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Yeah. There's a whole class of advanced statements that are true at certain levels and really harmful to anyone not very advanced. "If you meet the Buddha on the road, kill him." "Do as thou will is the whole of the law." "There is nothing you can do."
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Absolutely. At the same time, I went through many years of confusion over seemingly contradictory ideas, and yet I emerged stronger for it I think. The key, as always, is practice practice practice. Get to know your experiential reality before taking any claim too seriously.
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This is why I questioned @Failed_Buddhist with "words, words, words"! One of the clearest shifts I've had is to lose interest in talking about practice. It sometimes sticks as a habit, but it feels very not rewarding. "What is your experience like?" is the only question left.
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Yeah, and I don't think that's the point either. I just mean there comes a point when the discussion moves away from productive conversation... ... to something more like "let's compare religions and throw aspersions at things we don't like." That's when it's a waste of time.
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I've also had a few occasions (not with any of you, as far as I can remember) where I wanted to slap someone through the screen and yell: "I'm not a Mahayana Buddhist/Hindu/Christian/etc., I don't care what your fucking opinion is!"
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It's surprising and upsetting, but for whatever reason meditation Twitter is rife with attempts to proselytize disguised as "discussion". If people agree on their assumptions, that's fine. But it sometimes gets a bit wearying to listen to someone's particular religious opinion.