Was this a typo? "the importance of having a heart filled with love vs having a mind free of attachments." Did you mean and instead of vs? If so then we're in agreement. Love and freedom from attachments would both be parts of righteous living. I think that's what you meant but the wording makes it really hard to tell.
I think I mostly understand what you mean. I've had somewhat similar thoughts, about people whose lives are completely screwed because of things totally beyond their control, like childhood trauma and especially child abuse in all its forms. It makes me understand to some extent the Biblical lines about paying for the sins of the father even unto the 7th son of the 7th son. 7 is the number of perfection or completion in a spiritual sense. And child abuse is definitely something that runs in families. So generations of people are utterly incapable of getting their lives together for reasons completely outside of their control.
Strangely enough, John St Julien (the guy in the video I posted earlier on this thread) talked about this recently - I'll see if I can find the video, it was in a certain way very heartening. He created a home for troubled children in Tanzania, and he said so many viewers of his channel are always so concerned, praying and saddened about the children. But he said a strange thing, and I believe it's true. I wish I could remember how he put it, but it was very similar to things I've read in books about trauma and psychology by authors like James Hollis. Something to the effect that there's a built-in trauma system in the psyche that kicks in when there's severe trauma and comforts the person, it awakens the Self archetype which is to be touched by God. It's the exact same thing people are working to achieve through a lifetime of meditation and reaching that higher state of consciousness. I've also seen this in videos about spiritual awakening - I went through a big phase of watching those. People who underwent abuse or trauma beyond a certain level, as screwed up as they might be, reach that higher state of consciousness automatically. They become what's known as Holy Fools, some of them anyway. Maybe mentally messed up or weirdly socially awkward, but they have a deep abiding bliss like most people never experience, even if it's under physical or emotional pain we can hardly imagine bearing.
This is the video:
https://youtu.be/w5Ojfu2-At8?t=159
Well that didn't work, but if you click the link it will start right at the relevant part. Or watch the video below and scroll ahead to 2:39 (It starts right after the intro graphics are done).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w5Ojfu2-At8?t=159
Here are a couple of comments from under the video:
Quote:
It's just not okay to justify children dying in pain so humanity can understand beauty and goodness and happiness. Oh my God. Did you just say that... I don't want anything to do with love and beauty if that's the price
Quote:
Tough - polarity is reality, love and beauty do not exist without their opposite. This is why John does what he does, he enjoys love and beauty in his life whilst mitigating the pain and suffering of the most vulnerable. This provides him with meaning, purpose and joy. We should all be doing the same because then we can enjoy the love and beauty in our lives without internal conflict and guilt. Plus if we are all children of God (or fragments of the one), God is only subjecting himself to the pain and suffering, there is no other, there is only one.
Quote:
What if those children are just souls who said, this time I am gonna play the part of a quadriplegic child and die when I am 12?
_________________________
I just listened to the whole thing, and this wasn't the video where he said what I remember. He does talk about it in a roundabout way, but I remember him saying it much more specifically.
You know, it's possible he didn't even say it (though I was pretty sure he did) - maybe I saw this video and it suddenly made me think about what I had read from Hollis and a few other authors about the automatic trauma system. Because much of what he said did sound very familiar.