Mini-Me
Member
- Joined
- Jan 9, 2008
- Messages
- 6,514
True. I wasn't very thorough in my use of the word Utopia...coined by Thomas More so of course the Buddha didn't know about it. However i was speaking metaphorically in the sense of perfected states of being. So excuse me for sloppy use of language. However altruism... definitely.
Mini me....yknow, I reckon we can either wake up and start being less selfish and more other regarding...not in the 'political sense' but in an "aligned with Reality" that we are all interconnected sense.
Maybe we will awaken and be nicer to one another a bit more. Who knowz? Maybe the meltdown is a big opportunity?
Interestingly enough, while I'm a strong individualist in just about every sense, my intuition has always told me that there's something to the Buddhist idea of universal consciousness. Despite my uncertainty about a sentient creator and my outright rejection of all scriptures and organized religion, I've still always felt that there's a greater meaning to life and an interconnectedness between people, times, and events, as if everything is meant to be and happens for a reason. I've experienced deja vu and and Jungian synchronicity a staggering number of times, and while I know the first could be my brain acting up and the second could be confirmation bias, I still can't bring myself to ignore those feelings. The universe is a mysterious place.

Has anyone read "Man's search for Meaning" Victor Frankl...subtext How Auschwitz brings out the monster within and brings out the saint within. We will never know who we really are until we are in a Crucial Situation! We hope we will behave honourably but i reckon we could also become dobbers, lurkers and peepers!
Yeah, I read that about six years ago actually. I agree that desperate situations bring out our true nature and put our morality to the test...but I do not believe that we can never know who we are beforehand. I believe that by steeling ourselves and mentally preparing in advance for these things, we can make the choice ahead of time and come to terms with the consequences, and that can give us the courage to follow through and do the right thing if and when the time actually comes. After all, that's what it really is...it's a choice. We can make it ahead of time, but I suppose it's true that actually following through at the crucial moment is the only thing that will cure all doubts. Moving from Frankl to Rowling, I've always loved one of Albus Dumbledore's lines from Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, "It is our choices, Harry, that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities."
