Cambodia
There is no Self in Buddhism
" -
Are you really
gonna eat that? - Yes, of course!
- Europeans don't usually eat that kind of food...
- If I wanted to eat western food, I would have stayed in Europe"
This is how a several hours conversation with a strange chinese guy started in a not so touristy chinese food market. He is some sort of doctor, chinese traditional medicine, well over 40, with a barely understandable english accent. He started telling me that he just came back from a 10 days Buddhist meditation ritual in Sri Lanka. The conversation moved starting from being open to new experiences to the fundamental core teachings of Buddhism, as he understood them.
- Suffering is inevitable in life. It comes from many miseries, be it physical suffering, from ilness, financial, social, emotional and so on. This is why no one can be happy in this life.
- But I am happy! I said.

- Noooo, You don't suffer now, but some misery will struck you and you will suffer and you will be unhappy. You know, I am a physician, and everyday people come to me, in terrible pain, and they ask me: "Why is this happening to me?" Did you not ever ask yourself that?
- As a matter of fact, I did not. When I fell ill, I did not go to the doctor to ask him why did this happened to me. Let's assume he can really answer me. He might be telling me that it happened because I ate some bad food, or because my karma is bad, or because I did something bad in a previous life, or whatever other explanation. Is this gonna make me feel better? No! I am still ill. Therefore, when I suffer, I do not ask myself why, but how can I deal with it: cure it, accept it, use the suffering or simply live through it.
- Oooh. That is good. Bt still, can you say are u completely happy now?
- Yes.

- There is nothing you crave for, nothing you need?
- There are, of course, things I need. But I can live very well without them. The only thing that I could say now it makes me suffer is falling inlove with someone and not being able to be with her... But then, even this is a wonderfull experience. I have friends who were not able to meet someone to make them fall in love for years, and haunt through life like empty emotional ghosts.As well, on a different tune, I know a writer that would be so happy to find such sweet sorrow, that would make him write an entire poetry book about it. You see, every experience is a good experience if you embrace it, not fight it. Even physical pain. Without it, we would not be able to appreciate health, and we would not value it at all. So I choose to enjoy every experience life gives me.
He then explained me how you have to give up your self in order to rise above the mundane and the suffering. "In Buddhism these is no I, no self"

- You have to meditate to control your mind, your counciesness, and your emotions, your heart. The "Ï", in its various forms, body, mind, heart, craves for different things. Maybe it is a new shirt, maybe a new car, maybe a friend.. If you can't get them, you will be unhappy.
- But why control? Why fight with my emotions, with my mind? My heart is not the enemy, nor is my mind. The heart may hurt sometimes, but not because it hates me, or because it wants to make me suffer. Its just in its nature to love, and to hurt, to be happy, angry... My heart and mind are my best friends. I will not fight them!
Changi, Singapore, later that day

Kristýna Poláchová I like the way you are thinking..
wish you the best in Asia but I bet you have it already:)
Filipe Miguel Moreira Alves Teolin, thank you for your post and please keep on sharing your experiences with us. I just came from a 3 days Silence Zen Retreat and we had the opportunity to medidate on many of the aspects you discuss here and therefore let me just add something: in buddhism the central pont is to recognize the transitory nature of everything (even the self as a specific stream of counxiousness) and to be able to love and to express gratitute for everything and everyone with attachment...suffering doesn't come from loving but from attachment to the object of our love..;)
Sustainable regards,
Teolin Codreanu It is amazing to get to speak to people who practice and understand Buddhism, and hinduism and other great religions and phylosophic systems. For a long time I was restricted to cold books and knowledge repositories. Now I am very happy to enter a truly Living Library. Thank you for sharing.
Sustainable thanks :)
Roxi Ciopei MULTUMESC pentru ca ne impartasesti din experientele tale! simt ca ma imbogatesc putin de fiecare data cand iti citesc notes-urile :) sa iti fie bine!
Iulia Vinceller What a great experience!Congrats for using Facebook the way you do!
Iulia Vrajitoru, Iulia Vinceller, Pham Hoang Mien and 5 others like this.