No Soul?
Anatta is part of the Buddha's original teachings and quite opposed to present Buddhist beliefs most popularly and conveniently pursued. Anatta is the real deal, practiced by serious Theravada meditation monks in Thailand and Sri Lanka, and because of its ingeniousness, authenticity, and truth, has persevered for more than 2500 hundred years. But few understand this confusing No Soul - Anatta concept, especially here in the West, home of the super ego! Nor do we want to understand it. The interesting thing, however, is that it's the only ticket to authentic freedom, freedom from dependency on an outside source.
Hinduism suggests that we should do as God commands, and that we should fulfill our duties even if it means killing our literal brothers if need be, and that killing is okay, because our brother's eternal souls will continue to exist eternally. Neither the soul kills nor can be killed - so no one has really killed anything! (The Bhagavad Gita).
The Buddha rejected the idea of God, the idea that we should mindlessly conform to a structured caste system of duties that was so prejudicial at the time, or that some kind of soul continues on. He rejected it all flat out. To the Buddha, these were no more fairy tales.
Now, before you throw your hands up and fearfully object, "No God! No soul? What is to become of me?" let's look a little deeper why this idea of Anatta has persisted for almost three millennia.
The Buddha was not nihilistic. He rejected any mention of metaphysical oblivion. Actually, he avoided all talk of metaphysics with a noble silence. Questions such as "Is the universe eternal, am I eternal, will I continue, am I just an accident of nature to disappear eternally when I die," weren't addressed. What he did address was the here and now. And it wasn't that he was a bumbling simplistic idiot, he was beyond genius. The Abhidhamma, comprised of enough books to fit on two or three feet of a bookshelf, represent his philosophical and metaphysical teachings, and are so complicated that only dedicated scholars can decipher the texts.
Einstein said, "The religion of the future will be a cosmic religion. It should transcend a personal God and avoid dogmas and theology. Covering both natural and spiritual, it should be based on a religious sense arising from the experience of all things, natural and spiritual and a meaningful unity. Buddhism answers this description. If there is any religion that would cope with modern scientific needs, it would be Buddhism."
The Buddha rejected metaphysical questions because they served no purpose. He concentrated on only the things that would set people completely free. One day he showed his monks a few leaves in his hand, and asked, "What are greater monks, the few leaves I have in my hand, or the leaves in the forest?" The monks, of course, answered the leaves in the forest. The Buddha then said that what he teaches is likened to the few leaves in his hand, because those few leaves are the ones that lead to freedom, whereas all the other leaves in the forest don't lead to freedom. So maybe it's not how many facts you can cram into your head and remember, but how you can get in touch with your heart, and that doesn't come from learning, it comes from living life with clear eyes.
There are many ideas and beliefs about the afterworld: We merge with God, we sit at God's right hand, we merge with universal consciousness, we do this, we do that, but the Buddha instead remained steadfast in shunning beliefs, and insisted that his monks instead see exactly what was going on in each moment. He made them look at the exact "self" that supposedly transmigrates after death. And guess what? They couldn't find one! All they could find was a construction of the mind that represented an ego identity, but it was a fiction. And only the monk's deep meditation revealed this. (The Buddha did teach his monks how to meditate; meditation was one of the leaves he held in his hand.)
So now we are faced with a dilemma; if we don't exist, why should we worry about what happens to us? Maybe we don't have to! Great! Maybe we can live freely in the present and not worry about the after life. But wouldn't that encourage an irresponsible existence? After all, if no God was judging us, and we didn't have to worry about hell, why not pillage and plunder? Simply because, pillaging and plundering brings eventual destruction to the marauder herself . . . or himself! So we have to look a little deeper at happiness, and how happiness is attained and maintained.
How long can you remain happy? Not long. Something always comes up to bring you down. Back to work on Monday after the super bowl or something. Everything changes and therefore we can't sustain anything, happiness included. Changeability (Anicca), another doctrine of the Buddha.
But if it were true that our "self" was a mere construction, and that we didn't have to worry about it, kind of like it never existed for the billions and trillions of years before we were born, (and that wasn't a problem). And when it ceased to exist, that wouldn't be a problem either, kind of like; when the lights go out, time will no longer exist and therefore a billion million years would be a nanosecond. Then we could relax a bit. And guess what, when we stop worrying about what will happen to ourselves, we begin to see the needs of others! Isn't that amazing! We actually begin to love our neighbors. Wow!
After the shock that we don't exist eternally in the form of a wispy soul wears off, we come down to earth, where we belong. We become responsible and sensitive to what we do and how it affects others. We . . . actually become happy! We become happy in helping others and not worrying about ourselves. Happy. A strange word, yes? But it's true. Strange but true.
And it all can begin by sitting every evening for 15 minutes in meditation. You see, meditation instills courage after a time, and much courage is necessary to understand what and who you truly are.
Copyright © E. Raymond Rock 2007. All rights reserved.
Related Tags: meditation, buddha, soul, happy, god, metaphysical, beliefs, einstein, existence, transmigrates
E. Raymond Rock of Fort Myers, Florida is cofounder and principal teacher at the Southwest Florida Insight Center. His twenty-eight years of meditation experience has taken him across four continents, including two stopovers in Thailand where he practiced in the remote northeast forests as an ordained Theravada Buddhist monk. His book, A Year to Enlightenment (Career Press/New Page Books) is now available at major bookstores and online retailers.
Your Article Search Directory : Find in ArticlesRecent articles in this category:
- The Collective Conclusion
Our world is heading into darkness. That's not a news flash, nor is it anything that most would arg - Meditation Techniques For Beginners, Types Of Meditations
Meditation is an intensely personal and spiritual experience. The purpose of each meditation techniq - Psychic Healing: Gateway To Higher Level Of Spiritual Energy
Some people recovered from their illnesses without any present of therapeutic agents. How do they re - Mindfulness And The Change You Should Believe In
Being aware of change without having to stop and interpret it, mindfulness means detachment. I call - Basic Meditation Explained
Basic meditation will improve your focus, make you a happier person, and greatly reduce the stress - 3 Powerful Meditations to Open Third Eye Chakra
The most important chakra to open first when you take up a kundalini meditation practice is the Thi - Ways To Meditate Meditation For Beginners
If you have never done it before, mediation might seem a little tricky to you, especially when clubb - Achieve Peace Of Mind With Yoga And Meditation
Yoga is developing as a part of life. It is a way of life - you can integrate body poses and breathi - Choosing The Best Meditation Music
How do you choose the best meditation music? Baroque music is often recommended, and particular piec - Chakra Guided Visualizations for Health
Chakra guided visualizations help you create a deep state of focus and trance in order to make conn
Most viewed articles in this category:
- Resolving Conflict
What we extend outward toward others, we internalize. Whether the emotions are negative, such as hat - Simply Meditation
It is important that our practice can be done comfortably all day in a busy world, not only when we - Personal Transformations
The last time I looked, personal transformation was not on America's top ten list of achievements. S - The Power of Conscious Breathing
I have studied the human mind and psyche for over a decade now and this one technique I find is the - Better Living Through Hypnosis
Hypnosis is a trance-like state characterized by extreme suggestibility, relaxation and heightened i - Quenching the Fire Within
There in the lucky dark, None to observe me, darkness far and wide. No sign for me to mark - No o - Why Meditate?
Body - Computer Hardware . . . Feelings, thoughts - Software . . . Influenced Mind - Operator . . . - Kabbalah Meditation
Kabbalah is an important and vital aspect of Jewish mysticism, which consists of extensive theories - Gratitude and Awe
"So happy just to be alive, underneath this sky of blue." -- Bob Dylan, "New Morning"Gratitude is wh - Should You Try Meditation? Solutions for Three Common Fears
What do you do when you want to relax but you are scared to try meditation?Even though it has become

