Buddhism for Dummies Quotes
Buddhism for Dummies
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Jonathan Landaw1,738 ratings, 3.95 average rating, 132 reviews
Buddhism for Dummies Quotes
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“Happiness, Buddha once said, is actually quite simple: The secret is to want what you have and not want what you don’t have. Simple”
― Buddhism For Dummies
― Buddhism For Dummies
“you find that the teachings suit you, apply them to your life as much as you can. If they don’t suit you, just leave them be.”
― Buddhism For Dummies
― Buddhism For Dummies
“In many schools of Mahayana Buddhism, the goal is to develop an unconditional compassion that extends to all beings, regardless of whether they’ve helped or harmed you in the past. To aid in your cultivation of such all-encompassing “great” compassion, some teachers in the Vajrayana tradition recommend two related approaches: Recognizing that everyone is a member of one family Realizing the basic equality of yourself and others”
― Buddhism For Dummies
― Buddhism For Dummies
“mental attitude is what mainly determines the quality of your life.”
― Buddhism For Dummies
― Buddhism For Dummies
“Some master meditators achieve a particularly concentrated state of mind, samadhi, in which their mind is capable of gaining profound insights into reality.”
― Buddhism For Dummies
― Buddhism For Dummies
“Beneath the one who is busy is one who is not busy.”
― Buddhism For Dummies
― Buddhism For Dummies
“En el centro de todas las verdaderas enseñanzas del dharma está la comprensión de que el sufrimiento y la insatisfacción se originan en la forma en que tu mente responde y reacciona a las circunstancias de la vida, no en los mismos hechos de la vida.”
― Budismo para Dummies
― Budismo para Dummies
“The basic Buddhist teaching of impermanence (Pali: anicca) suggests that even the most powerful spiritual experiences come and go like clouds in the sky. The point of practice is to realize a truth so deep and fundamental that it doesn’t change, because it’s not an experience at all; it’s the nature of reality itself. This undeniable, unalterable realization is known as enlightenment.”
― Buddhism for Dummies
― Buddhism for Dummies
“Reality is constantly changing; as the Greek philosopher Heraclitus said, you can’t step into the same river twice.”
― Buddhism For Dummies
― Buddhism For Dummies
“Jealousy, hatred, greed, and the like lead to suffering and dissatisfaction because they’re out of step with reality. They paint a misleading picture of the world.”
― Buddhism for Dummies
― Buddhism for Dummies
“He who is tolerant to the intolerant, peaceful to the violent, who is free from greed, who speaks words that are calm, helpful, and true and that offend no one — him I call a brahmin.”
― Buddhism For Dummies
― Buddhism For Dummies
