Yeah, ok, thats still not saying what you do really. What do you actually DO in a typical day? Your answer is pretty darn vague on specifics. Do you tend to the cats? Work in the garden? Walk around with your bowl? Sit and talk to people? meditate? Etc? You keep giving lofty overall goals without talking about the specifics. I just want to know what a monk actually does after putting on their robes every morning.
Wake up, clean up, morning prayers, morning chores, breakfast, greet, talk, teach lay people, accept food offerings, give blessings, various ceremonies such as funerals, remembrance, weddings, meditate throughout the day, evening chanting and meditation, study, write, wash up, sleep. Some days I travel to places and meet people.
I've read siddartha, it's one of the reasons I feel that Buddhism is so odd. It seems to be nothing more then one guy's ideas about how people should act laced with religious rhetoric and silliness. It would be like declaring stoics or cynics a religion.
The Buddha never claimed to be starting a religion or that he was a god worthy of worship. In his time he found statues and bowing to him quite silly, but he let people do what they were happy to do, pay respect towards him. Is it true some people do it in a religious manner that isn't the original purpose of paying homage to the Buddha as a teacher? Yes, but if they aren't hurting anyone, let people be happy doing what they are happy to do.
I don't see why these ideas need people to dress in pajamas and shave their heads in order to stay alive
To reach the ultimate goal is one of renunciation, of giving up material goods and ties to your former life. So monks and nuns give up their clothes and their hair, among other things. As mentioned before, if you have had hair all of your life and then shave it off, you will see an impact on personal identity. It is not "personality" or an exaggerated sense of self worth tied to hair, but merely how the ego and mind identifies itself based on the face and hair. If you have never shaved all your hair off or lost all your hair, it is quite easy to scoff at the idea, and I forgive you for that.
Quite a few women (and men) who have taken up the robes have told me that losing all their hair was a bigger change/shock for them than giving up anything else in their past life. It's a physical reminder of the renunciation of former self, of losing the life and self you had.
Same with the brave patients I've spoken to who are going through the final stages of terminal cancer and are undergoing treatment that makes their hair fall out. Some of which are young girls. Why do you think we have '
Locks of Love' and other such programs to give a gift of hair to the dying?
Hair restores their sense of humanity as they are battling for their lives.
Like I said, no one in the Buddhist camp -at least mine- is looking down on anyone for their beliefs. That is wrong view to assume superiority. There's more a sense of compassionate understanding, that we're all in this together. We are all suffering and understanding is more important than choosing sides in beliefs.
True, though Buddhism does have a hell of sorts (Naraka) so it's still conflicting.
The cosmology which bled over from Hinduism is unimportant within the Theravadan sect. The personal mental, physical, and spiritual hells we create for ourselves and others are far more important to us. This is based on the untold suffering that we are fully capable of creating for others in this moment and universe.
No one is forcing anyone to adopt Buddhism. Let me quote the Buddha himself:
“Do not believe in anything simply because you have heard it. Do not believe in anything simply because it is spoken and rumored by many. Do not believe in anything simply because it is found written in your religious books. Do not believe in anything merely on the authority of your teachers and elders. Do not believe in traditions because they have been handed down for many generations. But after observation and analysis, when you find that anything agrees with reason and is conducive to the good and benefit of one and all, then accept it and live up to it.”
People love Buddhism because it offers a scientific way to happiness that can also lead to the happiness of others. If you follow a path of understanding, you will see results that the Buddha listed. That's what karma is. Causes bring effects into being. Intentional actions can have intentional and unintentional effects; unintentional actions can have unintentional effects. We should be mindful of what our actions do. This will help us, and it will help society. The Stanford School of Neuroscience recently had the Dalai Lama over to give a talk, they're very interested in how Buddhism affects human psychology, much as how we're fascinated by how tiny electrical impulses affect the mind.