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What I want I can't seem to have for moral reasons

It's not that it's necessary bad but it's rather selfish. Not even even in my literal sleeping dreams can I seem to appropriately experience it.

It's just I can't seem to be who I really am anymore. The happiness can't seem to be accepted by me.

The idea of Buddhist detachment seems to make me apathetic, demotivated, and careless. I'm just not understanding.

Buddhism says to have no desires if that's so then how can one even have joy in life, without joy in life what is the point. I just can't seem to understand.
SatanBurger · 36-40, FVIP
A number of myths about desire circulate among Buddhists. A common one is that desire is bad, and a spiritually mature person has no desires. Another is that the Buddha taught that desire is the cause of suffering and therefore all desire, even the desire to practice for liberation, is a problem. But life without desire is not necessarily a good thing: for example, one symptom of depression is having no desires. The Buddha did not teach that desire was the cause of suffering. In fact, he encouraged his followers to arouse ardent desire for liberation.

A starting point for understanding desire is to differentiate between unhealthy and healthy desire. Unhealthy desire undermines psychological health, producing what Buddhism often calls “suffering” for short. Healthy desire can contribute to psychological well-being, happiness, and peace. If we place healthy and unhealthy desire on a spectrum, at one end we have the motivations that lead to some of the worst and most horrific things people do. But at the other end, desire expresses some of the most beautiful and noble aspects of human life.

https://www.insightmeditationcenter.org/books-articles/the-spectrum-of-desire/
dark548 · M
@SatanBurger hmm 🤔 very interesting and facinating, thanks very much for sharing 🙏🙏
Entwistle · 56-60, M
@SatanBurger I'm a Buddhist for over 35 years. According to the Buddha ignorance is the root cause of suffering.
Desire..unfulfilled desire a secondary cause of suffering.
Misanthropic · 26-30, M
Not being consumed by desire doesn't mean you can't experience joy. When you are always wanting it creates an emptiness within it is better to learn how to enjoy the journey and not become too attached to materialistic desires or the general drama of life.

A surgeon detaches a lot of times when performing surgery on a patient but that doesn't mean they do not care, it gives them the ability to stay calm under pressure and work effectively.

There are two sides to every coin.. there is relaxed then there is lazy, there is motivated then there is greedy etc.

 
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