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Inspiration

Aspiration in Buddhist Practice:Purpose Without Ego

Be Here Now Network
Be Here Now Network
Feb 5, 2026
9 min read

TLDR: In this talk, Joseph Goldstein distinguishes between healthy aspiration rooted in our deepest values and unhealthy egoful striving that undermines practice. He argues that the Buddha explicitly set a goal—awakening through the Eightfold Path—and that practitioners can hold this direction while remaining grounded in impersonality and non-self. Aspiration becomes a sense of purpose that guides practice without the grasping, comparison, and self-reference that characterize ego-driven effort.

Read · 9 sections

Why Does Purpose Matter in Spiritual Practice?

A common misconception about Buddhist practice is that spirituality requires the abandonment of all purpose or direction. Joseph Goldstein directly addresses this confusion by pointing out that the Buddha did not teach an aimless path. Rather, the Buddha "definitely laid out a goal. The Eightfold Path leads someplace—it's not just meandering around not going any place." This clarity is foundational: the Eightfold Path is explicitly oriented toward awakening and enlightenment.

Yet the question remains: how can we hold purpose without letting ego hijack our practice? Goldstein reframes aspiration not as personal ambition but as "a realization of our values and what leads to the accomplishment of our values." When we examine our deepest values—compassion, wisdom, freedom from suffering—we find that these align with the direction of practice. Aspiration becomes the natural expression of what we actually care about, not something imposed from outside or constructed by the separate self.

What Is the Difference Between Aspiration and Striving?

Goldstein makes a crucial distinction between aspiration and the kind of striving that undermines practice. Aspiration is purposeful; striving driven by ego is grasping. Egoful striving carries the signature of self-reference—we practice to become someone, to achieve something for ourselves, to prove ourselves. This leaves the practitioner constantly measuring progress against an imagined ideal self, comparing oneself to others, and treating practice as a project of self-improvement.

Healthy aspiration, by contrast, arises from seeing clearly what actually leads to well-being and freedom. It is not about becoming; it is about realization. When a practitioner understands that anger causes suffering, generosity brings peace, and clarity emerges from sustained attention, aspiration naturally orients toward these realities. The energy is not self-directed but reality-directed.

The distinction can be felt in the body and mind. Striving often carries tension, urgency, and a sense that something is wrong with where we are now. Aspiration, resting in our deeper understanding, feels like a natural orientation toward what is true and beneficial. Goldstein invites practitioners to notice: are we pushing ourselves through shame and inadequacy, or are we moving toward what we genuinely value?

How Does the Buddha's Eightfold Path Embody Purposeful Direction?

The Eightfold Path itself is the answer to the question of how to hold purpose within the dharma. Right View, Right Intention, Right Speech, Right Action, Right Livelihood, Right Effort, Right Mindfulness, and Right Concentration form a coherent path—not a collection of random practices but an integrated system that leads to awakening. The path assumes a direction and a goal.

Goldstein's point is that acknowledging this goal is not un-Buddhist; it is deeply Buddhist. The Buddha taught that suffering has a cause and that there is a way out. To practice the path is to move in the direction of that way out. This is not theoretical—it is practical instruction for how to live and practice.

Understanding the Eightfold Path also reveals what aspiration actually means in practice. It is not wishful thinking or fantasy; it is clear seeing of the way things are and the direction that leads to freedom. When we practice Right View, we begin to see the impersonal nature of all phenomena—that suffering, impermanence, and non-self characterize all experience. This very seeing naturally generates aspiration to practice, because we recognize that the path works, that it is not arbitrary but aligned with reality itself.

Can We Have a Sense of Self-Purpose Within Impersonality?

One of Goldstein's most subtle points addresses a common confusion: if Buddhist practice emphasizes non-self and impersonality, how can we also hold a personal sense of purpose? The answer lies in understanding that impersonality and purpose operate at different levels of analysis.

When we look deeply at the five aggregates—form, sensation, perception, mental formations, and consciousness—we discover that there is no fixed, independent self running the show. This is the radical impersonality at the heart of dharma. Yet from this very realization arises natural purpose. We see that our values—compassion, wisdom, freedom—are not personal possessions but expressions of universal truths. When we practice to develop compassion or wisdom, we are not striving for ourselves; we are aligning with what is true and beneficial for all beings.

Goldstein invites practitioners to shift from "I want to be enlightened" (which is ego-driven) to "may all beings be free from suffering" (which is impersonal aspiration rooted in bodhicitta or awakening heart). The purpose remains; the reference point shifts from self to dharma, from personal gain to universal benefit.

What Is the Difference Between Faith Followers and Dharma Followers?

Goldstein makes an interesting observation about different types of practitioners: some are primarily "faith followers" while others are "dharma followers." A faith follower practices primarily because they trust the teacher or the tradition; their aspiration is supported by devotion and confidence in the lineage. A dharma follower practices because they have directly tested the teachings and verified them through their own experience; their aspiration is rooted in seeing.

Both paths have validity, and most practitioners contain elements of both. However, Goldstein's point is that there is no contradiction between having a strong aspiration and remaining open to all experiences. Whether we are inspired by faith or insight, the direction remains the same: toward awakening. The difference is in how the direction is supported—by trust in others' wisdom, or by trust in our own seeing.

How Do We Rest in Practice Rather Than Strain?

A key aspect of Goldstein's teaching is the invitation to rest in our practice and let go of unhealthy striving. This does not mean becoming passive or unmotivated; it means releasing the tension that comes from grasping for results. When we practice with the understanding that awakening is not something we need to earn or achieve through force, but something we uncover by seeing clearly, the practice becomes lighter.

Resting in practice means trusting the process. If we sit in meditation with a sincere aspiration to see clearly, if we practice generosity and compassion, if we cultivate mindfulness and wisdom, the fruit naturally follows. We do not need to strain toward enlightenment or white-knuckle our way to freedom. The path itself, when followed with integrity and openness, leads where it leads.

This resting is not spiritual bypassing or laziness. It is the natural posture of someone who understands that practice is not about self-improvement but about seeing truth. The energy that would have gone into striving gets redirected into presence, into genuinely meeting what is.

Why Does Right Attitude Matter in Practice?

Goldstein emphasizes maintaining right attitude and openness to all experiences. This means approaching both meditation and life with the understanding that every moment, every sensation, every thought offers an opportunity for learning and insight. There is no "wrong" experience that we need to fix or push away. A difficult meditation session, a moment of anger, a wave of grief—all can be met with the same interest and care.

Right attitude also means approaching practice without self-judgment. We do not practice to become "good meditators" or to achieve some imagined spiritual status. We practice to see clearly and to reduce suffering. When we stumble, when we forget, when we act unskillfully, we simply notice it and begin again. The simplicity of this attitude is its power.

Openness to all experiences means not grasping for peak states or running from difficult ones. It means allowing the practice to reveal what is true about our mind and heart. This fundamental receptivity is what transforms aspiration from a personal project into a genuine path of awakening.

What Is the Role of Diversity and Community in Sustaining Practice?

Goldstein speaks to the work of the Insight Meditation Society and their commitment to diversity, recognizing that this shapes the sangha—the spiritual community that supports practice. A diverse community brings different perspectives, backgrounds, and ways of seeing. This enriches the dharma for everyone.

The sangha also provides reminders and support when our individual practice flags. Sitting with others, hearing teachings from different teachers, encountering people at all stages of the path—these experiences reinforce aspiration and help us maintain right attitude. Community also challenges us to embody the values we claim to hold, since we cannot practice only in solitude; we must practice in relationship with others.

Where to Go From Here

Joseph Goldstein's teaching on aspiration offers permission for practitioners to hold clear purpose on the spiritual path without falling into the trap of ego-driven striving. The path forward is to examine honestly whether your practice is motivated by egoful striving—the need to become someone, to prove yourself—or by genuine aspiration rooted in seeing what is true and valuable.

You might begin by clarifying your deepest values and asking whether your practice aligns with them. What do you actually care about? Compassion? Wisdom? Freedom from suffering? These are not selfish desires; they are universal values. When you practice in service to these values, aspiration becomes a light on the path rather than a burden.

Engage with the Buddha's Eightfold Path not as external rules but as practical directions for awakening. Test the teachings through your own experience. Do you notice that generosity brings peace? That mindfulness reveals the nature of mind? That wisdom arises from seeing clearly? This testing is how aspiration transitions from faith to direct knowing.

Finally, consider how you might rest in your practice—releasing strain and self-judgment while maintaining clear direction. Can you sit, practice, and live with the understanding that awakening is not something to forcefully achieve but something to gently uncover? This shift in posture often reveals that the path is both more purposeful and more easeful than we imagined.

Be Here Now Network
AuthorBe Here Now Network

Be Here Now Network is the creator of Heart Wisdom with Jack Kornfield, a podcast exploring consciousness, spirituality, and personal transformation. With 313 episodes, they have c…

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Got Questions?

Frequently Asked Questions

Aspiration is purposeful movement rooted in seeing clearly what leads to well-being and freedom, while egoful striving is grasping motivated by self-reference and the need to become someone. Striving carries tension and shame; aspiration feels like a natural orientation toward what is true. Aspiration aligns with our deepest values, while striving arises from the ego's agenda.
Yes, the Buddha explicitly set a goal: the Eightfold Path leads to awakening and enlightenment. The path is not aimless but purposefully directed toward freedom from suffering. However, this goal is understood not as something to forcefully achieve but as a direction that naturally unfolds through sincere practice and clear seeing.
Purpose and non-self are not contradictory; they operate at different levels. While there is no fixed, independent self, there are universal values—compassion, wisdom, freedom—that naturally orient practice. Shifting from 'I want enlightenment' to 'may all beings be free from suffering' moves purpose from the personal to the impersonal, aligning it with dharma rather than ego.
Resting in practice means trusting that the path itself leads to awakening when followed with integrity and openness, rather than forcefully straining toward enlightenment. It involves releasing the tension of self-judgment and the need to achieve results. This does not mean becoming passive but rather meeting each moment with genuine presence instead of self-directed effort.
Both faith followers (who trust the teacher and tradition) and dharma followers (who verify teachings through their own experience) can have strong aspiration. The difference is in the support: aspiration rooted in faith relies on trust in others' wisdom, while aspiration rooted in seeing is verified through direct experience. Both are valid paths to awakening.
Right attitude means approaching all experiences—both pleasant and difficult—with openness and without self-judgment. It prevents practice from becoming self-centered striving for spiritual achievement and instead keeps practice oriented toward genuine seeing and learning. Right attitude transforms each moment into an opportunity for insight rather than a test to pass or fail.
The sangha (spiritual community) provides reminders, support, and different perspectives that enrich practice. Diverse communities bring varied ways of understanding the dharma, and sitting with others challenges practitioners to embody their values in relationship rather than only in solitude. Community also holds aspiration when individual practice wavers.
Yes, the Eightfold Path itself embodies purposeful direction. Each component—Right View, Right Intention, Right Speech, and so on—forms an integrated system leading to awakening. Understanding the path reveals that aspiration is not arbitrary but rooted in reality; seeing clearly how generosity brings peace and mindfulness clarifies the mind naturally generates aspiration to practice.

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