Trying to meet non-material needs by material means
I've written about happiness several times; about how less is more and life is like a soap opera, and when people have asked what attachments are.
Happiness is an inner state. An inner state cannot be brought about by external circumstances. An inner state arises from our mind. From our perceptions and thoughts. From the conclusions we draw and the things we tell ourselves. So happiness does not come from more things or experiences. And it certainly does not come from believing the advertising we are assailed with everywhere we look.
The Buddha warned us about the three poisons of greed, anger, and ignorance. Our greed can destroy our practice. And as we are now beginning to realize, greed can destroy our world. It can do this in many ways. We desire power, we crave revenge, we yearn for love—the list is endless. But the bottom line is: “I want.” And the unspoken thought following this declaration is…and I’m just not going to think about the consequences.
Today I read Use less or use better?. The entry, the excerpt below from a New Yorker article, and the comments were equally good.
"I asked [Amory] Lovins how his plan to save the world through energy efficiency could accommodate the open-ended nature of human desire. If, as he claims, conservation is profitable, what was to stop the profits from going straight toward more consumption?
"It doesn't automatically prevent that," he said. But, he added, "you might plow the money back into more efficiency rather than more powerboats and helicopter skiing. After all, you don't rewash your clean clothes in the cheaper-to-run washing machine, because your clothes are already clean. At some point, I think you get jaded by continuous trips to Bali.
"Your neighbors might point out that what you're doing is increasingly antisocial," he continued. "On a moral or spiritual level, at some point you may discover you're not all that happy having more stuff or more travel. Trying to meet non-material needs by material means is stupid and futile. Every faith tradition that I know decries materialism."Markets are meant to be greedy, not fair. Efficient, not sufficient. They're very good at short-term allocation of scarce resources, but that's all they're good at. They were never meant to tell you how much is enough or how to fulfill the higher purpose of a human being."
We need to figure out where happiness comes from, what our preoccupation with self-gratification is doing to our world and the less fortunate beings we share it with, and how we are going to change.
And as we know from our practice of Buddhism, change starts with ourself.
* "Mr. Green: Environmentalism's Most Optimistic Guru," January, 2007 New Yorker, Elizabeth Kolbert with Amory Lovins
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