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Breakingthewall

About Buddhism

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Buddhism tells you to detach yourself from everything. This is the only way to openness to the absolute, without this it is impossible because attachment closes, thats a reality .

The problem is that we all have a lot of attachment, and we should not break the attachment, it is very difficult and unappetizing, boring. What is possible is to see through the attachment for a few moments, to open your being to the infinite. To do this without drugs you would have to go to a cave for 35 years. I personally don't feel like doing that. But just small doses of drugs are enough if you already have broken your structure with 5 meo sometimes, then 5 ug of LSD and 1 puff of weed is enough and very powerful 

Anyway, well continuing with Buddhism. says that the purpose of making this opening and opening your being to the absolute is to end suffering and break the wheel of reincarnation. This could also be true in some ways. What we are is a karmic construction, layers of karma, under those layers is the absolute. If you become one with the absolute, you are already one with the absolute, there is no more karma. It seems that at this point "something" happens, which is "nirvana." I would say this is also true. Nirvana is the opening to the absolute, but this is where Buddhism limits itself. Nirvana for him is the absence of suffering and the essential emptiness of reality. but reality is not empty, that is impossible, limited. reality is full, it is total life, absolute creative power. How can what opens to absolute love, to total flow, to living infinity, be empty? Buddhism ends where the real game begins.

Buddhism says: reality is illusion, it is an unreal, empty hologram, a dead image. Not so, this is a dead perspective. the absolute is absolutely alive, that is the real opening. the bottomless well that lives. what is inside your heart, the absolute nuclear reactor, the total power, the unimaginable, the immeasurable, overwhelming, total: you

Edited by Breakingthewall

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Buddhism says a whole lot of Nothing. 

:P

The Middle Way is the answer.

Edited by Yimpa

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1 minute ago, Yimpa said:

Buddhism says a whole lot of Nothing. 

:P

Buddhism says many deep things, but it's limited. It's weird...how could be possible that so many monks and people focused in spirituality reach the conclusion that reality is empty and there is no self. The self is irrelevant, it's just an structure, what is the point is what is when the self reveals as a limited structure. It's not emptiness, it's you, the reality. 

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Chatgpt say this: 

In Buddhism, the final revelation is not presented as in theistic religions, where a truth is revealed by a deity. Instead, the core teaching of Buddhism is based on the direct realization of truth through experience and practice. However, depending on the Buddhist tradition, different perspectives on this ultimate truth can be highlighted:

In Theravāda Buddhism:

The final revelation is Nibbāna (Nirvana), the complete cessation of suffering and the end of the cycle of rebirth (samsara).

It is achieved through the practice of the Noble Eightfold Path, cultivating wisdom, ethical conduct, and meditation.

In Mahāyāna Buddhism:

The ultimate truth is emptiness (śūnyatā), the realization that all things lack inherent and independent existence.

The bodhisattva ideal is emphasized, seeking enlightenment not only for oneself but to liberate all beings.

In Vajrayāna Buddhism:

The ultimate reality is said to be Buddha-nature, the fundamental purity and potential for enlightenment present in all beings.

Of those, the vajraayana seems more accurate. Chatgpt says:

In Vajrayāna Buddhism, Buddha-nature (tathāgatagarbha) is the ultimate truth of all beings. It is believed that all beings are already Buddhas at their deepest essence, but this nature is temporarily obscured by ignorance and disturbing emotions.

Key Aspects of Buddha-Nature in Vajrayāna

It is inherent and omnipresent

It is not something to be acquired or developed; it is already present in all beings.

There is no difference between the Buddha-nature of an ordinary being and that of a fully enlightened Buddha.

It is primordially pure (prabhāsvara citta)

Despite mental impurities, Buddha-nature is never truly tainted, like the sun that continues to shine behind the clouds.

It can be realized in a single lifetime

Unlike other traditions that emphasize a gradual path, Vajrayāna holds that, with the right practices, it is possible to recognize and manifest Buddha-nature in this very life.

Methods such as Dzogchen or Mahāmudrā meditation help practitioners directly experience this reality.

It is beyond dualistic concepts

It is neither a "self" nor a "non-self," but the ultimate reality, free from all conceptualization.

It is described as the union of emptiness (śūnyatā) and luminosity, meaning it is empty of inherent existence yet the source of all manifestation.

Could be an accurate definition, because the ultimate reality is obviously always here but it's closed. You could open it in any moment. It's indefinable, unfathomable and total. And over all you are that. Id say that this school of Buddhism doesn't contradict it, but the others two are límited.

Edited by Breakingthewall

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