091-The subjective point of view - Buddhism in daily life

091-The subjective point of view - Buddhism in daily life

7 Minuten

Beschreibung

vor 2 Jahren

The subjective point of view


We all always have a reason for our actions, every behavior
builds on many causes, according to Buddha I speak here of the
law of cause and effect.


We know that every action also brings a reaction, which is why we
should have understanding for people (and their many reasons).
Instead of reacting in a huff, aggressively or emotionally, we
should ask ourselves why the person in question is behaving in
this way, whether fears or concerns are perhaps arising, whether
there are even constraints so that the person in question cannot
act in any other way?


And the subjective perspective on what is happening quickly
dissolves when we imagine ourselves standing in the other
person's shoes, what would we do now in their place? If you still
can't muster any understanding now, what could that be due to?


Are emotions being triggered in you here, perhaps your own fears
or needs being addressed? Is the other person's behavior really
wrong, or could the fault also lie with me?


And is there even an "objective" right, or a wrong? I would say
that there can only be a "subjective", because every person
thinks his point of view is right, criticizes the view of the
other person. But what do you see the splinter in your brother's
eye and do not perceive the beam in your own eye, so the sentence
attributed to Jesus of Nazareth, which already leaves hardly any
interpretation for real objectivity.


If it were still possible that I have built up prejudices
(preconceived judgments), where does my aversion come from right
now? Does this situation remind me of past incidents where I may
have had bad experiences?


Specifically, are there things or incidents that trigger you?
Circumstances that infuriate you? A type of person you just don't
like? For example, do you find yourself criticizing young people
for things you used to do yourself, but which now bother you
because you are no longer young?


Or, as another example, do you get upset about the ostentatious
behavior of the wealthy (fancy cars, expensive watches) because
you are not "rich"? There are always deeper reasons for our
actions, which even we cannot recognize at first glance.


The subjective point of view disturbs the reality, according to
Buddha there is by no means only one truth, but infinitely many
realities. The subjective point of view takes place from every
subject, but the way of Buddha would be the goal!





Higher acts a look of reverence


- Buddha - honorary name of Siddharta Gautama -





Copyright: https://shaolin-rainer.de


(Please also download my app "Buddha-Blog
English" from the Apple and Android stores)

Kommentare (0)

Lade Inhalte...

Abonnenten

15
15
:
: