The act of merit itself is another word for happiness, and suffering is the activity of clinging
"It’s in the actions themselves: Whether they’re skillful or unskillful
is what makes us happy or unhappy. We tend to think of happiness as a
product of an action, something we receive. The same with pain: We think
it’s the product of the action. But there’s a passage where the Buddha
indicates that the action itself is either the happiness or the pain. In the case of acts of merit, he says that the phrase, act of merit,
is another name for happiness. The happiness is there in the action.
Similarly with suffering: Suffering is the clinging. Clinging is an
activity; it’s something you do.
So when people are misbehaving,
treating other people wrongly, they’re already suffering. They may not
admit it, but that’s because their faculties are impaired. When you see
that in someone else, you have to turn and look at yourself. Your desire
to see them punished is a sign that your faculties are impaired, too.
It’s your desire that’s creating suffering right there."
~ Thanissaro Bhikkhu "When Your Will is Ill" (Meditations11)
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