Buddhists Really Are Happier
bjornte writes "For anyone that wonders what Richard Gere is up to, the BBC explains: 'Scientists say they have evidence to show that Buddhists really are happier and calmer than other people. Tests carried out in the United States reveal that areas of their brain associated with good mood and positive feelings are more active.' So, if you're suffering from the ongoing IT slump..."
Sounds like the next best thing compared to chemical happynes :P
Think of the computers that get saved if IT personel have more peace of mind
These findings would be better stated as 'calm and stressless lifestyle is happier'. It has nothing to do with religion, just that fact that Buddhists are smart enough not to get worked up over stupid things like getting cut off in traffic or being late to a meeting.
Or even simpler, as was taught when I was younger: Don't worry, be happy.
"I only speak the truth"
Karma: null(Mostly affected by an unassigned variable)
Anyone else equate Buddism with apathy?
Little girl down the hall seems to think that if you don't give a shit about anything or anyone your life and job are very easy.
She demonstrates this by not reloading the coffee, drinking everyone elses diet coke, opening up every virus on the net, and sending out 3+gig attachments to every mailing list on the server. Maybe she is the DEBLE!
Neck_of_the_Woods
#/usr/local/surf/glassy/overhead
...because the last time I was there, I got a fortune cookie that says, "A smile is your personal welcome mat." No joke. It really says this.
So, assuming that buddhist are happier, then they must smile more. And if buddhism is popular among the Chinese, then they must be smiling.
So... I'm going to find one of those smiling welcome mats upon which to wipe my feet!
How are you going to keep them down on the farm once they've seen Karl Hungus?
Buddism seems interesting to me, but why always those budda statues and strange ideas about reincarnation. If you follow the "Buddism" with the article, you arrive at a page which starts with: "Buddhism is a tradition that focuses on personal spiritual development. Buddhists strive for a deep insight into the true nature of life and do not worship gods or deities." right besides a picture of golden budda statues. No worship of gods and deities indeed, but worship of budda.
karma please!
There's not enough detail in the article to know whether this is a problem, but it looks like there's at least potential for a serious "correlation implies causation" error. Does Buddhism make people happy, or do people who are already happy become Buddhists?
I'm also not sure how "calm" got transformed into "happy" in the article. My personal definition of "happy" doesn't really have much to do with "hard to scare".
The study is interesting to some degree but drawing conclusion from it is unwarrented, until more data is collected from more sources.
I just learned that in September, the Dalai Lama is coming to MIT to participate in a Life Sciences seminar that appears to be on exactly this topic. He's then speaking at the Fleet Center. I've already got my tickets.
www.HearMySoulSpeak.com
That's more like Taoism, which is best described, probably incorrectly, as a form of apathy wrapped in ancient dogma.
Of course, that is just my opinion having met 4 very, very apathetic, pathetic so-called "Tao'ists" over a period of 10 years. They really were hopeless to work with, and put me off studying the Tao until I'd matured a little more.
; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
I became a buddhist about 2 years ago after being raised a catholic. The article is most definitely true. People I work with comment how laid back I am, and how happy I seem. Its just a different story at home when you have a bitchy wife. How the heck is a person supposed to become enlightened when their wife is constantly picking fights and yelling. hehe
Ignorance is bliss. Welcome to the real world.
"Not only is there nothing to be gained by believing an untruth, but there is everything to lose when we sacrifice the indispensable tool of reason on the altar of superstition." - Freedom from religion foundation
"Thus that which is the most awful of evils, death, is nothing to us, since when we exist there is no death, and when there is death we do not exist." - Epicurus, 341/270 BCE
I do however agree with: "Doubt everything. Find your own light." - Siddhartha Gautama (circa 563/483 BCE).
My job gets moved to India because the worker is happier.
Just my luck to be stuck with The depressing religion of Christianity.
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As I recall from a college course several years ago, the attitudes toward the Buddha are very different between the broad, general schools of Theravada Buddhism and Mahayana Buddhism. Theravada Buddhists believe as you describe. Siddharta Gautama, the first Buddha, was a man who had a great insight into living. Mahayana Buddhism, in contrast, contains a diversity of mystical, magical beliefs that vary across its many divisions including ones that Siddhartha lived as a demonstration or revelation of what he knew before his human birth rather than as a regular human life that included a great insight. Pure Land Buddhism, in my understanding, does involve worship.
These generalizations are general, vague and not true for every Buddhist, but the original post, to me, glossed over the diversity of beliefs regarding the Buddha and the mystical nature, including worship, contained in many of them.
So, if you're suffering from the ongoing IT slump...
... I should kill Buddhists and eat the "happiness" part of their brain??
Trust me, it sounds like a good idea at first but it definitely doesn't work.
Religion certainly has its faults with worship, but to assume that all worship is bad, or at least, not based on some sort of common principle of understanding, is to assume the worst about religion.
What "common" principle is that? And, what "understanding" is there beyond the individual, and his/her need? You can believe anything you want, that's fine, but to apply it to the world around you is silly.
We aren't in the Matrix - your personal belief doesn't change the world, just your interpretation of it, which, alas, in the case of most religions, is a BAD THING.
The philosophy behind buddhism is nicely captured by Zen, which I think is a practical philosophy of life. Zen tries to capture the essence of what buddha tried to teach.
"Zen flesh, zen bones" by Paul Reps is an excellent book to start, and some would argue the only one you'd ever need. I just like its collection of weird and wonderful stories.
Happyness shouldn't be a goal. If you spend your life trying to figure out how to make the world a better place and doing whatever you think will help transform the place then you'll probably be happy. When you discover that something you did with the best of intentions actually made things worse you will feel bad, but you won't make the same mistake and you'll try figure out how to tell others you see making the same mistake about it. Before long you'll feel good again. Is it some kind of revelation that being a good person makes you feel good?
Seriously, you know you only exist in the blink of an eye in the cosmic scheme of things so you try to build things that will last. Whether you speak the insight or idea, or do something that will reduce the rate of entropy per insight really doesn't matter.
Happyness may be a side effect of doing good or believing things are getting better, but it's got other causes, or you may be simply deluding yourself.
the grass is always greener on the other side.
Buddhism's goal is to free mankind from their desires.
Therefore, a good Buddhist wouldn't desire to be happy.
Since he/she doesn't desire it, they obtain it easily as long as other people who do desire it are watching.
From the article, it appeared to me that the association was less with being a Buddhist from a doctrinal point of view (i.e. holding a belief in the four-fold truths, reincarnation, etc.) than with Buddhist practices. I wonder if you would not find a similar correlation with people who pray regularly or meditatie within the context of another meditative tradition? Having known more than a few Franciscans, my impression is on a whole that they are happier than the non-meditative orders (e.g. the Jesuits) -- yet they are not Buddhists. They are just people who practice spiritual disciplines.
"He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
Some examples of buddhist teachings:And another:That's awfully depressing; whereas a born-again Christian has a guarantee:andSo which makes more rational sense: to achieve nothingness by relief from an otherwise unending cycle of pain through reincarnations, or eternal joy with our Creator God?
Got Wisdom?
there is an old saying, "it is hard to understand other's pain". don't read BBC to find out the pain of buddishts. ask buddhists.
I think there may be some misunderstanding here as to the nature of buddhism.
First of all, it wouldn't be truely accurate to call it a religion, at least not in a conventional sense. More of a philosophy or way of living, coincidentally named for the budha for having providing it's foundation and core teachings.
The nature of buddhism centers around learning through practice, meditation, and consistant right thinking to overcome the desires and compulsions that lead us to suffering.
To say that budhists are generally happies isn't the same as saying that, by having faith in something, one can be happy and relaxed even as all falls apart around you.
Buddhism doesn't take one out of the world nor does it abdicate responsability for it to a greater power. It actually sharpens ones focus on the things that need to be done by helping to control the emotional cruft that distracts us and drives us towards suffering.
To that end, being about the elimination of desire and it's resultant suffering, a successful buddhist would tend to be happier and calmer. That being an obvious hypothesis, the article meerly relates an attempt to apply the scientific method by testing the hypothesis.
Windows: The operating system built for the internet. Unix: The operating system the Internet was built for.
it is not BEING a buddhist that makes one happy, but PRACTISING buddhism that does it......
why! this is true of ALL religions.
btw, Happiness, as we know, is not permanent. Bliss is.
this is not unique to Buddhists. It's entirely up to the spirituality or approach of each individual.
There are also plenty of suffering Buddhists amongst us. Yet at the same time I do feel that there are teachings within Buddhism that are treasures of humanity.
I have found that studying and practicing Buddhism has given me a greater appreciation of other teachings, cultures, methods, ways of life, and the human spirit (in general).
At the same time, I feel it often cheapens and can be misleading and deceptive when any spiritual teaching presents itself to sell it as a means to happiness.
This may be the goal, but it can be misleading to say that the journey is full of happiness. Even if some experience this to be true, still, it is uncompassionate to present it in a general way like that.
Often what is involved in the path is a lot of reflecting, and discovery of the tyranny of self deception (on many levels). That may lead to happiness (through liberation from self deception), but that process may not necessarily be a happy one (but it can be).
An individuals path or journey through life is not always so smooth. It's how they learn from, deal with, and adapt to what happens to them that counts in the long run, and how they share their life with their community (and fellow beings) as a whole.
As HH Dalai Lama says, it is a good thing that there are so many paths to suit the diversity of human beings.
A difficulty that some Buddhists find with an article like the one authored by the BBC here is that it makes assumptions about what it is to be a Buddhist.
Goronguer fails to mention that the SGI is an exclusivist sect of Buddhism, in that it repudiates all other Buddhist movements. This sort of sectarianism is non-buddhist by nature, and is damaging to mental development.
Secondly, groups like SGI engage in another, non-Buddhist behaviour- that of socio-political evangelism, (which of course follows as a necessary activity for any organisation that believes it has a monopoly on truth).
Regardless, It is a good idea to follow Buddha's own advice- Don't trust authority for authorities sake, but work things out for yourself. Buddhism promotes discriminating awareness, so it encourages the individual to break the mould and 'think different'. Personal experience (as a practicing Buddhist of 30 years) suggests that meditation based upon removing what are known as 'self-grasping' and 'self-cherishing' (which actually includes any form of self-based attention, including self-hatred) does decrease unhappiness, and increase happiness.
Moreover, the promotion of acceptance of full responsibility for the world plays an important part in the construction of one's identity as a Buddhist, in that our ambitions become purposed for the benefit of all, rather than merely for the benefit of self, the family, the state, or humankind.
The BBC recently also authored an article about a scientific study, that 'proves' the non-existence of ghosts.
The issue over rebirth/reincarnation will remain open for a while, regardless of our individual or societal 'scientific' views because, simply put, the realms of life after death fall outside empirical science.
1) It cannot be proved or disproved, and
2) It isn't redundant, so Ockham's razor cannot be applied.
3) Lack of evidence is not proof of non-existence.
It is easy to see from a hard science view that the disbelief of rebirth/reincarnation is as superstitious as the belief in it.
Of course, the final remark "Doubt everything. Find your own light." is a demonstration of the supreme levels of profundity that Buddha taught. This is also an appropriate quote for those Buddhists who believe that their own school/sect/club' has some sort of monopoly on Buddhist truth.
Readings from sutra point to a basic assertion that in essence, truth belongs to logic, logic belongs to language, language is limited (e.g. explaining the taste of salt cannot convey the experience), and that's all there is to it. Buddhism is 'post-structuralist' - and it's ideas are 'post-wittgenstein'
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B-U-L-L-S-H-I-T.
Religion is not meant to lead you to a calmer life.
Crussaders, suicide martyrs, inquisitors should be enough prove for that.
If you are a religious calm person is a different.
As for the "anti-religion" types (whatever that is) I know plenty of atheists that are calm and peaceful people.
IANAL but write like a drunk one.
The Bible says that we were created for the purpose of worship.
It's not just Sunday morning for a couple of hours. Recognizing that God is God and I was made for the purpose of bringing Him glory means that "whether you eat or drink or whatever you do - do it for the glory of God."
I don't worship only on Sunday. I worship God as I live my life to please Him - optimally it's 168 hours per week.
Sadly the vast majority of so-called Christians merely attend church. They are missing the point.
Respectfully,
Anomaly
But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
They're a bunch of karma whores
They think they are happy now - but they all will burn in hell. God loves you - or else!
I doubt that we will ever figure out - and I suspect that even if we did figure out we couldn't do much about it
One thing the Dalai Lama does with western scientists is travel right here to Madison, WI USA to get his brain scanned. They've found significant differences in his brain use and activity than in the rest of us, supposedly (?) because he does not worry or fear.
8-PP
> Tests carried out in the United States ...i'd be a _lot_ happier in the us than in tibet;-);-);-)
For further enlightenment, check the a.b.s.f.g FAQ and manifesto. Just say that Pedro sent you.
German philosopher says It is difficult to find happiness in oneself but it is impossible to find it anywhere else
That to justify your religion you have to drag mine into it? I sure don't justify my Christianity by citing Brahma or Buddha or anything outside of the bible. Yet you have been using the Lord Jesus Christ in an attempt to mainstream eastern religions. Your tactic merely shows that the legitimacy rests on the Lord Jesus, and that you're trying to leverage that.
Your desperate manuverings with statements like "Christianity can be considered a small part of Hinduism (philosophically)" show that either you are tragically misinformed or intentionally making wrong statements. Christianity makes sense logically, but Hinduism is so logically internally inconsistent on the other hand.
For example, Hinduism teaches that one works out, via karma, the sins of past lives by experiencing the victim instead of the perpetrator side of each sin in the past life. However this only causes a perpetual presence of things like wife beating, since if person A beats his wife in one lifetime, then in the next he is a beaten wife. This means there is another beater, and the cycle goes on forever, with no net reduction in sin possible ever. The logic of this is so {supply your own term} that it does take vast amounts of faith to believe in that religion.
I realize that you've stated your mind is closed to alternative thoughts, but for lurkers out there who want to study the topic of eastern religions vs. Christianity, I highly recommend a book by a former Hindu, ISBN 0849943272 at wherever you like to get books (I just looked at amazon and it's there).
Got Wisdom?
This is the dumbest shit I've ever seen in my life. How in the fuck are you going to measure happiness. Anyone who claims they can are totally full of shit, because nobody has any way of knowing what someone else is thinking.