Nirvana is in every moment of our daily lives, but we don't know and don't understand that.
Which is a proof that nirvana
is not in every moment of our lives. If it were, we would ”know and understand that”.
And why? Just because an actual nirvana means full knowledge, understanding, and realization of a natural nirvana (anything's emptiness of inherent existence), which is indeed already there, but which is not an actual nirvana.
So we forget that and look for it outside of ourselves.
Which again is a proof that nirvana
is not ”in every moment of our lives”.
If we really want it in this lifetime and seek for it seriously, we will get it.
Why should you be concerned with getting nirvana, if you believe that it is already in every moment of your life? It is the task of the fool to try to get what one already has.
If all of us here could see our mind, our lives, at this moment, we would see that they are normal (neutral state).
Even samsaric gods obtain a neutral state in the formless realms. This is not nirvana, and anyway not our current state in the desire realm.
That is Nirvana.
An actual nirvana, or a true cessation, is a direct, non-conceptual realization of anything's emptiness of inherent existence (or of a natural nirvana), not a mere ”neutral state”, which is just a Hindu, non-Buddhist teaching transvestite as Buddhism.
Of course, some Buddhist schools accepted the illogical, if not ridiculous, view that ”we are already fully awakened, although we still need to awaken to this fact”. This ”view” is the obsessive concern of Bönpo and Nyingma ”Dzogchen” teachings, but it is conclusively rejected by non-nonsense oriented Gelugpas.
In the West, this view is most favored by Jewish and Judaizing pseudo-Buddhist propagandizers, because it opens the door to the acceptance of an inherently existent original self-perfected state, to be equated with the presence of ”God” (yes, the envious, psychotic, absolutistic Jewish ethnic ”god”) within human beings.
This, by the way, is one special reason why such Judaizing pseudo-Buddhist ideologists strongly favor the above mentioned Dzogchen delirious fantasies, and systematically try to revile Gelugpa teachings as ”fundamentalistic”, ”ultra-orthodox” ”merely intellectual”, and other stupid labels.
Therefore, Nirvana is provable and touchable.
Actually, an actual nirvana is proving and touching a natural nirvana, or an emptiness (although just in a metaphoric way, since an emptiness is not a sensorial object).
The Buddha taught that the Truth is something that really exists. He saw that life has no illusion, no suffering. Illusion and suffering are not real, they are transient.
If life had no illusion and no suffering, there would be no need for the Buddha to teach in the first place.
If illusion did not exist, there would be no need to defeat illusion, and such silly theories about the non-existence of illusion would also be unnecessary.
Besides, illusion and suffering are no less real just because they are transient. Being transient is itself a sign of being real.
So the real and original life is pure, or in other words, man is nothing.
This stinks to the Jewish ”paradise” with Adam and Eve ”pure and innocent”. But unsurprisingly it is also the Dzogchen non-Buddhist theory of ”original purity”. No wonder that Judaizing pseudo-Buddhist propagandizers love such Dzogchen nonsense, and detest the Gelugpa non-nonsense rejection thereof.
The anti-humanistic bias of such theory (”man is nothing”) is also evident. Man is nothing and the ”original purity” (be it the Jewish monomaniac ”God” or the Bönpo and Nyingma ”primordial buddha”, the all-creator Samantabhadra) is everything. Humans are insignificant, less than insects, therefore should blindly believe and obey whatever the priestly caste tells them.
Also, this view that ”man is nothing” is outrightly nihilistic -- the very negation of Buddhism.
It exists naturally. We don't have to do anything with it.
Which is the evil nihilistic theory of the Chinese Ch'an monk Ha-shang, which denies cause and effect, and which was fully adopted in Tibet by Nyingmapas, who nevertheless deny their own root teacher, Ha-shang, and ascribe the theory to a fantasized Padmasambhava, conveniently reinvented centuries after the fact by the ”terma” literature (because Indian rather than Chinese roots were seen as respectable).
Therefore, if we have found the right method,
Why and what for right or wrong ”method”, if according to you we don't have to do anything and nirvana is already present in our lives? Only a fool would want a ”method” to get what he or she already has.
and have done it correctly,
Done nothing ”correctly”, that's what you mean, right?
we will certainly get Nirvana automatically,
The view that liberation and enlightenment are obtained ”automatically”, or by themselves, or doing nothing, without any need to create the causes producing such effects, is again the nihilistic view of Ha-shang, enshrined by Bönpo and Nyingma ”Dzogchen” with its pompous, but hollow, assumption of being ”beyond cause and effect”.
without any expectation.
Actually, what you wrote above implies not only an expectation, but also a false expectation, which is the false expectation of achieving liberation and enlightenment ”automatically”, without effort, without relying on cause and effect, without relying on dependent arising, without relying on the steps of the path, and without relying on the lamrim.
That state of being is so pure that even though we have it, it seems like we have nothing.
Like the emperor without clothes. It seemed that he had nothing, and indeed he had nothing.
This is the trick: to make foolish people believe in something contrary to reason and to experience, be it the Jewish ”God”, or the Nyingma ”primordial purity”, or the emperor's clothes, or the relativity theory, claiming that the nonsense is ”very subtle”, and thus that only the ”very intelligent” can see it.
Buddhism is not about promoting nonsensical, self-contradictory theories for the sake of enslaving and exploiting the gullible, but, rather the opposite, about understanding reality, and achieving the freedom of liberation and enlightenment for oneself and others.
Everything is there, but there is nothing.
Yes, yes, like the clothes of the emperor.
If we are in this normal/neutral state of mind or have no greed- anger-delusion, then Nirvana is already here.
Nyingma literature talks about a ”natural” state of mind. Some people, wanting to promote Nyingma tenets in disguise, but lacking the honesty to assume their intention, will talk about a ”normal/neutral” state of mind. In the same way, Dzogchenpas promote the Ha-shang nihilistic view, but lack the honesty to recognize their actual roots.
A ”neutral” state of mind is not necessarily nirvana, because gods of the formless realm have a neutral state of mind, but not nirvana. Dzogchen and Ha-shang's ”non-conceptuality” is not better than this, as it lacks the actual antidote to greed, anger and delusion, which is the mere negation of an imagined inherent existence which does not assert anything else instead.
Nirvana is not ”normal” in the sense of ”usual” or ”average”, because people wandering in samsara are always befuddled by delusion and so forth. And your ”normality”, which supposedly is already and naturally present, is not nirvana, because nirvana, a true cessation, is something to be achieved in dependence of its causes, the true paths.
Finally, a state of mind which is free from delusion, hatred, and ignorance, which is indeed a nirvana, is not ”already there”, otherwise there would be no delusion, hatred, and ignorance to be free of; there would be no need fo the Buddha to teach; there would be no need for the learners to learn; and there would not even be a need for the proponents of such a ridiculous, self-contradictory theory to propound it.
It exists in human beings naturally.
If nirvana is a state of mind which exists naturally, then it does not depend on causes and conditions, does not depend on parts, and does not depend even on a designation, which is tantamount to say that your ”nirvana” inherently or intrinsically exists, exists by itself, falls on the extreme of existence, contradicts reason, and is the very opposite of the nirvana taught by the Buddha.
Everybody can find it,
Since such a ”nirvana” does not and cannot exist, it cannot be found either.
However, the imagination of such a non-existent, merely imagined nirvana can be found, in the mind of those who give in to Dzogchen oriented nonsensical fantasies.
no need to wait for it.
With this one I have to agree. Where is the need to wait for what does not and cannot exist?