|
...

...
Blues for Buddha
By Jed McKenna
Mind is the sword.
Heart is the will to use it.
Being critical of
Buddhism isn't easy. Buddhism is the most likable of the major
religions, and Buddhists are the perennial good guys of modern spirituality.
Beautiful traditions, lovely architecture, inspiring statuary, ancient
history, the Dalai Lama what's not to like?
Everything about Buddhsim is just so nice.
No fatwahs or jihads, no inquisitions or crusades, no terrorists
or pederasts, just nice people being nice. In fact, Buddhism means
niceness. Nice-ism.
At least, it should.
Buddha means Awakened One, so Buddhism can be taken
to mean Awake-ism. Awakism. It would therefore be natural to think
that if you were looking to wake up, then Buddhism, i.e., Awakism,
would be the place to look.
The Light is Better Over Here
Such thinking, however, would reveal a dangerous lack
of respect for the opposition. Maya, goddess of delusion, has been
doing her job with supreme mastery since the first spark of self-awareness
flickered in some monkey's brainbox, and the idea that the neophyte
truth-seeker can just sign up with the Buddhists, read some books,
embrace some new concepts and slam her to the mat would be a bit
on the naive side, as billions of sincere but unsuccessful seekers
over the last twenty-five centuries might grudgingly attest.
On the other hand, why not? Howd this get so
turned around? Its just truth. Shouldnt truth be, like,
the simplest thing? Shouldnt someone who wants to find
something as ubiquitous as truth be able to do so? How can anyone
manage to not find truth? And heres this venerable
organization supposedly dedicated to just that very thing, even
named for it, and it's a total flop.
So whats the problem?
Why doesnt Buddhism produce Buddhas?
The problem arises from the fact that Buddhists, like
everyone else, insist on reconciling the irreconcilable. They dont
just want to awaken to the true, they also want to make sense
of the untrue. They want to have their cake and eat it too,
so they end up with nonsensical theories, divergent schools, sagacious
doubletalk, and zero Buddhas.
Typical of their insistence on reconciling the irreconcilable
is the Buddhist concept of Two Truths, a poignant two-word joke
they dont seem to get, and yet this sort of perversely irrational
thinking is near the very heart of the failed search for truth.
We dont want truth, we want a particular truth; one that doesn't
threaten ego one that doesnt exist. We insist on a
truth that makes sense given what we know, not knowing that we know
nothing.
Nothing about Buddhism is more revealing than the
Four Noble Truths which, not being true, are of dubious nobility.
They form the basis of Buddhism, so it's clear from the outset that
the Buddhists have whipped up a proprietary version of truth shaped
more by market forces than any particular concern for the less consumer-friendly,
albeit true, truth.
Buddhism may be spiritually filling, even nourishing,
but insofar as truth is concerned, it's just the same old junkfood
in a different package. You can eat it every day of your life and
die exactly as awakened as the day you signed up.
Bait & Switch
Buddhism is a classic bait-and-switch operation. Were
attracted by the enlightenment in the window, but as soon as were
in the door they start steering us over to the compassion aisle.
Buddhists could be honest and change their name to Compassionism,
but who wants that?
There's the rub. They cant get us in the door
with compassion, and they cant deliver on the promise of enlightenment.
It's not limited to compassion, of course. Their shelves
are stocked with all sorts of goodies and enticements, practically
anything anyone could want, with just the one rather notable exception.
If they had just stopped when they had Anicca,
impermanence, and Anatta, no-self, then they would have had
a true and effective teaching they could be proud of, except there
would be no they because Buddhism would have died with the
Buddha. They'd have a good product, but no customers.
This untruth-in-advertising is the kind of game you
have to play if you want to stay successful in a business where
the customer is always wrong. You can either go out of business
honestly, or thrive by giving the people what they want. What they
say they want and what they really want, though, are
two very different things.
Me Me Me
To the outside observer, much of Buddhist knowledge
and practice seems focused on spiritual self-improvement. This,
too, is hard to speak against except within the context of
awakening from delusion. Then it's easy.
There is no such thing as true self, so any pursuit
geared toward its aggrandizement, betterment, upliftment, elevation,
evolution, glorification, salvation, etc, is utter folly. How much
more so any endeavor undertaken merely to increase one's own happiness
or contentment or I'm embarrassed just to say it bliss?
Self is ego and ego resides exclusively in the dreamstate.
If you want to break free of the dreamstate, you must break free
of self, not stroke it to make it purr or groom it for some imagined
brighter future.
Maya's House of Enlightenment
The trick with being critical of so esteemed and beloved
an institution is not to get dragged down into the morass of details
and debate. It's very simple: If Buddhism is about enlightenment,
people should be getting enlightened. If it's not about enlightenment,
they should change the name.
Of course, Buddhism isn't completely unique in resorting
to shoddy marketing tactics. This same gulf between promise and
performance is found in all systems of human spirituality. We're
looking at it in Buddhism because that's where it's most pronounced.
No disrespect to the Buddha is intended. If there was a Buddha and
he was enlightened, then it's Buddhism that insults his memory,
not healthy skepticism. Blame the naked emperor's retinue of lackeys
and lickspittles, not the unbeguiled lad who merely states the obvious.
Buddhism is arguably the most elevated of man's great
belief systems. If you want to enjoy the many valuable benefits
it has to offer, then I wouldn't presume to utter a syllable against
it. But, if you want to escape from the clutches of Maya, then I
suggest you take a very close look at the serene face on all those
golden statues and see if it isn't really hers.
About the Author:
Jed McKenna is the author of The Enlightenment Trilogy — Spiritual
Enlightenment: The Damnedest Thing, Spiritually Incorrect Enlightenment,
and Spiritual Warfare — published by Wisefool Press. Articles, books
and more at our website: http://www.WisefoolPress.com
The
Enlightenment Trilogy by Jed McKenna
Spiritual
Enlightenment: The Damnedest Thing
Spiritually
Incorrect Enlightenment
Spiritual
Warfare
e-Book
versions with Bonus Content
Audiobook
versions in CD and MP3 format
Publisher-Direct!
Save 20-50%
:
: :.Order
Now.:
: :
|