Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - What is the relationship between Chinese studies and psychology?

What is the relationship between Chinese studies and psychology?

Lan Xin yuxin

I recently met a senior psychological counselor. He speaks affably. No matter what questions he asks, he always answers calmly. Like a born monk.

After listening to his two lectures, I asked him a question. Because the name of his consulting room has the word "Chinese studies", I don't quite understand how he put psychology and Chinese studies together.

He explained that Confucianism, Buddhism and Taoism in Chinese studies are all-encompassing. China people talk about "neutralization". The source of life comes from water. Buddha was born in India, but grew up in China. Buddha grows up but can't blossom and bear fruit. That is to say, you can't enter daily life.

Where does Chinese studies point? The same thing is rubbish to you and precious to others. When you have both, you have the whole. Wisdom is Chinese studies. This is the root of traditional culture, often a point. Not that extensive.

Psychology. Not psychology. Artists understand people's hearts. Psychologists understand the theory. Psychologists don't know their own hearts. If you can understand yourself, you can understand others.

The real problem lies in ourselves. If something in life stumbles you, it is that there is something wrong with this individual. When people's problems are solved, there will be no problems.

You point it to a truth and knowledge. Taoism and Confucianism use theories whenever they have them. What I brought did not solve the problem, but solved the confusion.

No matter where the problem occurs, it should be solved. You come for chaos, and you must find the place of chaos. Go back to your body and solve the problem.

The more you live, the more problems you have, and when you solve them, they happen again. The problem will never be solved, but you can solve it whether it makes you painful or not. Problems can't stop, but pain can be solved. This question makes you suffer, struggle, insomnia, depression and anxiety. This is the problem. It's amazing if you don't have these feelings. The core is not events, but the pain they bring to themselves. Breaking the peace will be very painful. None of this can be solved when you are in pain.

The dust on the mirror is pain. Our job is to wipe the dust.

I quickly recorded this while he was talking. When I read it again, I felt I understood it, but what the teacher said seemed to be intermittent. Can you understand?