February 15, 2026 · Field note

Spiritual Materialism and the Violence of Certainty

A reflection on spiritual materialism, ego, and the danger of turning belief into justification.

Spiritual Materialism and the Violence of Certainty
Originally from the Before the Cure archive

Spiritual materialism is a concept introduced and most clearly articulated by the Tibetan Buddhist teacher Chögyam Trungpa, especially in his book Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism.


At its core, the term describes the tendency to use spirituality as a way of strengthening the ego rather than dismantling it.

1. The core idea (in plain terms)


Instead of collecting money, status, or possessions, we begin to collect:


We turn spirituality into another form of acquisition.


The ego survives by changing costumes.

When material success no longer satisfies, it puts on robes.

2. How it shows up in real life


Spiritual materialism is subtle and often socially rewarded.


a) Identity inflation


Spiritual language becomes a shield against self-examination.

b) Experience collecting


The question quietly shifts from “Am I seeing clearly?” to

“Am I having impressive experiences?”

c) Moral superiority


This is sometimes called spiritual bypassing, a close cousin of spiritual materialism.

3. Why Trungpa considered it dangerous


According to Trungpa, spiritual materialism is dangerous because:


The ego becomes sacred, and therefore untouchable.

4. What 

authentic

 spirituality looks like (by contrast)


In Trungpa’s framing, genuine spiritual practice is often:


Signs you may be cutting through spiritual materialism:


If spirituality makes you less human, something has gone wrong.

If it makes you more human, it is probably working.

5. Clinical & anthropological lens (relevant to your work)


From a medical-anthropological perspective (especially in Indigenous and contemplative contexts):


This is particularly visible when ancient practices are transplanted into hyper-individualistic societies.

6. A simple diagnostic question


A useful self-check (from Trungpa’s lineage):


“Is my practice helping me avoid reality – or meet it more fully?”


If spirituality is being used to:


…it may be functioning as materialism in sacred clothing.

7. Final thought


Spiritual materialism does not mean spiritual practice is wrong.

It means the ego is extraordinarily adaptive.


True practice does not decorate the self.

It disassembles it – slowly, compassionately, and without applause.


TO MY IRANIAN FRIENDS AND LOVERS ..I LOVE YOU 

Original Blogger URL: https://medicoanthropologist.blogspot.com/2026/02/spiritual-materialism-vision-of.html

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