Happiness.

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Alexander Davis

<i>"Hello" in your host country's language:</i> Namaste <i>Home Institution (your U.S. University/College):</i> Knox College <i>Expected graduation year:</i> 2021 <i>Destination city & country:</i> Bodh Gaya, India <i>Program provider:</i> Carleton College <i>Major/minor:</i> Creative Writing Major Religious Studies Minor <i>Demographics:</i> First-generation. White male. Mentally disabled (bipolar II, OCD, PTSD) <i>Future career aspirations:</i> Teaching Meditation <i>Top 3 goals for your time abroad:</i> 1.) Understand Buddhist history as it developed and spread from India 2.) Become acquainted with different meditation techniques among traditions 3.) Better understand Buddhist philosophy as it is interpreted among different groups.

This trip is coming to a close. It is difficult to realize how much of your world has been taken up by something until it departs. Iโ€™m sure itโ€™ll sink in once everyone leaves. I have chosen to stay on here in Thailand for an indefinite period of time following the program’s end date. My hope is to do a ten-day meditation retreat at a temple here in Chiang Mai, Wat Ram Poengโ€”the only hang up I have is that itโ€™ll be hard. Really, this doesnโ€™t mean Iโ€™m not going to do it, it only means that Iโ€™m scared.

This is it. School is over and the rest of life is relatively unstructured and up to me to decide. I have student debt of course, but Iโ€™ll figure a way to pay that offโ€”hopefully as soon as possible. I donโ€™t have much of a desire to participate in the rat-race shit-show that is society, so the sooner I can get out of the mess, the better. That being said, a part of me still loves it all.

I like the coffee shops, the goofing around, and, of course, I love my family and miss home. That being said, Iโ€™m young, Iโ€™ve got goals, and Iโ€™m determined to see where I can fulfill them. Ultimately, the goal is happinessโ€”thatโ€™s everyoneโ€™s goal really. Recently I read an essay by Ajahn Geoff titled โ€œPushing the Limits.โ€ Usually we like to think that all desire is bad since the second noble truth in Buddhism is literally โ€œthe cause of

suffering is desire.โ€ Cool thing is, just like good sci-fi evil AIs, the destruction of the system lies within the system itselfโ€”meaning to say, you use desire to overcome desire.

We all want happiness. All other desires are just secondaryโ€”the cup of coffee, screaming at the cashier, going on a walk, or even just wanting to move from one spot in the room to another, itโ€™s all just about a way to make us happy. Now, given the second examples, we have a tendency to choose strategies that really donโ€™t lead us in the right direction. We have a really bad habit of this.

As for myself, Iโ€™m trying to find a way thatโ€™s harmless and helpful. Leaving the world a better place than the one that I found has been a goal of mine for a long time. It took a while for me to realize that making the world a better place cannot entail self-destruction, specifically in terms of the mind. Draining oneself emotionally and burning out is just a recipe for becoming a burden onto the very people one set out to help. Iโ€™ve done this.

What Iโ€™m doing now is seeking a way to build myself up, up, and up. To create a stable foundation of compassion and wisdom so as to achieve inner peace, in turn gaining the ability to help others find the same. Thatโ€™s the big dream, my missionโ€™s statement.

My next step in achieving that goalโ€”find a teacher. Admirable friendship is absolutely key to these thingsโ€”so I donโ€™t quite have time to dilly dally around.

Iโ€™ll post once more before I sign off for good.

Thank you for reading and take care,

-Alexander Davis

First image is the bus from Chiang Rai to Mae Sai. It was about fifty degrees, all the windows were open, as were the doors. The whole trip was cold and loud. Could’ve been worse.

Second image is alms-round at Wat Ram Poeng.