今天,筆者希望分享一則大學時期間寫過的一篇論文- 《如何克服日常生活中的不幸》(當時當然是用來交功課),筆者每隔一段時間也會反思人生的意義,也會想起曾寫過的這篇論文,哈!
原文:
Topic: How to overcome unhappiness in our daily life?
Introduction
In this essay, the
methods of overcoming unhappiness in our daily life will be analyzed. The
meaning of unhappiness will be described and examined. Afterwards, we may have
a look upon what general public will do to eliminate unhappiness. The main
arguments will be put on Buddhism’s understanding of unhappiness and Buddhist’s
way to overcome unhappiness in our daily life will be analyzed. Finally, my own
experience of overcoming unhappiness in our daily life will be described and I
will share my points of view towards Buddhist teaching and its philosophy.
Unhappiness
According to the
Bartleby Dictionary, unhappiness has several definitions: 1.Not happy or
joyful; sad or sorrowful; 2. Not satisfied; displeased or discontented; 3. Not
attended by or bringing good fortune; unlucky; 4. Not suitable; inappropriate[1].
Unhappiness comes to human mind when someone does not feel spiritual comfort or
satisfaction. It may due to physical, material or mental dissatisfaction of the
present situation. For example, we may feel unhappy when we do not have enough
money to buy our desired goods; students may feel unhappy when they have poor
academic results; our parents may feel unhappy when we do not behave properly,
etc. Unhappiness arises to everyone, no matter he or she is rich or poor. In
the contemporary world, though people’s living standard have risen, it does not
necessary imply people have become happier. Today, we have higher buildings and
wider highways, but shorter temperament and narrower points of view; we have
more medicine, but less heath; we have better information and technology, but
worse human relationships to others, etc. It is not surprising to see that to
survive in the modern world, it seems that we need to face more pressure and
competitions, and human’s inter-relationship is gradually replaced by individualism
and selfishness. Hence, unhappiness arises where people suffer.
Steps to overcome
unhappiness in modern society
What will you do to
overcome unhappiness? Apparently, there are million of ways to get rid of
unhappy feeling. Some people will divert the feeling of unhappiness by working,
drinking, playing around. However, these are just piecemeal and temporary,
which cannot overcome unhappiness in a long term. Some people will talk to
their friends, family or seek others’ help when they do not feel comfort and
satisfaction. These are more positive attitudes to overcome unhappiness. In
addition, some people will just let times fly and eliminate the sad feeling
gradually. What is the best method to get rid of unhappiness? It is the mind.
Unhappiness is our perception and depends on our attitudes towards surrounding
things and atmosphere. Buddhist way of overcoming unhappiness will be
introduced in next section.
The Teaching of
Buddha
Unlike other
religions that emphasize on god or superstition of the religious powers,
Buddhism depends on enlightenment and wisdom. Sangharakshita even considers
Buddhism as a method of personal development, a vision of human existence, the
nucleus of a new society and a blueprint for a new world[2].
All religions talk about charity, virtue and ethics, rebirth in heaven.
However, Buddha’s teaching is far beyond these. The Buddha often said that he
offered his teachings in the manner of a physician, who had diagnosed the
condition of the patient and then prescribed the method of cure. In following
his therapy of an arduous self-ordained discipline, there was to be no recourse
to the supernatural for assistance[3].
Buddhism is a
system of education that can teach us how to cope with problems and to live
peacefully with others; it is not based on superstition but on practical
method, by which everyone can attain the state of enlightenment and joyful.
The Four Noble Truths
Four
Noble Truths is one of the major teachings of Buddha and will be used to
demonstrate the ways to cease suffering and overcoming unhappiness. Buddha
proclaimed the fundamentals of his system in the Four Noble Truths, which are:
Life is suffering; Suffering has a cause; Suffering can be suppressed; The way
to the suppression of suffering is the noble Eightfold path.
There
are things that make us happy, for example: love, beauty, money, etc. However,
these things change sooner or later, and will bring us unhappiness. For
example, one is separated from that person, the happiness turns into suffering.
One suffers because of one’s attachment to pleasures do not last forever. In
short, the Buddha taught people not to be distracted by momentary pleasures,
but to recognize the fact that desired things do not last forever. Therefore,
people should learn from him the way to solve the problems of suffering. This
is the true meaning of suffering caused by change. Buddha used the The Four
Noble Truths to analyze why humans face unhappiness, or suffering, and act as a
teacher, to put Four Noble Truths as a formula, and to help us to solve
problems encountered in our daily life. We are going to examine the Four Noble
Truths in depth.
The First Noble Truth:
Suffering (Dukkha)
Buddha taught the
solution to a problem, this problem is the fundamental problem of life. In
Sanskrit and Pali the problem is termed duhkha/dukkha,
which can be approximately translated as ‘suffering’. It can be seen from three
aspects.
i. Dukkah as ordinary
suffering
Everyone suffers
from birth (you cry when you are born), sickness, old age, death, being with
people and in places that you dislike, being apart from people and places that
you love, not getting what one desires, all other types of problem and
disappointment that are part of life[4].
Nowadays, there are
global risks like greenhouse effect, ozone depletion, nuclear weapons,
terrorists’ attacks, political instability, natural disasters, etc. The above
all can be regarded as universal suffering which we cannot escape or eliminate.
As a student in
ii. Dukkha produced by change
Buddha did not deny
the existence of happiness such as friendship, family life, a healthy body and
mind. When we are enjoying something, or even when there is nothing that is
causing us particular unhappiness, things are always liable to change: what we
were enjoying may be removed from us or something unpleasant may manifest
itself- this is duhkka as change.
In fact
everything in the world, everything we experience, is changing moment by
moment. Some things may change very rapidly while other things may change extremely
slowly, but still everything changes, everything is impermanent (anitya/anicca). When we begin to be
affected by the reality of this state of affairs we may find the things that
previously gave us great pleasure are tainted and no longer please us in the
way they once did. The world becomes a place of uncertainty in which we can
never be sure what is going to happen next, a place of shifting and unstable
conditions whose very nature is such that we can never feel entirely at ease in
it[5].
For
example, teenagers may feel very happy in their young age, they do not bear
economic hardship, they can study and play at the same time, and they are
beautiful, healthy and shinning. However, they cannot act the role of teenagers
forever. When they become older, they have to work, to earn money, to raise a
family. When they get older, they may not be as healthy and energetic as in the
past. These reveal that things are impermanent, and we cannot escape the fact
of suffer due to change.
Yet
there are pleasures in the world, but it is rather momentary and does not last
forever as we mentioned earlier. Hence, people should learn from Buddha the way
to solve the problems of suffering and unhappiness. This is the true meaning of
suffering caused by change.
iii. Dukkha caused by our
bodies
Our bodies do not
last forever, so it is impossible for us to establish permanent happiness based
on impermanent body[6]. Hence,
we suffer due to our physical constraint.
In an absolute
sense, everything is impermanent. Suffering is a basic fact of life, no one can
avoid it. Hence, it is the fact that unhappiness do appear in our daily lives.
The Second Noble
Truth: The Cause of Suffering
The Buddhist
tradition has sometimes compared the Buddha to a physician and the four truths
to a medical diagnosis: the truth of dukkha
is like a disease, the truth of the origin of dukkha is like its cause, the truth of the cessation of dukkha is like the disease’s being
cured, and the truth of the path leading to the cessation of dukkha is like the medicine that brings
about the disease’s cure[7].
It is wish to relieve the suffering of the disease and eradicate its cause that
is the starting point of Buddhist practice.
The Buddha
discovered that when our mind was polluted by defilement, impurity, such as
craving, hatred and ill-will and ignorance, then we suffer. Attachment,
aversion, and the delusion are the origin of suffering. Desire or craving, and
ignorance will be extracted to discuss the direct causes of suffering.
i. Craving
It can
be classified into: 1. People carve for five sensual pleasures. People are
greedy for sense-pleasures, wealth, power and honour. They are attached to
ideas, ideals, views, opinions, theories, concepts and belief. 2. Craving for
existence (dying person) and becoming (wealth person). 3. Craving for non-
existence (self-annihilation)[8].
It is the desire
for what belongs to the unreal self that generates suffering, for it is
impermanent, changeable, perishable, and that, in the object of desire, causes
disappointment, disillusionment, and other forms of suffering to him who
desires. Desire in itself is not evil. It is desire to affirm the lower self,
to live in it, cling to it, identify oneself with it, instead of with the
Universal self, that is evil[9].
In short, the cause
of suffering is the desire: the will to be, to exist, to re-exist, to continue,
to become more and more, to grow more and more, to accumulate more and more.
However, in the world of limited recourses where people have unlimited desire,
it is the outcome that we cannot satisfy of what we want and wish. Suffer
occurs.
ii. Ignorance
Ignorance is the
inability to see the truth about things, to see things as they really are. Our
craving is based on a fundamental misjudgment of the situation; a judgment that
assumes that when our craving gets what it wants we will be happy, that when
our craving possesses the objects of its desire we will be satisfied. But such
a judgment in turn assumes a world in which things are permanent, unchanging,
stable, and reliable. But the world is simply not like that. In short, in
craving we fail to see how things truly are, and in failing to see how things
truly are we crave. In other words craving goes hand in hand with a fundamental
ignorance and misapprehension of the nature of the world[10].
The Third Noble
Truth: The End of Suffering
The attachment to
things is unstable, unreliable, changing and impermanent. Hence, we might want
to find something in the world that is permanent and stable, which we can hold
on to and thereby find lasting happiness. But the fact is we must always fail.
The Buddhist solution is as radical as it is simple: let go, let go of
everything. If craving is the cause of suffering, then the cessation of
suffering will surely follow from ‘the complete fading away and ceasing of that
very craving’: its abandoning, relinquishing, releasing, letting go. The Third
Noble Truth shows to be the way to the complete eradication of suffering, is
equivalent to the complete self-transcendence of Buddhahood[11].
The cessation of craving is the goal of Buddhist path, and equivalent to the
cessation of suffering, the highest happiness- Nirvana.
Nirvana means ‘blowing out’ or
‘extinguishing’[12], the
path to Nirvana is the process of
purification of our minds through the removal of all defilement from our
polluted minds. When one’s mind is polluted by various defilement, i.e. lust or
greed (lobha), hatred (dosa) and delusion (moha), one is unable to see things as they truly are. When one
removes all defilement completely, then, one automatically sees things as they
truly are. This is called Nirvana,
where an everlasting state of great joy and peace. This is the highest goal in
Buddhism.
Yet like the Buddha,
any person who attains Nirvana does
not remain thereafter forever absorbed in some transcendental state of mind. On
the contrary he or she continues to live in the world; he or she continues to
think, speak, and act as other people do- with the difference that all his or
her thoughts, words, and deeds are completely free of the motivations of greed,
aversion, and delusion, and motivated instead entirely by generosity, friendliness,
and wisdom.
The Fourth Noble: the
way leading to the cessation of suffering
What is the way to
cease suffering? Yet as long as we crave nirvana
or the cessation of suffering, then by definition the object of our craving is
not nirvana, not the ‘reality’ of the
cessation of suffering, but a mere idea of what we imagine nirvana, the cessation of suffering, to be like. Nirvana is precisely the ceasing of all
craving, so even the craving for nirvana
must be rooted out and eventually abandoned. The fourth truth is concerned with
the practical means for bringing this.
There is the noble
truth of the path to the cessation of suffering, which is summed up as the
‘Noble Eightfold path’: ‘perfect’, ‘right’, or ‘appropriate’ view, intention,
speech, conduct, livelihood, effort, mindfulness, and concentration.
Right views enable
us to see the four truths; right intention includes desirelessness,
friendliness and compassion[13].
These are the path of wisdom. Right speech embraces with refraining from false
speech, divisive speech, hurtful speech and idle chatter. Right action is
refraining from harming living beings, taking what is not given and sexual
misconduct. Right livelihood implies not to base on wrong speech and action[14].
These are the path to conduct, self-discipline (morality). Right effort aims to
prevent unarisen unwholesome states, abandon arisen unwholesome states, arouse
unarisen wholesome states and develop arisen wholesome states. Right
mindfulness shows the contemplation of body, feeling and mind. Finally, right
concentration is the practice of the four mediations (dhyanas). These are the path to meditation[15].
Through self-discipline,
people learn to control their worlds and deeds and to avoid unwholesome
behavior; through mental disciple, our mind can be trained, disciplined, and
developed. The third step is wisdom. When we understand the meaning of Four
Noble Truths and penetrate a thing in its true nature, we can remove craving
and ignorance, and experience the end of suffering.
The path is a way of
life to be followed, practiced and developed by each individual. We can
practice the Eightfold path by ourselves. It is self-discipline in body, word
and mind, self-development and self-purification.
My own experience of
overcoming unhappiness and reflection of learning from Buddhist study
It is of no doubt
that everyone has ever suffered unhappiness. As a student, I face pressure in
studying and examinations. I feel unhappy when I got poor academic results or
did not complete certain tasks properly. When I feel unhappy, I always talk
with friends to express my grievance and sadness. I have had cried and stayed
alone by myself, too. I agree with Buddha’s teaching that mind and positive
thinking are very important to overcome unhappiness and remain rigid. Frankly
speaking, I am quite emotional and affected by things surrounding me. For
example, one of my good friends did extremely poorly in the last semester and
even faced the risk of defer for an academic year. I felt so sad to him and feel
unhappy too. However, time is really a good medicine to cure unhappiness. When
time flies, we are able to forget unhappy things and continue our living.
In my own
experience, I always face unhappiness, even due to some minor things. However,
I am a rather optimistic person. When I have expressed all my unhappiness out
of my mind, it is easier for me to think positively and overcome unhappiness
eventually. To me, I think that to love and being love are important elements to
overcome unhappiness. It is because you can feel that there are people
supporting you and you can solve problems with the spiritual support and
encouragement of family, relatives and friends. In my points of view, these are
crucial factors to overcome unhappiness in a practical and positive way.
In
In the studying of
Buddhism, it enables me to view things in another dimension. In the past, I
only knew Buddhism is one of the religions which also emphasizes on doing good
things, respect others. And now I know more. I have become more enlightened
when I know the reality of change and suffer. I believe positive thinking and
individual perception are very important when facing difficulties. I agree that
Buddha is just like an enlightened teacher and equipped with knowledge about
the reality of life, Buddha taught us how to overcome unhappiness and to
understand the fact of suffer and the Four Noble Truths. It really broadens my
horizon and I enjoy the learning from Buddhism very much. There is no point in
persist in a specific thing when we understand things are impermanent in
nature. In order to live happier, just like the Eightfold Path, we have to
construct our right attitudes towards life and live properly and meaningfully.
In this sense, we can overcome unhappiness by ourselves, no matter under which
circumstances.
[1]
[2]
Sangharakshita 1996. ‘Buddhism for today- & tomorrow’
[3] Chen, Kuan-sheng. c1968. ‘Buddhism: the light of Asia’
[4]
According to Dr. Jingyin’s elaboration on the First Noble Truth in Lecture 4
[5] Gethin, Reupert. 1998. ‘The foundations of Buddhism’
[6]
According to Dr. Jingyin’s elaboration on the First Noble Truth in Lecture 4
[7] Gethin, Reupert. 1998. ‘The foundations of Buddhism’
[8]
According to Dr. Jingyin’s elaboration on the First Noble Truth in Lecture 4
[9] Humphreys, Christmas. 1995. ‘Buddhism’ Harmondsworth:
Penguin, P. 92
[10] Gethin,
Reupert. 1998. ‘The foundations of Buddhism’
[11] Sangharakshita 1996. ‘Buddhism for today- &
tomorrow’
[12] Gethin,
Reupert. 1998. ‘The foundations of Buddhism’
[13] Sangharakshita
1996. ‘Buddhism for today- & tomorrow’
[14] Sangharakshita
1996. ‘Buddhism for today- & tomorrow’
[15] Sangharakshita 1996. ‘Buddhism for today- & tomorrow’

如果可以有中文演譯,相信大家會覺得更快樂,畢竟每個路過的讀者水平各有不同。草上飛
回覆刪除謝謝回覆,非常明白!但本身這篇論文是用來交功課,所以是英文,人手翻譯要花很多時間,現嘗試用google translation翻譯,希望日後能以快樂為題,以中文重新寫過一篇。😅
回覆刪除高效率,現在舒服好多,為人師表典範,讚!草上飛
回覆刪除謝謝!是現在的翻譯工具利害而已。草上飛兄對佛學有興趣嗎?
刪除還可以,對溫暖人間這雜誌,特別喜愛,因為有些癀告介紹齋菜館,挺不錯,師姐也信佛嗎??
刪除非佛教徒,不懂佛經,但非常有有興趣研究佛學處世智慧。😊
刪除你之前的post唔見左?
回覆刪除哪個post?
刪除開唔開心,存在一心
回覆刪除笑亦要做人,喊亦要做人
開心點計,都有賺
對呀!發自內心。
刪除快樂就是活在當下,每天充實地生活。😊