Mimetic Desire
There can, however, be good desires too - the desire for knowledge, to help others, to be a better person. As Jeff Cannon, a self- styled modern American monk, points out, desire is not an enemy to a happy and balanced life; it can be the engine o...

There can, however, be good desires too - the desire for knowledge, to help others, to be a better person. As Jeff Cannon, a self- styled modern American monk, points out, desire is not an enemy to a happy and balanced life; it can be the engine of greater awareness. But if desire is driven by ego or self-importance, it ceases to be good. As the Buddhist doctrine enunciates, attachment to desire is the root cause to all suffering.
So, should one cease desiring? Here is a delicious paradox: one does not have to 'cease all desires but merely replace one species of desire with another - the desire not to have desires'. One needs to sit back and analyse one's desires. Answers become self-evident.
As poet-painter William Blake said, those who restrain desire do so because theirs is weak enough to be restrained. So, restrain not your desires; channelise them. To paraphrase, the earnestness of your desire to fulfil your desire will determine the distance you are likely to travel.
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