|

Peace Through Truth

embracing reality

Is there a way to find peace and freedom from affliction? Does truth have a bearing on this?

Let’s see…

Phenomena are spontaneously arising and naturally self-liberating. We have no control over said phenomena because we don’t exist as any kind of being that could exercise control.

Therefore bringing clarity to the actual state of affairs promotes a better relationship to the essential facts of reality. Truth, in other words. Or at least the conscious and earnest exploration of what-is in order to arrive at it.

Much of our human suffering is a result of misapprehending the basic nature of what-is, because not recognising the true nature of reality tends to corrupt and frustrate the expectations and demands that we make of it. In other words, delusions and wrong views lead to suffering.

The Buddhists point out the Three Dharma Seals regarding the nature of existence: impermanence, no (independent) self, and nirvana (or transcendence).

I would also emphasise non-doership, viz. the spontaneously arising nature of all phenomena.

So we explore what-is through our direct experience because clarity diminishes suffering and the truth sets us free.

In this active inquiry and exploration, we invite experiential scrutiny of our (pre)existing conclusions and presumptions.

And if experientially observable facts are discovered that would collapse our presumptions like a house of cards then we welcome that.

Some other considerations/observations:

There are no fixed points (in conditioned reality).
There’s nowhere to ‘plant the flag’ of identity.
There can be no lasting happiness in the field of incessant change.
And no control.
Fighting reality is painful.

Our true nature is consciousness-being. It’s unchanging and ever-present. Realising this (in an abiding way) is freedom.

Recognise that all phenomena comes and goes on its own.
Recognise that the one that recognises this is awareness itself.
Recognise that awareness is you.

How do we come to know this, recognise this?
Meditation,
Self-inquiry,
(Alone or in Satsang),
Study, to some degree.

Basically, by sustained exposure to and reflection on (one’s) open awareness/no-mind. (And a healthy dose of Grace).

 

Similar Posts

  • The Personal Path

    The seemingly simple task of describing a path from ‘a’ to ‘be’ unravels the very notions that uphold the conditioned view. It’s impossible to find a starting point, there’s no beginning. It seems like a cliché but it’s true, any given point is arbitrary, no ‘event’ is original, always there is a preceding moment. So…

  • Questions

    What is This? Who am I? What am I? What kind of answers am I looking for? What could satisfy? Questions are beautiful, more illuminating than answers. Questions stop the mind. So if I told you “you are consciousness”, would that help? Would you be satisfied? Would your suffering diminish at all with that piece…

  • |

    All In

    If you are insistent or even desirous of keeping your life exactly as it is then it’s probably best not to embark on the spiritual path. Better to just sit tight and tolerate your afflictive mind than to “give it all to God” or “surrender everything to the Self”. Because that’s what’s required, a single-minded…

  • |

    From Awakening to Freedom

    The recognition of our nature as non-conceptual awareness — spiritual awakening — is relatively simple. But the consequences of this recognition typically have challenging implications for our human-ness, conditioned as it is around the ego-belief. Awakening is rarely the end of the story. A reconstruction of the lived experience and outward expression in light of the newly realised awareness-identity…