How does cravings and desires lead to suffering and unhappiness in life?
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n his Second Noble Truth, the Buddha taught the cause of suffering. ... Craving and ignorance are the two main causes of suffering. People suffer with their craving for the pleasures of the senses and become unsatisfied and disappointed until they can replace their cravings with new ones.
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Buddha talks about Desireless stage. He also talks about Mindfulness which is in fact keeping your mind empty all the time.
Desire causes a pleasant sensation. Failure to gain the object of desire, or loss of that gained causes an unpleasant sensation. When the desire is fulfilled, the pressure at that time goes away, and we feel relief from the pressure of that 'need' or 'desire'. We think the relief comes only from fulfilling that desire. However, most of the joy we feel is release from the pressure of the desire itself. A desire is most often perceived as the conviction of lack of the feeling we would have by gaining that thing. That conviction of lack is an untruth in conflict with the truth of our inner fullness.
We want relief from conflict. To fulfill a desire in that moment once again puts you in harmony with a feeling of fullness which is your truth, in that moment, you no longer desire. It is in being WITH your truth that the truest joy comes from the fulfillment of any desire. The pressure is temporarily off, the conflict is gone, and you are in that moment with your truth. But thinking happiness comes only from that thing in the world, one is ignorant and a slave to desire and that same mechanic over and over again.
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Buddha talks about Desireless stage. He also talks about Mindfulness which is in fact keeping your mind empty all the time.
Desire causes a pleasant sensation. Failure to gain the object of desire, or loss of that gained causes an unpleasant sensation. When the desire is fulfilled, the pressure at that time goes away, and we feel relief from the pressure of that 'need' or 'desire'. We think the relief comes only from fulfilling that desire. However, most of the joy we feel is release from the pressure of the desire itself. A desire is most often perceived as the conviction of lack of the feeling we would have by gaining that thing. That conviction of lack is an untruth in conflict with the truth of our inner fullness.
We want relief from conflict. To fulfill a desire in that moment once again puts you in harmony with a feeling of fullness which is your truth, in that moment, you no longer desire. It is in being WITH your truth that the truest joy comes from the fulfillment of any desire. The pressure is temporarily off, the conflict is gone, and you are in that moment with your truth. But thinking happiness comes only from that thing in the world, one is ignorant and a slave to desire and that same mechanic over and over again.
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