Latest posts
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The Four Nutriments: Nourishing the Mind and Body for Modern Life
Key Takeaways 1. Introduction to the Four Nutriments In the Theravada tradition, particularly within the Pali Canon, the concept of nutriment [ahara] is central to understanding how we exist and why we suffer. While teachers from other traditions, such as the Zen master Thich Nhat Hanh, have also engaged with this teaching, its structured formulation…
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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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The Five Remembrances (Upajjhatthana Sutta) – A Guide to Contemplating Life’s Unavoidable Truths
Key Points at a Glance Introduction to Buddhist Psychology and the Upajjhatthana Sutta Buddhist psychology is not an abstract academic discipline. It is a practical, lived framework for understanding how the mind creates suffering through its habitual resistance to the natural flow of reality. While many Western psychologies emphasize biography, personality formation, and developmental conditioning,…
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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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Karma – Why Do Good People Suffer? A Buddhist View on Fortune, Misfortune, and Injustice
Key Takeaways Introduction: The Problem of Unjust Suffering Why do good people suffer while those who do harm appear to flourish? And how can any teaching of moral causation possibly account for the immense horrors of genocide, transatlantic slavery, and the indiscriminate slaughter of millions in war? These questions trouble anyone who honestly reflects on…
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112 Contemplations for Buddhist Psychology
A modern synthesis drawn from the Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta, Theravāda Abhidhamma, and Mahayana mind‑training texts. These contemplations aim to be faithful in spirit to their source traditions while offering a practical, psychologically accessible curriculum for contemporary readers. They are offered as humble tools for direct investigation, not as absolute dogma. 1–12: Establishing Mindfulness 1. Mindfulness of…
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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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How to Be Compassionate Toward Yourself
Key Takeaways Introduction What does it mean to see yourself with compassion? For many people, this question feels unfamiliar, even uncomfortable. We are often taught to be hard on ourselves, to push through pain without acknowledgment, or to believe that self‑criticism is the only path to improvement. Yet there is another way – a way…
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Buddhism Q&A: 108 Core Questions
Introduction Buddhism offers a profound and practical path to understanding the nature of existence, the roots of suffering, and the possibility of genuine liberation. This collection of 108 essential questions is structured to guide the practitioner from foundational concepts to advanced philosophical inquiries, ensuring a logical and comprehensive exploration. Each question is designed to be…
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The Dharma in Buddhism: 108 Contemplations
Note: This article draws primarily on the Pāli Canon (the earliest recorded teachings of the Buddha) as preserved in the Theravāda tradition. While the Dharma is expressed in many forms across Buddhist traditions, these contemplations focus on the foundational teachings common to all. Introduction The Dharma (Pali: Dhamma) stands as the second of the Three…
