Embracing The Present Moment
by Adrian Borda
Original - Not For Sale
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Dimensions
55.000 x 70.000 cm.
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Title
Embracing The Present Moment
Artist
Adrian Borda
Medium
Painting - Oil On Canvas
Description
Meditation, according to Eastern philosophy, is a practice intended to strip one of all veils to reveal the truest and highest self. Through the practice of meditation, one can reach enlightenment, or nirvana, and all schools of thought surrounding this topic share one common belief: this enlightened state is a death of the ego.
Enlightenment is sometimes referred to as “the great death” — in stark contrast to “the small death” that occurs when your physical body expires. Buddhism believes that this death of the ego is much more significant than the death of the physical form. Contrary to Western psychology’s definition of “ego”, Eastern philosophy views the ego as entirely false and unnecessary. According to Eastern philosophy, there is no such thing as having a “healthy ego,” but that the ego is nothing more than a false illusion of the self that should be stripped away. This ego is simply a construct created by the mind, imprisoning us to believe that we are the center of our own universe.
It gives us a false sense of importance and deeply roots us to wants, such as recognition and approval. The Buddha believed that the root of all our suffering stems from ignorance and taught that our clinging to the identity of the ego was a source of great ignorance and, in turn, great suffering.
The simplest way to envision “the great death” is to imagine the absence of thought. Thought is all that provokes our egos. The well-known quote from Descartes, “I think, therefore I am” essentially sums up this concept of ego. This sense of self exists because of thought that provokes us to believe that we are separate from all else and that we are at the center of all that surrounds us...that our very identities exist simply because we are the ones creating thought.
Removing the sense of self and all the fears and wants associated with it, allows for the incorporation of all else. It allows us to see how we are all inherently connected, how there is no real distinction between you and me.
Uploaded
June 24th, 2020
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