Dorothy Dandridge
Member
I wish I had an outlet to speak with other Buddhists.
I love Buddhism: the sutras, Buddha's words, the poem and sutra patterns, the meditations, the ethics, the 4 noble truths, the eightfold path. It all just fits me. But I struggle with western Buddhists because western Buddhists are often so interested not so much in the ethics and actual doctrine and religion of Buddhism, but the meditation and not-self, intellectualism, and secularism to it, which is not inherently bad. But then they claim to be Buddhist while not having compassion even for the poor, as seen on r/buddhism recently.
I have compassion for them, for I feel that they are ignorant and foolish. But it still doesn't change the overall narrative of western Buddhism. From my experience, western Buddhism is obsessed with fads and selfish desires, and they use Buddhism to defend these points of view by way of suggesting that Buddhism is about contentment or only about nirvana. While those two things are important Buddhism, it comes off as if they feel they can buy their way to it through exclusivity. My local Zen Center has a sesshin at least once a month, it's ridiculous. They have memberships there, and the members act as if they all belong to a unique special club. The centers tend to focus on an exclusive subset niche, that being well off educated white people.
I remember that I should have compassion for them, but it still doesn't account for the distinct lack of emphasis on displaying compassion for others through metta via volunteering or having an organized group that helps people. I signed up for my Zen Center's equivalent of that, and asked when they'd be doing something. They said they didn't know and that the group was currently defunct. Meanwhile, the Zen Center continues to have Sesshin after Sesshin and very little in actual charity work, so I end up volunteering by myself.
These people talk about meditation and non self and more but the Zen Center itself rarely consults or examines the sutras.
It makes me question what I'm doing anymore. It seems everyone is so interesting in mindfulness and being "present" and not being compassionate towards all beings. I'm not judging, and maybe it's just my Zen Center, or maybe something wrong with Zen period, but it's a notable observation I have made and it makes me question my future in the religion. I love the actual religion, but the people - the sangha - for which Buddhism heavily says you be a part of, is something else entirely. For the time being, I'm going to be examining other branches of Buddhism and other Zen Centers. Hopefully I can find a place where people actually seem to care beyond participating in the next weekend sit or whatever.
I have searched online for Online Sangha's and have found no such luck. It makes me sad that for such a large religion, the online community is relatively dead and not nearly as active as say, the Christian one.
I love Buddhism: the sutras, Buddha's words, the poem and sutra patterns, the meditations, the ethics, the 4 noble truths, the eightfold path. It all just fits me. But I struggle with western Buddhists because western Buddhists are often so interested not so much in the ethics and actual doctrine and religion of Buddhism, but the meditation and not-self, intellectualism, and secularism to it, which is not inherently bad. But then they claim to be Buddhist while not having compassion even for the poor, as seen on r/buddhism recently.
I have compassion for them, for I feel that they are ignorant and foolish. But it still doesn't change the overall narrative of western Buddhism. From my experience, western Buddhism is obsessed with fads and selfish desires, and they use Buddhism to defend these points of view by way of suggesting that Buddhism is about contentment or only about nirvana. While those two things are important Buddhism, it comes off as if they feel they can buy their way to it through exclusivity. My local Zen Center has a sesshin at least once a month, it's ridiculous. They have memberships there, and the members act as if they all belong to a unique special club. The centers tend to focus on an exclusive subset niche, that being well off educated white people.
I remember that I should have compassion for them, but it still doesn't account for the distinct lack of emphasis on displaying compassion for others through metta via volunteering or having an organized group that helps people. I signed up for my Zen Center's equivalent of that, and asked when they'd be doing something. They said they didn't know and that the group was currently defunct. Meanwhile, the Zen Center continues to have Sesshin after Sesshin and very little in actual charity work, so I end up volunteering by myself.
These people talk about meditation and non self and more but the Zen Center itself rarely consults or examines the sutras.
It makes me question what I'm doing anymore. It seems everyone is so interesting in mindfulness and being "present" and not being compassionate towards all beings. I'm not judging, and maybe it's just my Zen Center, or maybe something wrong with Zen period, but it's a notable observation I have made and it makes me question my future in the religion. I love the actual religion, but the people - the sangha - for which Buddhism heavily says you be a part of, is something else entirely. For the time being, I'm going to be examining other branches of Buddhism and other Zen Centers. Hopefully I can find a place where people actually seem to care beyond participating in the next weekend sit or whatever.
I have searched online for Online Sangha's and have found no such luck. It makes me sad that for such a large religion, the online community is relatively dead and not nearly as active as say, the Christian one.
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