Let go
Five hours have passed since I let go. Believe that letting go will be the driving force for tomorrow, and believe that by letting go, you can see new things again. It's painful to let go, but I'll let go.
Is Bon-san good at letting go?
Five hours have passed since I let go. Believe that letting go will be the driving force for tomorrow, and believe that by letting go, you can see new things again. It's painful to let go, but I'll let go.
Is Bon-san good at letting go?
The reason I can't let go is because I have an obsession.
Everyone has an obsession, though. When it gets stronger, I don't want to let go. I won't be able to let go.
However, life doesn't have an eternity.
There are times when I have to let go of it someday.
It's not just stuff. That's because you can't maintain your youth or your health.
Rather than letting go,
I wonder if it's about accepting the reality right now.
I'm not good at letting go, though.
Decluttering is clean, I (^^)
What did you let go of? Is it something? Do you think so? Is it an obsession (desire) for something? If you let go of your obsession with something, you'll definitely feel better. If you think about it, we live our lives obsessed with a lot of things, and I'm just saying that obsession is the meaning of life... For example, there is something I really want at that time, and I get it, but once I get it, that feeling of wanting it fades, and the next thing I want appears. Also, I suffer because I can't get the thing itself, I suffer when I lose it... But when I think about it over time, was that something I wanted that much? Was it worth suffering so much? I'm also in the midst of that hesitation for quite a while...
In Buddhism, desire more than necessary is admonished, because desires are never satisfied, and people suffer as a result, creating obsessions that people always want. If you let go of some kind of obsession (desire) under such circumstances, I think you will feel at ease even if it is temporary. Then, as they say, take a short distance to observe what you have let go of, and look at it from a different angle, and I think there are new discoveries there.
Pursuing the origin of the heart is something boys pursue every day, so I feel that they are seriously dealing with letting go (written by letting go).
After thinking through whether this is really OK, let go. However, when I think about the passage of time and space, I feel that letting go is not scary. The depth of meaning of the content of letting go changes depending on things.
well. I think the fact that she thought it through and posted it on hasunoha is because she had a lot of ideas.
No Regrets, Move Forward, I hope it will be an abandoned book.
Gassho
well. sir
I was able to take a look.
You haven't had it since the beginning, right? It may be Buddhism that makes you notice this.
It may be contradictory, but recently, I found these words on a temple bulletin board.
“I'm holding it, so I can't grab it”
Incidentally, I'm not good at letting go.
well. Hello, Mr.
I'm not good at it. I'm too obsessed with things. Right now, I'm training to throw it away. Gassho
Previously, there was a time when Hasunoha's questions and answers were on the regular TV corner.
I forgot what the question was about, but there was a monk (Uragami Shonin) who introduced a jumon-like sutra called “uden uden utaku” in response at that time.
When I looked it up, it was a sutra called “Muryojukyo,”
“Arita Yuta, Aritake, Utaku, Mutamata, Melancholy, Arita, Uta, Utaku, Uden, Uden, Uden
(If you have rice, worry about rice; if you have a house, worry about your house; if you don't have a rice field, worry; if you don't have a house, worry if you have a house)
That was the sutra.
It seems to mean that if you have it, you worry; if you don't have it, you worry about not having it.
Also, there was similar content in the sutra called Nikaya (Agon Sutra).
“Those who have a son worry about him
People who have cows worry about cows
People worry about what they are obsessed with
Actually, people who aren't attached don't have to worry.”
There is such a thing.
Right. The pain of owning and the pain of not being able to get it seems like a long time ago.
Dogen Zenji teaches, “If you let go, your hands will be full.” As long as you hold it firmly, only what you hold is yours, but when you open your hand and release what you hold, the whole world is on that hand. It means that when you let go of your obsession, you can have a truly full heart.
It's easy if you think you don't have anything of your own right from the beginning. It's hard to let go, but I'm sure something new will come in.
I'm not good at letting go either, but when I let go, I forget what I had pretty quickly (laughs)