Nick_A wrote: ↑Mon Jun 11, 2018 5:56 am
I have the highest regard for the rare minority like Simone Weil who are willing to suffer for truth.
Okay. "Truth" is debatable, of course.
Nick_A wrote: ↑Mon Jun 11, 2018 5:56 am
The willingness to awaken is real suffering. A person’s personality and acquired habits struggle against it.
Sure. That doesn't mean that a life of suffering and wallowing in the IDEA of "suffering for truth" leads one to an awakened state. There are so many things within a person that can create something ELSE. Suffering doesn't ensure awakening... it only ensures suffering.
Nick_A wrote: ↑Mon Jun 11, 2018 5:56 am
It is far easier to live for pleasure.
Is it? How many people have truly pleasurable lives? Seems to me that it is easier to say "Woe is me... everything is bad and awful... and THAT'S why I'm not a happy person." Seems to me that it takes great courage (more than suffering) to seek truth. Many religions focus on suffering. All things considered, it seems to be no greater or more productive path than any other.
Nick_A wrote: ↑Mon Jun 11, 2018 5:56 am
You seem primarily attracted to pleasure as most people are.
No, Nick... I am primarily attracted to clarity. I see it as naturally flexible and open and willing to let go. It's only natural that there's a lot of pleasure associated with doing that. Whereas, the idea of "Truth" is often claimed as a reason for "locking things down in a certain way", thereby making it the ONLY truth, and making those who proclaim it, superior... even if they use their suffering as some sort of proof.

Human suffering may be many things -- inevitable, entertaining, eye-opening, etc. -- but idolizing it (or anything!) surely leads to intoxication more than clarity. If your idea of suffering brings you PLEASURE... ha ha... have fun with that.
I'm simply challenging your absolute claims. It seems like that's a useful activity to do here.
Is it not true that there are many truths? Has it not been shown in humankind's history that there is a continual search for the GREATEST TRUTH -- the one above all others? Humans search high and low... down every path and in every crevice. Yet you claim that it is a rare minority, with which you are aligned (of course), who are willing to suffer in search of truth and awakening. How many such "rare minorities" have there been, I wonder? Claiming that their suffering is BECAUSE of their divine and noble quest? A wonderful STORY. And yet... how do such stories actually weigh down humankind... and KEEP IT FROM evolving?
It's really quite amusing to notice how/when humans claim the OPPOSITE of what they're doing. Like a little kid with chocolate and crumbs around his mouth, claiming that he didn't eat a cookie. Is growing into adulthood just a collection of more elaborate excuses and disguises to conceal what we're really doing?
Nick_A wrote: ↑Mon Jun 11, 2018 5:56 am
If the drive isn’t in a person, then it appears the height of lunacy. But for those who understand, they will know what Jesus meant by: Matthew 16: 26: "What good will it be for someone to gain the whole world, yet forfeit their soul? Or what can anyone give in exchange for their soul?"
Don't you think that MOST people understand the idea that losing one's soul (spirit) while striving after worldly/superficial gains is not the "ultimate richness" it may seem? It's a message woven throughout world cultures and throughout time. Yet, do you see how you weave such a narrative to uniquely support (and even exalt) yourself and your ideas... while claiming that others cannot see? You are a persecuted seeker of truth... suffering as a rare minority of others have suffered. That's your story, right?
Have you ever wondered what makes a person choose the story they do among the countless stories available?