You must find out for yourself. Unfortunately, no matter how well
you know the native language it will not help you understand Dhamma
without meditation and a strong adherence to the 5 precepts (for
basic morality/purity).

Along the path you will get more sensitive to pain if you don't
become purer and purer (following personal made precepts). This is
how it works. Reading about Dhamma won't help, learning the language
won't help: you have to do it/live it, through meditation and
personal experience.

There won't be a full understanding until one achieves Satori (Stream-
Entry); but once one does, there is no turning back.

They who worship ignorance
enter blind darkness.
They who delight in knowledge
enter darkness, as it were, yet deeper.

Respectfully...


--- In Pali@yahoogroups.com, Daniel <daniell@...> wrote:
>
>
> Hi.
>
>
>
> Though this is not a question in Pali, but I would be glad to
discuss it with
> people of the group.
>
>
> I understand that buddhism says that afflictive emotions such as
anger, hatred
> jealousy, pride are in themselves a type of suffering. That feeling
them is
> actually suffering.
>
>
> It would be very interesting for me to hear personal perspectives
on those
> feelings, and how do people view them as sufferings.
>
> Take care
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------
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>