
Originally Posted by
jim79
Hi,
I've been looking at Buddhis and the whole thing sounds great apart from when you die nothing happens? ...
Is the ego the same as the soul?
You are not the first to approach the Buddha’s teaching with these questions. The Buddha reflected on Puṇṇaka’s questions when Ānanda made reference to their culprit “I-making, mine-making, and the underlying tendency to conceit…” such that would presume the stasis to continue on from this life-cycle to another, what to say of a ‘soul’.
And the remedy is so simple that it would almost mock us if not for the fact that our own contemplative work does give a glimpse of it:
“Here, Ānanda, a bhikkhu thinks thus: ‘This is peaceful, this is sublime, that is, the stilling of all activities, the relinquishing of all acquisitions, the destruction of craving, dispassion, cessation, nibbāna.’ In this way, Ānanda, a bhikkhu could obtain such a state of concentration that he would have no I-making, mine-making, and underlying tendency to conceit...”
Sounds unattainable, this relinquishing of everything. Austere as this seems it is simply the relinquishing of desire and agendas with the given of living. As the Buddha mentioned
“…with reference to this that I said in the Pārāyana, in ‘The Questions of Puṇṇaka’:
“Having comprehended the highs and lows in the world,
he is not perturbed by anything in the world.
Peaceful, fumeless, untroubled, wishless,
he has, I say, crossed over birth and old age.”