NEKKHAMMA
Nekkhamma is a Pali word translated as
"renunciation," or "the pleasure of renunciation." It
conveys specifically "giving up the world and leading a holy
life," and "freedom from lust, craving and desires."
Nekkhamma
is the first practice associated with "Right Intention," in
Buddhism's Noble Eightfold Path. In the Theravada list of ten
perfections, nekkhamma is the third practice of
"perfection," and involves non-attachment (detachment).
Worldly
desires based on craving, cruelty to living beings based on anger, and
the misdirection of one's own path through ignorance, are all destroyed by
real renunciation.
Bhikkhu
Bodhi is an American Theravada Buddhist monk who was appointed the
second president of the Buddhist Publication Society and who has edited
and authored several publications concerning Theravada
Buddhism. He describes the various and ultimate benefits
of nekkhamma:
"Contemplating
the dukkha (suffering) inherent in desire is one way to incline the mind
to renunciation. Another way is to contemplate directly the benefits flowing
from renunciation. To move from desire to renunciation is not, as might be
imagined, to move from happiness to grief, from abundance to destitution. It is
to pass from gross, entangling pleasures to an exalted happiness and peace,
from a condition of servitude to one of self-mastery. Desire ultimately breeds
fear and sorrow, but renunciation gives fearlessness and joy."
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