellaOnline Editor
Parakeet
Registered: 12/16/08
Posts: 909
Loc: Los Angeles, CA
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Hi looong, thanks for sharing so much of yourself. As you know, this kind of self-inquiry work is the heart of the Buddhist path (and I would say all spiritual paths really.) We can practice mindfulness, and positive thinking, and all sorts of other methods for 'improving' our minds, but this is really like chopping the same weeds down over and over. Until we dig up the roots, the weeds will keep growing back. So looking in to our deepest patterns and seeking to understand and release them is the 'real' work, as far as I am concerned.
I do energy work and counseling myself with my students, and I support all the different methods people have mentioned above - I think it's very individual what will work for someone, we are each different. And of course there are many other methods besides those mentioned above for working with yourself in this way, including many Buddhist ones (and many Buddhist psychologists too, as we discussed in another thread, this is one of the ways East and West have worked together. If you want book suggestions along those lines, I can provide you with some.)
Personally, I don't like to do too much analyzing in a thread like this - it can get a little 'pop psychology', and really you have to come to your own insights. But in a way, you're already doing the work yourself, in the information you have provided for us on your life. You have had to work hard your whole life just to survive. That was conditioned into you with the type of childhood you had. Survival is our most ingrained instinct, and you've been conditioned that in order to survive you must push yourself, you must work hard. So it makes perfect sense that after a major health scare, after something in which you no doubt felt your mortality keenly, a part of you is going to want to push yourself.
As for poor self-esteem, or a sense of unworthiness, that makes so much sense too with your childhood. And as you achieved things in life, you no doubt felt some sense of esteem from that, and so you are also conditioned to believe you have to keep achieving, keep pushing to have any worth. Although philosophically you know from your Buddhist studies that your worth is inherent, you may not feel that deep down.
I'm not saying this is the case, I am just offering things for you to look at since you asked. And again I respect you doing so, as this is the real work, I think (and I could write pages on my own work, believe me!)
From a Buddhist practice perspective, you can work with these feelings in terms of mindfulness, just as you do other emotions and thoughts that arise. It just may take a little more 'digging' to find these emotions within yourself - a sense of unworthiness, or a deep fear of mortality and drive to survive. But you can locate them in your inquiry practice, and begin to 'unroot' them. Which doesn't mean you shouldn't try other methods mentioned above if you like, but you already have a strong Buddhist practice foundation, so it makes sense to work with these impulses within that context too.
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