Diebert van Rhijn wrote:
One aspect that just has to be part of it, in terms of perpetuation, is that the whole process starts to offer something that outweighs and outshines every other interest in terms of joy, fulfilment and sufficiency.
Yeah experiencing this kind of content liberation from attachment makes burden or desire appear utterly useless and unnecessary compared to the calm peace that comes with an awareness of the truth, unaffected. It is as something you rest 'in'. There is a natural 'love' or content 'awe' that comes with undisturbed existence, sufficiency is a good word. As if attachments only gets in the way of this blissful abiding.
Diebert van Rhijn wrote:Before answering that some more focus is needed on what is meant by all these terms. Dive in again and see if it can be reflected on even better. Would the answer not follow from there?
What is meant with 'craving' is that which drives one to want to go meet girls, call friends, play sports, make money, look good, secure a future, act in the world and assert oneself with each passing opportunity.
I wonder, is a complete end to this want, and end to clinging even to 'life'? The fact is that one doesn't
need to continue doing or perpetuating the life of the 'self', perpetuating it is a sort of clinging.
I take 'an end to the craving for existence' as meaning one of the two 'possibilities' I referred to above.
a) 'Unsurpassed void', non-being, not returning or settling on any experience, no craving for anything. The possibility of an existence comprised of only that timeless unawareness one knows in 'the dark' (Which is as far as I will go describing that which we can't describe). I don't see this as being the most 'likely', but can't dismiss it as a possibility, having spent so much 'time' in such a state without attachment to particular forms.
b) Simply not-doing, non-action (non-attachment in which there is the awareness that one isn't in control of the passing experience, isn't part of it, not the self, no free will, not 'me' participating in the survival options, a non-inclusive show of form)
Does that clarify the 'issue'? You quoted that life itself means suffering, the possibilities I'm describing are between the end of suffering meaning end to life as it is, (being,doing, eating,surviving) or simply an end to attachment to life and the self-aspect of these experiences. I 'support' the second as a possibility for the end of suffering. Dennis might say the way is to end discrimination and preference/aversion rather than to 'trash life'.