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Craving and Anguish as the Root of Pain – Stephen Batchelor

by Jerry Jordan MBA, MEd, MCouns on 31 August 2010

Consistent with Buddha’s first Noble Truth, Stephen Batchelor clarifies “suffering”, discussing this concept as “anguish”:

“Anguish emerges from craving for life to be other than it is. In the face of a changing world, such craving seeks consolation in something permanent and reliable, in a self that is in control of things, in a God who is in charge of destiny. The irony of this strategy is that it turns out to be the cause of what it seeks to dispel. In yearning for anguish to be assuaged in such ways, we reinforce what creates anguish in the first place: the craving for life to be other than it is. We find ourselves spinning in a vicious circle. The more acute the anguish, the more we want to be rid of it, but the more we want to be rid of it, the more acute it gets.”

(Stephen Batchelor in “Buddhism Without Beliefs”, p 41)

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