At the core of Buddhist teachings are four principles, the
key one being that life is painful. I’m talking about emotional pain, the kind
one suffers when events don’t go your way, or people don’t act the way you want
them to. Every time life falls short of our expectations there is some degree
of emotional pain.
Everyone feels pain, usually on a daily basis. Some people
experience that pain—as a mild disappointment or a gut-wrenching catastrophe—and
then let it go, move on. Others wallow in their pain, blow it out of
proportion, latch on to it for years or decades, and wrench every ounce of
emotion out of it, worry it like a dog worries a bone.
Buddhism, simply put, is a method to avoid, or at least
minimize that pain. And the principle way to avoid life falling short of
expectations is not to create those expectations in the first place. If you
fully embrace everything in your universe as if it is exactly what you desire,
then there is no emotional pain.
That’s easy when we talk of losing a game of tennis, or even
losing your wallet. It becomes more difficult when a loved one dies, or your
job is eliminated. I’ve heard Christians deal with such pain by saying, “It’s
God’s will.”
As a Buddhist, I remind myself of this lesson several times
a day: accept what is. Not only accept, but be grateful, thankful for every
failure, every disappointment, every thing that angers me. And once I accept
it, then I work to improve the situation in whatever way I’m able. Acceptance
does not mean you don’t “fix” things, it simply means you’re okay with it now
while you work to improve it.
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