The real basis for a sense of connectedness comes through kamma. When you interact with another person, a connection is made. A connection of skillful behavior starts with generosity, and grows with the gift of virtue.
"The real basis for a sense of connectedness comes through kamma. When you interact with another person, a connection is made.
Now,
it can be a positive or a negative connection, depending on the
intention. With generosity you create a positive connection, a helpful
connection, a connection where you’re glad that the boundary is down, a
connection where good things can flow back and forth. If it’s unskillful
kamma, you’re creating a connection, you’re creating an opening that
sooner or later you’re going to regret. There’s a saying in the
Dhammapada that a hand without a wound can hold poison and not be
harmed. In other words, if you don’t have any bad kamma, the results of
bad kamma won’t come to you. But if you have a wound on your hand, then
if you hold poison it will seep through the wound and kill you.
Unskillful kamma is just that, a wound. It’s an opening for poisonous
things to come in.
The opposite principle also works. If there’s a
connection of skillful behavior, a good connection is formed. This sort
of positive connection starts with generosity, and grows with the gift
of virtue. As the Buddha said, when you hold to your precepts no matter
what, with no exceptions, it’s a gift of security to all beings. You
give unlimited security to everyone, and so you have a share in that
unlimited security as well. With the gift of meditation, you protect
other people from the effects of your greed, anger, and delusion. And
you get protected as well.
So this is what generosity does: It
makes your mind more spacious and creates good connections with the
people around you. It dissolves the boundaries that otherwise would keep
the happiness from spreading around."
~ Thanissaro Bhikkhu "Generosity First" (Meditations1)
Comments
Post a Comment