This is an internal truth I have known all my life, but I am finally able to put it into some type of coherent words. I have found that many spiritual teachers like to degrade the joys that life can bring, by using excuses like craving and ignorance. From what I have heard and experienced, if for example one likes to dance or sing, one should not if they are on the path to enlightenment. This is because one will sing or dance out of craving to the pleasantness, and is therefore is ignorant to the truth of their reality. One could also sing or dance out of aversion of something unpleasant the singing or dancing covers and suppresses. This to is ignorance.
I see the value in choosing not to make certain choices or decisions, like singing or dancing, for a period of time to destroy the impurities of the mind. However, after such a period of time, is it really wise to deny our internal nature? Our creative force? The bliss and joy that comes with living?
A time for everything and everything for its time.
I find the ten fetters, although may be absolute in their truth to purifying one's mind of attachment and desire, are the essential factors one must embrace to really live with liberation, which means making choices based in non-clinging, non-aversion, and non-delusion. One could call this mindfulness.
For example, if we go down the list of a few of the fetters,
1) belief in the self
I find, if we are making choices with mindfulness, free from clinging, aversion, and delusion, and comes from a place of non-clinging, non-aversion, and non-delusion, then it is essential we have a belief in the self. This belief in the self is just a belief, we can see the illusion and the ultimate reality, the divine, as we decide our choices and actions. But without a belief in the self, we are just being unconscious, we can easily be led astray, we can easily let other define our sense of self for us. Are we just a worker bee or are we more advanced than that? Who thinks for us?
2) Sceptical Doubt
I find doubt is an essential element of our mind to help us think for ourselves. The doubt as a fetter may refer to the teachings or the divine, to which I have no doubt over, but as to my interactions with the world, doubt seems to be very important. If someone lies to me, do I blindly accept it? If I have clear seeing and see the truth of the matter from my own eye, do I trust the words outside, or is the doubt rising in me just trying to remind me of my own truth?
3) Attachment to Rites and Rituals
The more I go on living, the more I see the importance of rites and rituals, but again, not with ignorance or blind faith. When one is mindful, making choices based on non-clinging, non-aversion, non-delusion, how is a ritual or ceremony such a bad event? They are essential elements humans evolved to partake in to sing, dance, and pass on wisdom from one generation to the next. To share the joys of life together, while being mindful free from ignorance, does not seem like such a bad thing.
4) Lust for Material or Immaterial Existence
We are already living, we are already here, is it wrong to embrace our life? Again, if we are mindful and purify our minds of the desires to exist, we are liberated to fully start living, to make choices from a place of non-craving, non-aversion, and non-delusion.
5) Restlessness
Everything seems to exist on a scale from nothing to something. Because we are already living, we are already here, is restlessness really such a bad thing? If restlessness is only guiding us to do something from nothing, is it really something we would want to disappear? If one sees through the illusion and sees the ultimate reality (the divine), restlessness is only a power within us to guide us, our purpose. What is purpose? The reason to exist, a choice we are capable of making free from craving, aversion, and delusion.
The seven deadly sins:
greed; gluttony; lust; envy; wrath; pride; sloth.
I have found that when one is making choices free from craving, aversion, and delusion, then the seven "deadly" sins are not something to fear. There are part of our nature, and can exist in a state of non-craving, non-aversion, and non-delusion. For example, greed is the part of ourselves to remind us we need something to survive, like food. It is just the reality of living. Wrath can be our power to stand up for ourselves when it is proper, in a place free from non-craving, non-aversion, and non-delusion. Pride could be our power that arises to remind us of the truth we are experiencing, a place that can be free from craving, aversion, and delusion.
The Process of Becoming....
Oh it is so bad, say all the spiritual teachers. The fact is it happens whether or not I give my attention to it. The problem is not the process of becoming, but the attachment to the process itself, the underlying desire. If we are making our choices from a place of non-craving, non-aversion, and non-delusion, and the process of becoming keeps happening anyway, why not make choices seeing the truth of the illusion and the ultimate reality? We are here anyway, we are living. If we have so much aversion to existence, we should have stayed in the nexus.
Bottom-line, I think we people have lots of internal power, and when utilized properly, can lead to one actually enjoying one's life. This can come from a place of non-craving, non-aversion, and non-delusion. All the parts of our minds, like the deadly sins, seem to have very important roles within us. To me it sounds like a bad idea to ignore our own internal nature because someone else says they are bad. To me, that sounds like the Other is only trying to silence us. Although i can see how our minds can become corrupted with attachment and desire, when we operate out of a place of liberation and love, then the "bad" part of ourselves seem to serve a very strong purpose.