The Buddha in Your Mirror Quotes
The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
by
Woody Hochswender1,537 ratings, 4.20 average rating, 128 reviews
Open Preview
The Buddha in Your Mirror Quotes
Showing 1-18 of 18
“Buddhism is a beautiful philosophy, but above all, it is about action.”
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
“We really are the architects of our existence, and our surroundings do reflect precisely what we have built.”
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
“There’s no way out of this mess, except to become enlightened and then enjoy it. —Robert Thurman A”
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
“Society is complex and harsh, demanding that you struggle hard to survive. No one can make you happy. Everything depends on you as to whether or not you attain happiness…. A human being is destined to a life of great suffering if he is weak and vulnerable to his external surroundings.”
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
“No matter what a person may be exhibiting at any given moment, it is only one part of a whole human being; each person contains the seed of enlightenment within and therefore deserves respect. While”
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
“The reason so many people are unhappy is, for the most part, delusion. They believe the predominant myths that our culture propagates about happiness.”
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
“Buddhism finds happiness in the midst of rather than the absence of problems.”
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
“The ultimate purpose of Buddhist practice is to manifest a greater or true self.”
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
“Buddhist practice is about developing character. And relationships are the forum, the classroom, in which we learn how.”
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
“Sustainable happiness is not the absence of problems. As Nichiren writes: “Though worldly troubles may arise, never let them disturb you. No one can avoid problems, not even sages or worthies.”
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
“Today’s problem is replaced by new prob lems in an unending procession. We seem barely to have a chance to catch our breath before new challenges confront us.”
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
“All the happiness in the world comes from thinking of others; all the suffering in the world comes from thinking of only oneself.” By concerning yourself with the problems of others, your own problems become diminished, both in perspective, because you realize that perhaps other people have more serious obstacles than yours, and in reality, because when you stop focusing on your own difficulties they lose their mastery over you.”
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
“To Nichiren, “freedom” meant not an escape from the realm of changing phenomena but the discovery of an absolute point of reliance within ourselves.”
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
“Buddhism teaches us to recognize these cycles of impermanence and have the courage to accept them.”
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
“Buddhism clearly explains that suffering emerges in our hearts because we forget the principle of impermanence and believe that what we possess will last forever.”
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
“In Nichiren’s own words, “A blue fly, if it clings to the tail of a thoroughbred horse, can travel ten thousand miles, and the green ivy that twines around”
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
“three thousand realms in a single moment of life.”
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
― The Buddha in Your Mirror: Practical Buddhism and the Search for Self
