Dear DS Friend,
This is a lovely post and it got me thinking for a while. This explains why it took some time before I could write about this.
Frankly, I used to think that renunciation was giving up everything and denying one's right to live or to enjoy life.
Of course, I was seeing this through my very "samsaric lenses".
As time goes by, with more help from my Guru and Dharma brothers and sisters - renunciation begin to hold a different meaning for me.
It is NOT about giving up enjoying life or everything.
Before Dharma, I had different definitions of "life's purpose", "enjoyment" and "achievement".
In the past, my life purpose's was really to serve me and my ever-changing likes and dislikes. Enjoying my life would amount to when I get to have fun, how fun I got and when can I do it again. Achievement meant that I have found a way to allow myself to have as much fun as possible - without limits to space, travel and time, of course.
So, as you can imagine - renunciation would be deemed as totally vulgar in my samsaric world - a kind of death, for sure.
But with more Dharma learning and plenty of help from Dorje Shugden - my mind began to see more. It felt like it just opened up suddenly and my "samsaric lenses" started to collapse - along with everything else.
I think what I was finally opening up to ( and still am ) is the renunciation of how much I am attached to what I thought was fun, great and joyful.
In Dharma, we first empty out everything but what we are essential surrendering is all that is bad for us - our fears, insecurities, selfishness, etc.
But in order to even realise that we are actually giving up what 'corrupts and contaminates' us - we must know where it all comes from.
And that is a journey within our spiritual path - going inwards in order to look outwards.
We trace the symptoms to the root cause and eradicate the cause. Mind you, this will take a long while for some. Myself, in particular. But I am deeply grateful to my Guru who put me in this retreat which was equivalent to a detox of my mind's diseases.
So, how would a modern person achieve renunciation and integrate it into his or her life in our modern society?
Well, we can take a very simple example of say, how one is so attached to coffee, drinking coffee and without it, one would be most unhappy. But before one even realises how much one is attached to coffee and that attachment is not good for you - one must first realise that the coffee is not the problem here but it is our attachment to it.
Hence, one would remove oneself from coffee altogether for a period of time in order to see for oneself how deeply attached one is to the coffee and it is really one's attachment and not the coffee.
Without that first phase of abstaining oneself from coffee, one cannot see one's full effects of attachment to coffee.
After going through a period of facing this coffee attachment and "resolving" it - one would no longer be attached to coffee, even if one could drink it again after the whole "exercise" of renouncing it.
Because one has grown not to be attached to coffee, one has control over one's attachment. With or without, one is still the same - if not, better.
I am not sure if I am answering the question accurately, but that was how it was for me. In another context, of course - not coffee. haha
What I found is that I was renouncing my attachments and not my life.