• nomy@lemmy.zip
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      4 hours ago

      Desire is the root of all suffering, suffering can cease when attachment to desire is extinguished.

  • arotrios@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    As a practicing Buddist, I do this often. Smoke enough weed, and an empty shack becomes a temple of delight.

  • Bo7a@lemmy.ca
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    19 hours ago

    I bet his friend is never worried about stupid shit.

      • Bo7a@lemmy.ca
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        18 hours ago

        That is a basic survival worry. I tend to believe that humans faced with real survival issues are less negatively impacted than those who have material worries.

        My stress about work is killing me.

        My stress about not freezing to death leads me to do things like chopping wood, lighting fires, and maintaining my chimney. Which are all good things.

        • SendPrudes@lemm.ee
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          12 hours ago

          My wife doesn’t love multi day backpacking. But she loves the glimpse of how I am and how we are - during that time.

          Our priorities - Stay warm, stay dry, fetch and purify water, hike the right distances to get out with food in hand, packing and unpacking our gear, avoid dangerous wildlife, cook, sleep.

          When every day that’s your goal state it’s super simple - stress is actually just a response to things that might kill you again. And not 20 steps away from it. “I might perform poorly, my clothes might not be appropriate for the job, I’m running 3 minutes behind - which may cost me my job, which could be long term, and financially we won’t recover, and then we might lose the house or starve”. Up against “I need water and dry clothes”.

        • melpomenesclevage@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          13 hours ago

          I think the reason it’s not a problem is there’s agency you can take over that stuff, and it’s not deferring to a blatantly malevolent system designed to crush you into dust and extract the value for things like sleeping inside and getting the ever diminishing treats that make you not kill yourself while you’re doing that.

          whereas when it’s cold your body does stuff by itself to heat up, and there’s usually more you can do besides to fix or at least emotionally cope with the problem in healthy ways-warm clothes, blankets, wood chopping, chimney maintenance, something inadvisable with nichrome wire, etc. When you’re fighting a nazi, you have to be moving or carefully still, and the moving actually matters and maybe you kill or escape the nazi before it kills you. your actions actually matter, even if the base situation is more outwardly harrowing.

          there’s no cognitive dissonance to survival issues, no worrying about how you’re seen, no helleresque bullshit. nothing even stopping you from acting but your own assessments.

        • HappinessPill@lemmy.ml
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          17 hours ago

          Indeed, the majority of us aren’t made to worry about arbitrary problems that are beyond our control constantly more than trivial and survival related problems.

  • noretus@sopuli.xyz
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    20 hours ago

    Weird only to a mind that’s used to being constantly bombarded with low quality entertainment, lulled into comfortable numbness with mostly unnecessary material goods. While this is overly extreme (and potentially hazardous… though that being 4chan it’s probably exaggerated, if even true), most people would do well to take periods of disconnecting entirely and have minimal entertainment available. Zen Buddhist retreats are great by my experience. Yoga Retreats are nice but you need to weed out the ones that are really just masturbatory Wellness holidays for rich white women. Vipassana retreats are probably good too tho I personally haven’t been to one of those. But just starting meditation would be great. https://www.wakingup.com/ is a low bar access point with guided meditations but also a lot of great philosophical discussions from several different branches of thought (notably Stoicism and Buddhism but others too). And you can get it for free (request scholarship) if the price seems steep.

    • Zozano@aussie.zone
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      19 hours ago

      Shout-out to my man Sam.

      I know a lot of people here hate him for his political takes, but his meditation app can be divorced from his podcast career. His science based approach to meditation, with no spiritual conflation is so refreshing.

      I’ve had so many life changing realizations about my own mind thanks to him. His efforts to emphasise the outcomes of compassion and stoicism in the face of hostility have changed my outlook on engaging with abrasive people, and is one of the most important lessons I’ve learnt in a long time.

      Furthermore, the realization that free will is an illusion helps to change how you view people who annoy you. They’re victims of their own minds, and slaves to every prior cause in their life. Forgiveness and tolerance are both rational, and impossible perspectives to deny, once you can see it clearly.

      • noretus@sopuli.xyz
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        56 minutes ago

        Same, actually. Which is why I meditate after being up for a while and/or in the evening.

  • yunxiaoli@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    Post-industrial Buddhism is what it is. Yeah like it’d be great to do that in a cave or forest or open prairie but who the fuck can afford those things?

    Abandoned buildings are free as long as you don’t fuck with the native inhabitants’ meth.

    • Droechai@lemm.ee
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      21 hours ago

      I would just worry of asbestos or heavy metal contamination in the buildings, especially if I’m sleeping on or near the floor

      • Oni_eyes@sh.itjust.works
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        18 hours ago

        Transportation to and from the forest isn’t free.

        Also some places have laws against camping on public land to discourage homelessness and these would likely fall afoul of those.

          • Oni_eyes@sh.itjust.works
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            14 hours ago

            Yes, but not as many people go to abandoned buildings so you’re less likely to be seen by others and reported.

            • nomy@lemmy.zip
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              4 hours ago

              I’d be way more concerned about running into someone in a 'bando than out in the woods though.

              Hiker in the woods is going to go the other way. A homebum in a bando? Who knows how they’ll react.

          • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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            7 hours ago

            You’ve never seen an abandoned building in Baltimore, DC Philadelphia, Detroit, or Chicago?

            Outside of the tourist zone you can find wastelands of abandoned buildings.

            • the_crotch@sh.itjust.works
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              7 hours ago

              I’m not doubting there are abandoned buildings in cities. I’m doubting any city within the US with the exception of the southwest is more than a few miles from a forest.

              • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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                4 hours ago

                Oh ok. But to refute your forest idea, while there are forests a few miles outside those cities, you can’t easily walk to them. There also aren’t any forests near those major cities where you wouldn’t immediately be noticed by park rangers if you tried setting up a random tent. Abandoned buildings don’t get daily police sweeps whereas parks do get sweeps because of lost/injured at nightfall when the parks close to everyone without a camping permit. And legal camp sites are very popular so you wouldn’t be getting away from people- like those who have their playlists blasting out their phone while hiking.

      • algorithmae@lemmy.sdf.org
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        13 hours ago

        OP didn’t mean the cost of going there, they meant still paying the bills while going to the forest instead of work

        • the_crotch@sh.itjust.works
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          13 hours ago

          That’s still going to be a problem living in an abandoned building though. That part doesn’t change regardless of where their friend goes to meditate (unless that place is work I guess)

      • currycourier@lemmy.world
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        16 hours ago

        Actually the larger parks near me (the only places that have enough trees to qualify as something close to a forest) do cost money (american city metro area)