Posts tagged ‘way’

  1. Bodhisattva vows – what they really mean

Living beings are countless – I swear to free them all.
Mental aberrations are endless – I swear to end them all.
Teachings are limitless – I swear to understand them all.
The Buddha’s path is the highest – I swear to realize it.

It is like saying: “I live as if there are no limits.”

For example: “To free all beings” does not mean literally saving everyone. It means: I do not exclude anyone from my compassion, even difficult people, unpleasant people, or guilty people.

  1. Why a bodhisattva is NOT altruism (this is very important).

Ordinary altruism: There is me who helps others. I sacrifice myself. I am good; you receive help.

Even in the best case, there is still: hidden hierarchy, moral superiority, expectation of gratitude (even unconsciously).

The bodhisattva path is different. A bodhisattva acts from the understanding that: the boundary between “me” and “others” is conditional, another person’s suffering is not really “someone else’s but also mine”.

So: the bodhisattva does not “sacrifice himself”, he removes suffering where it exists.

A good formula: a bodhisattva is not kind, a bodhisattva is clear-seeing.

He does not help out of duty. He simply cannot ignore suffering – just like you cannot ignore pain in your own hand.

Why is this hard to accept? Because our mind is built on “me/mine/not mine”. The bodhisattva acts after this structure begins to fall apart.

  1. Why the bodhisattva path is psychologically very difficult:

3.1. Because there is no final “exit”. In Hinayana/Theravada there is an idea: “I will be liberated — and then it ends.” In Mahayana: there is no final ending, no point where you can say: “I did enough.”

This is hard because: the ego wants completion and reward.

3.2. Because you cannot hide in purity

A bodhisattva: stays in the world, works with conflict, aggression, ignorance,is constantly in contact with suffering.

At the same time: he cannot allow hatred, he cannot say: “This is not my problem.” This requires great inner stability.

3.3. Because compassion without wisdom breaks a person. This is very important and rarely said.

If there is compassion, but no understanding of emptiness, then a person burns out, becomes a rescuer, a martyr, or a cynic.

That is why Mahayana always says: compassion + emptiness,
not just “be a good person”.

3.4. Because the image “I am a good person” keeps collapsing.

The bodhisattva path constantly uncovers: hidden egoism, pride, the desire to be important.

Again and again you see: “I helped, but not purely,” “I wanted recognition,” “I felt anger.”

This is unpleasant. And you cannot simply walk away from it without abandoning the path.

  1. One simple summary

Bodhisattva vows are not promises, but direction. A bodhisattva is not an altruist, because there is no “other”. The difficulty of the path is the lack of final comfort and ego reward.

Said honestly and directly:

The bodhisattva path is a life without spiritual illusions – even without the illusion of one’s own spiritual growth and perfection.

BIG BLACK CAT AND A GIRL