Latest posts
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The Potential Within: Understanding Buddha‑Nature in Modern Life
Key Takeaways 1. Introduction In a world that constantly urges us to be faster, richer, and more accomplished, many of us carry a quiet feeling of not being enough. We look for validation in likes, promotions, and the approval of others, yet the sense of inner completeness often remains elusive. The busy mind becomes tangled…
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The Two Truths: Conventional and Ultimate
Key Takeaways 1. Introduction: Why Two Truths Matter in Modern Life You wake up in the morning. You check your phone. There is a message from a colleague that upsets you. Your mind races with thoughts: “They are so unfair. I always work harder than them. This is typical.” By midday, you feel tired and…
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The Sand Mandala: A Philosophical Education in Ritual and Impermanence
From the tantric monasteries of the Pala Dynasty to the museums of the contemporary West, the Tibetan sand mandala remains one of Buddhism’s most demanding and doctrinally complete ritual forms. Glossary Key Takeaways Introduction At first glance, a Tibetan Buddhist sand mandala appears to be a painting of extraordinary intricacy and chromatic intensity. But to…
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108 Misunderstandings About Buddhism
Section I: The Nature of the Buddha and Enlightenment 1. The Buddha is a god. 2. Buddhism is a pessimistic religion obsessed with suffering. 3. There is no self, so nothing exists. 4. Karma is fate or predestination. 5. Rebirth means a soul transmigrates. 6. Buddhism teaches that desire should be completely suppressed. 7. Nirvana…
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Why We Defend a Self That Keeps Changing
Key Points 1. The Great Paradox: Defending a Moving Target We spend a staggering amount of our psychological energy defending a “self” that does not exist in the way we think it does. Every day, we curate our online personas, protect our reputations, rehearse justifications for our past actions, and nurse wounded egos after perceived…
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Emptiness, Dependent Origination, and Not‑self
A Practical Guide to Seeing Reality Clearly Key Takeaways 1. Introduction: Three Doors to the Same Truth The Buddha taught many things, but some teachings sit at the very heart of the path. Emptiness, Dependent Origination, and Not‑self are three of these core insights. They are not abstract philosophy. They are practical tools for understanding…
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Common Meditation Mistakes and How to Correct Them
Key Takeaways 1. Introduction: Why Understanding Mistakes Helps Your Practice Meditation is often described as simple, but simple does not mean easy. Many people begin meditating with enthusiasm, only to become discouraged when their minds wander, their bodies ache, or they feel they are “doing it wrong.” These difficulties are not signs of failure. In…
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Failure in Ethics and Failure in View; Accomplishment in Ethics and Accomplishment in View
Note to readers: The fourfold framework used in this article (failure/accomplishment in ethics and view) is a modern teaching synthesis based on principles found across the Pali Canon and later Buddhist traditions. It is not presented as a direct quotation from any single sutta but as an organizing structure to help understand how the Buddha…
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Compassion in Buddhism: 108 Contemplations
Introduction to Compassion in Buddhism Compassion (Karuna in Pāli) stands as one of the most essential and transformative qualities in the entire Buddhist path. It is the heartfelt yearning for all beings to be free from suffering, coupled with the active intention to alleviate that suffering wherever possible. Unlike ordinary pity, which can create distance…
