The Atlantic

Why So Many Americans Are Turning to Buddhism
Olga Khazan<https://www.theatlantic.com/author/olga-khazan/>
Mar 7, 2019

The ancient Eastern religion is helping Westerners with very modern 
mental-health problems



Dressed in flowing gold robes, the bald female meditation teacher told us to do 
nothing. We were to sit silently in our plastic chairs, close our eyes, and 
focus on our breath. I had never meditated, but I’d gone to church, so I 
instinctively bowed my head. Then I realized, given that this would last for 15 
minutes, I should probably find a more comfortable neck position.


This was the first of two meditation sessions of the Kadampa Buddhism class I 
attended this week near my house, in Northern Virginia, and I did not reach 
nirvana. Because we were in a major city, occasional sirens outside blasted 
through the quiet, and because this was a church basement, people were laughing 
and talking in the hallways. One guy wandered in to ask if this was an 
Alcoholics Anonymous meeting. The more we focused on our breath, the teacher 
assured us, the more these distractions would fade away.


After we had meditated for 15 minutes, the teacher shifted focus to the topic 
of the class: letting go of resentments. This was the real reason I had come to 
this meditation class, rather than simply meditating on my own at home with an 
app. I wanted to learn more about Buddhism and how its teachings might be able 
to improve my mental health—and that of the myriad other Americans who have 
flocked to some form of the religion in recent years. These newcomers aren’t 
necessarily seeking spiritual enlightenment or a faith community, but rather 
hoping for a quick boost of cognitive healing.


The people I spoke with were young and old, but few were Buddhist by birth. 
Perhaps some have just run out of options: Mental-health disorders are 
up<https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/322877.php> in Western societies, 
and the answer doesn’t seem to be church attendance, which is 
down<https://news.gallup.com/opinion/polling-matters/242015/church-leaders-declining-religious-service-attendance.aspx>.
 There’s always therapy, but it’s so expensive. My meditation class was $12.

As she opened a book on Buddhist teachings, the teacher told the class that 
holding grudges is harmful. Resentment feels like clutching a burning stick and 
complaining that it’s burning us. And yet, being harmed by someone also hurts. 
So, the teacher said, the question was this: “What do I do with my mind if I 
feel like I’ve been harmed by someone?”


Americans everywhere seem to be asking themselves variations on this very 
question: What do we do with our minds?


________________________________


The 40-something dad in Los Angeles was plateauing. He had achieved most of his 
career goals, rising to the position of senior manager at a large company. But 
the competitive nature of the work had taken its toll on his marriage, and he 
was in the process of getting a divorce. He rarely saw his grown children. “In 
short, I am going through a midlife crisis,” the dad told me via email, a few 
days before I attended the meditation class. (He asked to remain anonymous, 
because his divorce and other struggles aren’t public.)


Last year, this dad turned to traditional psychotherapy for a few months, but 
he didn’t see as much of a benefit from it as he had hoped. He felt like he was 
mostly being taught to justify destructive emotions and behaviors. His 
therapist did, however, recommend two books that were helpful: How to Be an 
Adult in Relationships, by David Richo, and The Wise Heart, by Jack Kornfield. 
Both authors work in Buddhist themes and ideas, and earlier this year they 
introduced him to the practice of meditation.


Hungry for more, the dad recently attended a Buddhist meditation class in 
Hollywood, where he learned ways to deepen his own meditation practice and to 
change his approach to relationships. Now he feels more open and is willing to 
be more vulnerable around his family and friends. “As a Catholic, I struggle 
with some of the religious concepts,” he says, “but it doesn’t prevent me from 
adopting the Buddhist techniques and philosophies.” Besides, he told me, it 
really does seem like the universe has been putting Buddhism in front of him.


Though precise numbers on its popularity are hard to come by, Buddhism does 
seem to be emerging in the Western, type-A universe. The journalist Robert 
Wright’s Why Buddhism Is True became a best seller in 2017. Buddhist meditation 
centers have<https://lotuslightcenter.org/> recently popped up in places such 
as Knoxville, Tennessee, and Lakewood, 
Ohio<https://www.cleveland.com/metro/index.ssf/2018/02/buddhist_center_has_grand_open.html>.
 There are now dozens of Buddhist podcasts, among many more apps and playlists 
geared specifically toward personal, non-Buddhist meditation. Four in 10 
American 
adults<http://businessresearcher.sagepub.com/sbr-1946-105603-2878495/20180129/the-meditation-industry>
 now say they meditate at least weekly.


Hugh Byrne, the director of the Center for Mindful Living in Washington, D.C., 
says the local meditation community has “blossomed in the past few years.” As I 
stress-Ubered from meeting to meeting in D.C. recently, I noticed a few 
“meditation spaces” where far more consumerist establishments used to be. 
Academic research on mindfulness meditation has also exploded, making what in 
the West was once an esoteric practice for hippies more akin to a life hack for 
all.


Buddhism has been popular in various forms among certain celebrities and tech 
elites, but the religion’s primary draw for many Americans now appears to be 
mental health. The ancient religion, some find, helps them manage the slings 
and arrows and subtweets of modern life. Many people are 
stress<https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2017/03/strangers-in-their-own-land/518733/>ed
 
out<https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2017/03/strangers-in-their-own-land/518733/>
 by the constant drama of the current administration, and work hours have 
overwhelmed<https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2019/02/religion-workism-making-americans-miserable/583441/>
 the day. There’s something newly appealing about a practice that instructs you 
to just sit, be aware, and realize nothing lasts forever. Perhaps the comfort 
comes simply from knowing that the problems that bedevil humans have been 
around since long before Gmail.


A few themes and ideas seem to unite the disparate experiences of the people I 
interviewed. The Buddha’s first “noble truth” is that “life is 
suffering<https://asiasociety.org/education/origins-buddhism>,” and many of 
Buddhism’s newly minted Western practitioners have interpreted this to mean 
that accepting emotional pain might be preferable to trying to alleviate it. 
“Buddhism admits that suffering is inevitable,” says Daniel Sanchez, a 
24-year-old in New Jersey. “I shouldn’t focus on avoiding suffering, but learn 
how to deal with suffering.”

In addition to meditating every morning and night, Sanchez reads the Diamond 
Sutra and Heart Sutra, texts from the early Middle Ages, and listens to zen 
talks. The sutras are quite a departure from the normal content of 
psychotherapy, in which one might ponder what truly makes one happy. Buddhist 
thought suggests that one should not compulsively crave comfort and avoid 
discomfort, which some see as permission to hop off the hedonic treadmill.


A Colorado life coach named Galen Bernard told me that Comfortable With 
Uncertainty, by the Buddhist nun Pema Chodron, has influenced his well-being 
more than anything else, except perhaps his very first experience on Prozac. He 
says the book and its teachings have helped him avoid labeling certain 
experiences as negative by default. For example, transitioning to a friendship 
with an ex-girlfriend after their breakup was painful for him at first, but 
Chodron’s and others’ writings helped him see that “it might seem like too much 
pain,” he said, “but actually it’s just an experience I’m having that … can 
actually be a portal to joy on the other side.”


________________________________


For decades, people have been attempting self-improvement through classes and 
seminars, many of which incorporated elements of Eastern religions. The Human 
Potential 
Movement<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_Potential_Movement#cite_note-13> 
of the 1960s influenced the work of the foundational psychologist Abraham 
Maslow and, perhaps less positively, the 
Rajneesh<https://newrepublic.com/article/147853/human-potential-movement-gone-awry>
 movement, documented in the Netflix show Wild Wild Country. In the 1970s, the 
organization Erhard Seminars Training, or EST, offered courses on how to “take 
responsibility for your 
life<https://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/29/fashion/the-return-of-werner-erhard-father-of-self-help.html>”
 and “get 
it<https://slate.com/culture/2016/04/the-true-story-of-est-the-group-that-seduces-philip-in-this-season-of-the-americans.html>.”

What’s different—and perhaps reassuring—about Buddhism is that it’s an existing 
religion practiced by half a billion people. Because relatively few Caucasian 
Americans grew up Buddhist, they generally don’t associate any familial baggage 
with it like some do with, say, the Christianity or Judaism of their 
childhoods. While liberating, this also means that the practice of secular 
Buddhism often differs dramatically from the religion itself. All of the 
secular practitioners I spoke with for this piece are reading different books, 
listening to different podcasts, and following different teachers and 
traditions. Their interpretations of Buddhist teachings aren’t necessarily 
consistent with one another or with traditional texts.


I ran some of their insights by an expert in Buddhism, David McMahan at 
Franklin and Marshall College, who said some of these Western interpretations 
are slightly morphed from Buddhism’s original cultures and contexts. Buddhism 
carries with it a set of values and morals that white Americans don’t always 
live by. Much like “cafeteria Catholics” ignore parts of the religion that 
don’t resonate with them, some Westerners focus on only certain elements of 
Buddhist philosophy and don’t endorse, say, Buddhism’s view of reincarnation or 
worship of the Buddha. Call them “buffet Buddhists.”



Taken out of their Buddhist context, practices like meditation “become like a 
dry sponge,” McMahan said, “soaking up whatever values are around.” Traditional 
monks don’t “meditate for 
business<https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/287524>.”

This so-called secular Buddhism, says Autry Johnson, a Colorado bartender and 
tourism worker who meditates regularly, “is a little more accessible to people 
that wouldn’t primarily identify as Buddhists, or already identify with another 
religion or philosophy, but want to adopt aspects of Buddhist practice to 
supplement their current worldview.” (Indeed, many meditation centers emphasize 
that you don’t have to be Buddhist to attend sessions.)


Buffet Buddhism may not be traditional, but its flexibility does allow its 
adherents to more easily employ the philosophy for an antidepressant jolt. Some 
people practice Buddhism and meditation as an alternative to psychotherapy or 
psychiatric medication, given mental-health care’s cost and scarcity: Sixty 
percent of 
counties<https://www.newamericaneconomy.org/press-release/new-study-shows-60-percent-of-u-s-counties-without-a-single-psychiatrist/>
 in the U.S. don’t have a single psychiatrist. “I have pretty good health 
insurance,” Bernard said, “but if I want support, it’s a month and a half to 
see someone new. Having a resource that I can pop open is invaluable.”


Some people turn to both Buddhism and psychotherapy. “There’s an overlap 
between the reason people will come to therapy and the reason they come to 
meditation,” says Byrne, the Center for Mindful Living director. Some 
therapists are even starting to incorporate Buddhist concepts into their 
practices. Tara Brach, a psychologist and the founder of the Insight Meditation 
Community of Washington, D.C., offers meditations and talks with titles like 
“From Human Doing to Human Being” on her 
website<https://www.tarabrach.com/guided-meditations/>. In Texas, the 
psychologist Molly Layton encourages clients to mindfully “sit with their 
thoughts,” rather than to “jump into the cycle of their thinking.”


Mary Liz Austin, who practices psychotherapy at the Center for Mindful Living, 
similarly helps clients see that “it’s the attachment to the outcome that 
really causes suffering.” Another favorite teaching of hers is Chodron’s 
aphorism “Everything is 
workable<https://books.google.com/books?id=Vw87euioS0cC&pg=PA150&lpg=PA150&dq=pema+chodron%27s+%22everything+is+workable%22&source=bl&ots=SNYPH0uNww&sig=ACfU3U1xwjwpBht4hPwTobSHSW3BbXjMHA&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwj2iuS8-uvgAhVkU98KHVOHBgIQ6AEwBXoECAQQAQ#v=onepage&q=pema%20chodron's%20%22everything%20is%20workable%22&f=false>.”
 This means, essentially, that something good might come out of even the worst 
moments. “I’m having an experience right now with my father-in-law. He’s dying 
of cancer. It’s a shitty situation,” Austin says. “But what I’m seeing is that 
the fruits of this cancer diagnosis is everyone is by his bedside, everyone is 
showing amazing love to him, and that allows the people in your life to show up 
in a way that you see so much what matters.”


At times, it’s the meditation teachers who sound more like psychotherapists, 
offering practical tips for dealing with existential quandaries. Byrne, who 
also teaches meditation, wrote a book about the power of mindfulness for habit 
change<https://hugh-byrne.com/the-here-and-now-habit>. He uses mindfulness 
meditation to help people understand impermanence, another Buddhist teaching. 
The idea is to see your emotions and experiences—including anxiety or pain—as 
constantly changing, “like a weather system coming through,” he says. 
Everything, eventually, ends.

Cecilia Saad found this to be an especially attractive element of Buddhism. A 
close friend of hers was diagnosed with cancer three years ago, and Saad was 
impressed by how calm she remained throughout her diagnosis and treatment. 
“We’ve talked a lot about her outlook, and she always goes back to her 
Buddhism,” she says. Now, when Saad is stressed about something, the concept of 
impermanence helps her to imagine that she’s already survived the event she’s 
dreading.


________________________________


At my meditation class, the teacher read from her book in her even, perfectly 
unaccented voice. The book told us to consider that there are two reasons 
someone might cause us harm: It’s their nature to be harmful, or a temporary 
circumstance caused them to act in a harmful way. Either way, the teacher said, 
it doesn’t make sense to be angry at the person. The nature of water is wet, so 
you wouldn’t rage at the rain for getting you wet. And you wouldn’t curse the 
clouds for temporarily having a weather system that causes a downpour.

“When are we compelled to hurt people?” she asked, rhetorically, before 
answering: “When we’re in pain. It’s easy, if you see the fear, to have some 
compassion.”


She asked us to close our eyes and meditate again, this time while thinking 
about letting go of resentment toward someone who had harmed us. I shifted 
awkwardly and wondered how the burly guy sitting in front of me wearing a Lift 
Life T-shirt felt. I was having trouble focusing on resentment, and my eyes 
flickered open involuntarily. It was 30 degrees outside, yet most of the seats 
were taken. The fullness was uplifting. Still, it was remarkable that so many 
of us were willing to stumble through the freezing dark just to take in some 
basic wisdom about how to be less sad.


In Sunday school, when you opened your eyes during prayer, other kids would 
tell on you, thereby implicating themselves as having opened their eyes, too. 
That’s how people are sometimes, I thought: They’ll burn themselves for the 
chance to harm someone else. I took a deep breath and tried to have compassion 
for them anyway

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