For over a year I've studied Buddhism and tried my best to apply its principles in my life. I believe Buddhisms principles are valuable to any belief system and I've tried to live as a religious Buddhist, but...I feel empty when I do so.
The philosophy of Buddhism, I believe, is something that more people can use and, at their core, many of the same teachings are a part of other religions. However, the religiosity of Buddhism just feels like it is full of nothing. I was originally Tibetan, but quickly became disillusioned. Then I looked into Theravada and ultimately felt the same. If I had to pick a denomination, it would be Zen; as it is the most philosophically based of the schools.
The biggest deterrence, however, are my changing personal beliefs.
1.) As time goes by, I'm starting to think that there is a creator to the universe; in a panendeistic sense anyway. I hold the belief that buddhists can be theists, but Buddhism seems very binding in its teaching that "god" is not important/doesn't exist. Regarding this, I believe that there is possibly a God who created the universe, but the problem of evil is what is truly holding me back from saying "I believe in God".
2.) I feel a bigger draw towards Judaism and Hinduism more than I ever did Buddhism.
3.) When I have spoken with Jews and Hindus, they often have a spark and life to them that the Buddhists I have spoken to didn't. They take the whole "nothing is permanent" and "no-self" very far.
Maybe it's nothing or maybe it's time to think about switching paths. I'm quite confused about this to be honest.
I guess to make this thread have an actual point, how many of you switched paths after you have already deeply invested your time in another? How did you deal with the shift? Was it ultimately worth it to you?
The philosophy of Buddhism, I believe, is something that more people can use and, at their core, many of the same teachings are a part of other religions. However, the religiosity of Buddhism just feels like it is full of nothing. I was originally Tibetan, but quickly became disillusioned. Then I looked into Theravada and ultimately felt the same. If I had to pick a denomination, it would be Zen; as it is the most philosophically based of the schools.
The biggest deterrence, however, are my changing personal beliefs.
1.) As time goes by, I'm starting to think that there is a creator to the universe; in a panendeistic sense anyway. I hold the belief that buddhists can be theists, but Buddhism seems very binding in its teaching that "god" is not important/doesn't exist. Regarding this, I believe that there is possibly a God who created the universe, but the problem of evil is what is truly holding me back from saying "I believe in God".
2.) I feel a bigger draw towards Judaism and Hinduism more than I ever did Buddhism.
3.) When I have spoken with Jews and Hindus, they often have a spark and life to them that the Buddhists I have spoken to didn't. They take the whole "nothing is permanent" and "no-self" very far.
Maybe it's nothing or maybe it's time to think about switching paths. I'm quite confused about this to be honest.
I guess to make this thread have an actual point, how many of you switched paths after you have already deeply invested your time in another? How did you deal with the shift? Was it ultimately worth it to you?