The Buddha pointed this out 2,500 years ago: life as ordinarily lived is dukkha — a glitchy, unsatisfactory runtime. Enter buddha.dll .
This is not a replacement for your core process. It doesn’t kill ego.exe . It doesn’t delete your personality or memory. It simply provides a set of that you can call — optionally, mindfully — to handle reality more cleanly.
In programming terms: — but its symbols are not yet exported to your conscious namespace. buddha dll
And in that realization, buddha.dll finally exports its core function:
Effort is itself a function from ego.dll . Trying to become enlightened is like trying to use a program to load the same program that’s already running. It leads to infinite recursion. The Buddha pointed this out 2,500 years ago:
But now, when an exception occurs, instead of panic, the system calls ObserveSensation() and CompassionateResponse() . The stack trace is clear. The memory is cleanly freed. There’s no lingering attachment to how things “should have” executed.
But the Buddha argued: there is no self.exe . There is only a — aggregates (skandhas) of form, sensation, perception, mental formations, consciousness — all interdependent, none in charge. It doesn’t kill ego
And when someone asks, “What’s your religion?”, you can smile and say: “I just loaded a library.” May your process run with ease. — A friend in the kernel
RecognizeNoSelf() -> void
ldconfig /dev/null You’re clearing the symbol cache, letting the system rediscover what was always there: the ability to witness without grasping, to know without possessing.
By a Curious Mind