Yes Milo, we all know how proud you are of yourself that you've become a new person, you've 'escaped' your cave.
Though this isn't really a new experience for you, is it? This is now the third time you've had an, 'epiphany' like this and shared it with the forum. I wonder what's different this time...you do seem even more delusional than before - maybe that's the key - delusion?
Well congratulations I suppose, in finally deluding yourself into believing you're enlightened.
Yes Milo, we all know how proud you are of yourself that you've become a new person, you've 'escaped' your cave.
Though this isn't really a new experience for you, is it? This is now the third time you've had an, 'epiphany' like this and shared it with the forum. I wonder what's different this time...you do seem even more delusional than before - maybe that's the key - delusion?
Well congratulations I suppose, in finally deluding yourself into believing you're enlightened.
To be honest, most of the people who claim themselves, 'enlightened', 'liberated' or something else of that nature, are repulsive to me. Seems like what people consider, 'enlightenment' is more commonly born from wilful delusion than anything else.
People convince themselves they're enlightened/superior, that they've rid themselves of ego and they don't let anything even hint at the otherwise. Pretty ironic watching these people when they're questioned about these things, they give pretty obvious indication that they haven't really removed their ego. More like ego is being suppressed to give a false pretense of (superficial) enlightenment to the world.
Which often seems to manifest in people being, 'overly' affectionate. That they seem to want to solve everyone else problems and share their superiority with the world, under the guise of, 'helping' people when really it's just a way for them to further qualify in their own minds that they are in fact, 'walking an enlightened path'.
Anyway, count me out of that, I'd rather be made acutely aware of all of my failures and shortcomings, of all the things I'm not and all that I am too idiotic to understand, than to delude myself to that point.
I'll walk my own path, irrespective of others. If I happen to encounter other beings who resonate with myself, then so be it. If not, I have no problem with being completely alone in the world.
People who claim to be enlightened are generally lying or deluded. If you're actually enlightened, you have no reason to advertise the fact, you'd have nothing to prove, you'd simply be enlightened, thus allowing your state to be known through observation alone. Being enlightened isn't an award or staus you get to hang on your wall. Assuming it's synonymous or similar to wisdom, it's nothing more than a useful skill.
I think you just defined being a person. Being yourself + not being limited by something besides your own understanding = Everybody, since you do not understand anything except in the way you understand it, and you are yourself, by necessity.I'm not proving my enlightenment. I'm trying to teach others about it because I enjoy doing so. Enlightenment is being yourself. Being totally liberated to do anything you want without being influenced by something other than one's own understanding. It is not possible to prove one's enlightenment to anyone but themselves because of the barrier between knowledge and reality.
You can only trust me.
You are the perfect example of the person who is not enlightened.
You recognize things such as pride and criticize people based on the abstractions of good and bad "failures and shortcomings." You learn there is no such thing. It is your mind playing tricks on you.
I think you just defined being a person. Being yourself + not being limited by something besides your own understanding = Everybody, since you do not understand anything except in the way you understand it, and you are yourself, by necessity.
From my understanding of enlightened, enlightened individuals are humble by their very nature. Stating one is enlightened is not humble at all. Therefore, one who states they are enlightened is most likely not enlightened. I try not to conflate being enlightened with being knowledgeable.
I'd be more worried if you said I was enlightened, because as deluded as you are it would be an almost sure sign that I am indeed crazy.
What's wrong with criticism? It's not inherently negative, and in my experience it's more often interpreted as a negative, than intended as one. Most criticism is legitimate in some way, it's an opportunity to improve and learn.
Who said failure was a bad thing either? Everyone does it - all the time. If you try something and don't succeed, you have by definition, failed. I fail all the time. Sometimes (often?) I fail spectacularly. These are my favourite failures, because it's when I really learn something. In fact I usually learn more from failing than succeeding because, if I succeed, it's usually because I already had the ability to achieve that goal in the first place - so nothing is really gained. Yet if I fail, I understand myself better.
Interesting that you would say there's no such thing as, 'failures and shortcomings'. Is there also no such thing as, 'successes and capabilities' then?
And do you think it's bad to not be enlightened? I'm curious.
I'd be more worried if you said I was enlightened, because as deluded as you are it would be an almost sure sign that I am indeed crazy.
What's wrong with criticism? It's not inherently negative, and in my experience it's more often interpreted as a negative, than intended as one. Most criticism is legitimate in some way, it's an opportunity to improve and learn.
Who said failure was a bad thing either?
Everyone does it - all the time. If you try something and don't succeed, you have by definition, failed. I fail all the time. Sometimes (often?) I fail spectacularly. These are my favourite failures, because it's when I really learn something. In fact I usually learn more from failing than succeeding because, if I succeed, it's usually because I already had the ability to achieve that goal in the first place - so nothing is really gained. Yet if I fail, I understand myself better.
Interesting that you would say there's no such thing as, 'failures and shortcomings'. Is there also no such thing as, 'successes and capabilities' then?
Duxwing said:The only difference between constructive cricitism-- which is what I think that you mean
Duxwing said:Well, you do fail when you fail, so failure isn't a good thing.
Milo said:This causes one to second guess one's self and think hard about what is the moral thing to do and feeling bad when they think they did something bad.
Milo said:Good and bad are all products of the mind.
How is this even significant? Most people aren't like that anyway. I can't even bring to mind anyone I know who is like that.
Were you like that?
Somehow, I doubt that. (No offence)If not, I have no problem with being completely alone in the world.
The difference is that you do not have any fears. You are 100% confident in your own choices without having to ask questions to anyone or even yourself.
It is this way of living vs. living in a state of fear which contains worry, depression, sadness, anger, shame, confusion, regret, and other prolonged negative emotions.
I agree. Failure teaches us more than success, and for these reasons failure can be better towards learning than success, given the right circumstances. Either way, even failure and success tend not to be clearcut cases of 'good' and 'bad' events. Which makes me wonder, why do we even bother with success and failure rather than simply learning from events, whichever way they turn out?Who said failure was a bad thing either? Everyone does it - all the time. If you try something and don't succeed, you have by definition, failed. I fail all the time. Sometimes (often?) I fail spectacularly. These are my favourite failures, because it's when I really learn something. In fact I usually learn more from failing than succeeding because, if I succeed, it's usually because I already had the ability to achieve that goal in the first place - so nothing is really gained. Yet if I fail, I understand myself better.
I do not think it's bad not to be enlightened. I also don't think there's a 100% enlightened, or even 100% unenlightened person. We're on a spectrum in between these two, as with many other things. I do think we can move on this spectrum throughout our life. (Something which serveral people on here believe is not possible within MBTI !). As stated here before, enlightened is indeed a bad term. There's far too much 'divine' and 'superior' connotation attached to the term.Interesting that you would say there's no such thing as, 'failures and shortcomings'. Is there also no such thing as, 'successes and capabilities' then?
And do you think it's bad to not be enlightened? I'm curious.
In a way. Everyone has their own way of using their ego to cope with the superego's guilt. In retrospect, I don't think I used any. I allowed my superego to impose guilt and shame on me and it made me second guess everything. I accepted everything at face value which, I suppose caused me to suffer through the disillusion of thinking morals existed. The pain of the disillusion may have motivated me to search for more and more answers in order to create a solid belief system that corresponded to the truth.How is this even significant? Most people aren't like that anyway. I can't even bring to mind anyone I know who is like that.
Were you like that?
What, you mean good and bad aren't objective concepts and that they're actually subjective? Wow, so deep! This concept hasn't been covered in by dozens of people already...oh...
Who isn't already aware of this stuff by the time they reach their teenage years? Have you really just started becoming aware of and understanding these concepts? I find that a little...sad.
Another term for people who don't care what other people think is "Asshole".The difference is that you do not have any fears. You are 100% confident in your own choices without having to ask questions to anyone or even yourself. Knowing yourself and how you relate to reality gives you liberation out of knowledge vs. that of a child who is liberated because of ignorance of the influences which is the perceived existence of good and bad behaviors. This causes one to second guess one's self and think hard about what is the moral thing to do and feeling bad when they think they did something bad. You realize that good and bad are all products of the mind. This causes them to truly act according to your own understanding with confidence without the regret as a possibility.
The outcome is that you become "an untroubled soul" and live completely in the moment completing the tasks you choose with your bodily urges directing your most basic needs.
It is this way of living vs. living in a state of fear which contains worry, depression, sadness, anger, shame, confusion, regret, and other prolonged negative emotions.
My goal here is to drag you all into the present moment.
Being aware of the fact that you are a mammal with a set termination date, in my view, is more helpful in prioritizing the various pursuits in one's life.
[ENCADRE][/ENCADRE]It seems like you are still using some of the defense mechanisms based on your loaded words that contain personal judgement mixed with truth to make it sound true, but is actually in fact fallacious. (Take my criticism not in terms of personal judgement, but as a way to lead you to the truth). My criticism is to help you. Your criticism is to help yourself.
Milo said:The news is also making you afraid of the real world by only showing you people getting scammed or people dying.
Milo said:You're judgement is based on false beliefs that you are interpreting as real.
You belittle other people so that you feel superior. You are also vulnerable because you rely on this superiority. This is why the truth will set you free. You will no longer be vulnerable.
'She or he assumes that she or he is superior when she or he is not, and this false success compensates her or him for the state of inferiority which she or he cannot bear.'
'In psychology, it refers not to a belief, but a pattern of behaviors expressing the belief that one is superior.'
And yes, in terms of one reducing one's suffering as a goal, I would say that not being enlightened is bad.
In that sense I think you have failed, because we're absorbed in arguing via the internet with little sense of the passage of time instead of, I don't know, climbing mountains or making love to beautiful women or whatever normal people do.
I'm hostile to the exhortation to live in the moment because it is usually advocated by sensors who really mean "Party! YOLO!" etc. I think it is much more constructive, if one is seeking "enlightenment," to meditate on the certainty of one's own death. As Hitchens once said (and here I'm going off memory because I'm too lazy to find the actual quote), "One is expelled from their mother's uterus as if shot from a cannon toward a barn door studded with nail files and rusty hooks. It is therefore incumbent upon the individual to use the intervening time in an intelligent and ironic way, and try not to do anything ghastly to one's fellow creatures."
Being aware of the fact that you are a mammal with a set termination date, in my view, is more helpful in prioritizing the various pursuits in one's life.
I don't consider lacking those things to be "freedom" from them. I consider it missing out on the human experience, missing out on living life.My goal here is to drag you all into the present moment. Free from your psychological fears. Free from influence. Free from expectation. Free from shame. Free from depression. Free from worry. Free from confusion. Free from hesitation. Free from competition. Free from false happinesses like pride and vengeance. Free from self-consciousness. Free from anxiety. Free from disappointment. Free from feeling like you don't belong. Free from cowardice. Free to be yourself.
Free at last.
That's probably true. The pursuit of enlightenment itself is wildly impractical, especially according to any worldly criterion. Spirituality is, or should be, a thing apart from survival concerns and economic advancement. Anyway, the ultimate purpose of meditation, which few monks acknowledge or realize, is to redefine ego-mind's subordinate position to Reality. The idea is to still the chattering ego-mind's moment to moment myth making. What happens then? Try it and find out. I'm not hawking anything. That's just my view. And @Milo you're never going to convince SpaceYeti or redbaron. Just give it up. Edit: I've said it before: the hardest battle is against those who fully buy into ego-mind. They see no use for spirituality. Things feel basically OK to them. It takes a few roundhouses to the face to want a change. Is any one person better than another, though? I wouldn't say so, but there is a qualitative distinction.
When you get to a point in your life when you are quite miserable and have a quite depressing look on existence, you will have the urge to find the answers to life. I'm guessing a mid-life crisis or identity crisis will be the triggers if you ever do have one. You have to be looking for the answer to see it I suppose.
When you get to a point in your life when you are quite miserable and have a quite depressing look on existence, you will have the urge to find the answers to life.
Don't let other people tell you what to do and don't let your fear (guilt, shame, worry) control you either.
My goal here is to drag you all into the present moment. Free from your psychological fears. Free from influence. Free from expectation. Free from shame. Free from depression. Free from worry. Free from confusion. Free from hesitation. Free from competition. Free from false happinesses like pride and vengeance. Free from self-consciousness. Free from anxiety. Free from disappointment. Free from feeling like you don't belong. Free from cowardice. Free to be yourself.
Free at last.
Goddamn I fucking hate INFJs.Everyone on this site is already absorbed in it. I am trying to bring everyone to the edge of knowledge so they may see that thinking too hard about what they should do with their lives or about what they have been doing with it. The edge of knowledge is when you realize it is pointless to lose yourself in your own head or to identify with anything in reality, which includes your body and mind.
Identifying with your body and mind is a meta-program in the brain that causes one to fear death (the meta-program is of the ego which is connected to the ID which is instinctually afraid of death). The ultimate teaching of this is to allow everyone to stop the constant subconscious fear of death. The body and mind has the instincts to know what it is doing to avoid that from millions of years of evolution. You don't have to perpetuate it to think it is about to die by thinking things that are subconsciously associated with it.
Perhaps there is a psychological transformation into that of a sensor through certain knowledge. I have been an inbetweener of intuition and sensing for a while and now besides when I am online I am pretty much a sensor. Extraversion is growing, thinking is enhanced to a higher efficiency, and percieving is transforming into judging since I no longer see meaning in things. I just see it as it is.
Am I now an ESTJ? Perhaps I have changed as a caterpillar becomes a butterfly. Taking in experiences, turning them into knowledge, meditating with that knowledge, and building my psyche into a much stronger and more stable one.
@Milo, If you are enlightened then do you still know the physical presence that arise in your body or are you "the observer" aware of more? How do you span the diffidence between finitude and eternal now?
Chain of thoughts to help you stop identifying with your body and/or mind.
Wise Old Man; Child, you must learn not to associate with your own self in order to attain enlightenment.
30 Year-Old Man; Um... what?
Wise Old Man; You are absorbed in yourself, and thus lost. Detach from desire, want, need, and identity to see the light.
30 Year Old-Man; People consider you wise because you say things that sound deep, but are actually just bull shit, huh?
Wise Old Man; It is not for one to judge, but for one to simply be.
30 Year-Old Man; Ever watch Mystery Men?
Wise Old Man; Child, I do not waste my time with television. There are more important matters at hand, such as astral projection.
30 Year-Old Man; Well, watch it. The old wise man in that movie. That's you. Thank you for your deepities, but I can make up my own nonsense in my spare time. I was looking for answers, not empty sophistry. Come back and find me when you have something worth saying.
Thank you for your deepities, but I can make up my own nonsense in my spare time. I was looking for answers, not empty sophistry. Come back and find me when you have something worth saying.
They definitely could, and I wouldn't blame the guy who did it.Jesus or Buddha could be impugned the same way, and probably were.
They definitely could, and I wouldn't blame the guy who did it.
Fair enough, but the fact remains that spouting out nonsense doesn't make you enlightened or wise. Claiming enlightenment requires the same evidence any other claim would require, and nonsense is certainly not evidence.I know you wouldn't but that doesn't make Buddha wrong. It makes you skeptical.
Fair enough, but the fact remains that spouting out nonsense doesn't make you enlightened or wise. Claiming enlightenment requires the same evidence any other claim would require, and nonsense is certainly not evidence.