Reframing the Buddhist teaching of greed, hatred, and delusion as drivers of toxic exposure systems and consumption patterns.
Dipa Ma grounded her teaching in the Three Poisons—greed, aversion, and delusion—that generate suffering. These same forces shape environmental toxicity: greed drives industrial production of cheap goods with toxic chemicals; aversion leads us to ignore uncomfortable truths about exposures; delusion blinds us to long-term health consequences of convenience. Understanding how these mental patterns perpetuate toxic environments moves responsibility from abstract corporations to lived human behavior. By examining your own greed for convenience, aversion to inconvenience, and delusion about safety, you interrupt the cycle at its root. This Buddhist framework reveals that environmental toxins are not merely chemical problems but manifestations of unskillful mental states, making personal awareness and ethical choice essential to genuine health.
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