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Even so, some in the Buddhist community saw the tragedy as an opportunity to publicly ponder some difficult questions. To what degree is the image of the peaceful Buddhist based in reality? Do Buddhists and Buddhist temples deal directly enough with the topic of mental illness? And, in fact, might Buddhism hold a special attraction for people who are mentally ill?
The tragedy has triggered “the beginning of the conversation that Buddhists are human beings, too,” with human flaws, said the Rev. Danny Fisher, a lay Buddhist minister and blogger who runs the Buddhist chaplaincy at the University of the West. “Which is good, we need to have that.”
And with its focus on easing emotional and spiritual suffering and close connection in the West to psychology, Buddhism is particularly appealing to “mentally unbalanced people seeking to right the ship of their lives, to self-medicate, to curb their impulses,” said Clark Strand, a contributing editor to the Buddhist publication Tricycle magazine and a former Zen monk.
From the start, Western Buddhism has overlapped greatly with the field of psychology. Many prominent American teachers were initially psychologists and research shows many people pursue meditation to ease psychological stress.
“There are many therapists who are Buddhist or who take materials from Buddhism,” said Charles Jones, a religion and culture professor at Catholic University. “Mental illness is largely about suffering, about mental states that cause us to suffer,” he adds. “Buddhism is a religion that has made that a large focus.”
While small, the American Buddhist community is the most diverse in the world. But it tends to cluster — ethnic groups of Asians in their own temples and then separate worship spaces for what Strand calls “the upper middle way,” a Buddhism that has tended to appeal to Americans with higher incomes and educations.
Thai Buddhists are part of Theravada tradition, which is common across South and Southeast Asia and claims to be the oldest and most authentic form of Buddhism, said Jones.
MarsSentinel
"Buddhism is particularly appealing to “mentally unbalanced people seeking to right the ship of their lives, to self-medicate, to curb their impulses,” said Clark Strand, a contributing editor to the Buddhist publication Tricycle magazine and a former Zen monk.
The possibility that Alexis tried meditation to ease his mental suffering prompted Strand to wonder whether he may have sought out Buddhism “as a last hope to avert this tragedy.”
“It may be that he was seeking a meditative discipline that would help him to get a handle on that or to learn to work with those voices to still them or to give his mind something else to do,” Strand said, referring to reports that Alexis was haunted by mysterious voices. “Buddhism tends not to be a quick fix for such stuff.”
stormdancer777
I would love to hear the views from the Buddhist on the forum , and as mentioned in this article they question the difference between western Buddhism and ethnic Buddhism, something I have questioned myself.
more later.
www.washingtonpost.com... -6c66b668ea55_story_1.html
Even so, some in the Buddhist community saw the tragedy as an opportunity to publicly ponder some difficult questions. To what degree is the image of the peaceful Buddhist based in reality? Do Buddhists and Buddhist temples deal directly enough with the topic of mental illness? And, in fact, might Buddhism hold a special attraction for people who are mentally ill?
The tragedy has triggered “the beginning of the conversation that Buddhists are human beings, too,” with human flaws, said the Rev. Danny Fisher, a lay Buddhist minister and blogger who runs the Buddhist chaplaincy at the University of the West. “Which is good, we need to have that.”
And with its focus on easing emotional and spiritual suffering and close connection in the West to psychology, Buddhism is particularly appealing to “mentally unbalanced people seeking to right the ship of their lives, to self-medicate, to curb their impulses,” said Clark Strand, a contributing editor to the Buddhist publication Tricycle magazine and a former Zen monk.
From the start, Western Buddhism has overlapped greatly with the field of psychology. Many prominent American teachers were initially psychologists and research shows many people pursue meditation to ease psychological stress.
“There are many therapists who are Buddhist or who take materials from Buddhism,” said Charles Jones, a religion and culture professor at Catholic University. “Mental illness is largely about suffering, about mental states that cause us to suffer,” he adds. “Buddhism is a religion that has made that a large focus.”
While small, the American Buddhist community is the most diverse in the world. But it tends to cluster — ethnic groups of Asians in their own temples and then separate worship spaces for what Strand calls “the upper middle way,” a Buddhism that has tended to appeal to Americans with higher incomes and educations.
Thai Buddhists are part of Theravada tradition, which is common across South and Southeast Asia and claims to be the oldest and most authentic form of Buddhism, said Jones.
I practiced Buddhism myself for a short period but strayed away from it after hearing to stick with what I was born into this incarnation.
thoughts?www.huffingtonpost.com...edit on 113030p://bThursday2013 by stormdancer777 because: (no reason given)
MarsSentinel
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"Buddhism is particularly appealing to “mentally unbalanced people seeking to right the ship of their lives, to self-medicate, to curb their impulses,” said Clark Strand, a contributing editor to the Buddhist publication Tricycle magazine and a former Zen monk."
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And this is total bull#. No other way to say it.
This is an assertion. Nothing more.
THink about it. What is your subjective perception of Buddhists?
I am not asking what you have heard others say on TV. I am asking what do you in your heart and mind think of when you think of Buddhists?
Use your own mind. It makes zero sense that Buddhism has anything to do with this.
Sorry, but this is a Road to Nowhere.
imitator
MarsSentinel
"Buddhism is particularly appealing to “mentally unbalanced people seeking to right the ship of their lives, to self-medicate, to curb their impulses,” said Clark Strand, a contributing editor to the Buddhist publication Tricycle magazine and a former Zen monk.
My goodness Clark Strand, what a dumb thing to say! This could simply be replaced by ice cream...
Ice Cream is particularly appealing and self medicating to the mentally ill.
"Buddhism is particularly appealing to “mentally unbalanced people seeking to right the ship of their lives, to self-medicate, to curb their impulses,” said Clark Strand, a contributing editor to the Buddhist publication Tricycle magazine and a former Zen monk."
Even so, some in the Buddhist community saw the tragedy as an opportunity to publicly ponder some difficult questions. To what degree is the image of the peaceful Buddhist based in reality? Do Buddhists and Buddhist temples deal directly enough with the topic of mental illness? And, in fact, might Buddhism hold a special attraction for people who are mentally ill?