Free Online FOOD for MIND & HUNGER - DO GOOD 😊 PURIFY MIND.To live like free birds 🐦 🦢 🦅 grow fruits 🍍 🍊 🥑 🥭 🍇 🍌 🍎 🍉 🍒 🍑 🥝 vegetables 🥦 🥕 🥗 🥬 🥔 🍆 🥜 🎃 🫑 🍅🍜 🧅 🍄 🍝 🥗 🥒 🌽 🍏 🫑 🌳 🍓 🍊 🥥 🌵 🍈 🌰 🇧🇧 🫐 🍅 🍐 🫒Plants 🌱in pots 🪴 along with Meditative Mindful Swimming 🏊‍♂️ to Attain NIBBĀNA the Eternal Bliss.
Kushinara NIBBĀNA Bhumi Pagoda White Home, Puniya Bhumi Bengaluru, Prabuddha Bharat International.
Categories:

Archives:
Meta:
June 2022
M T W T F S S
« May   Jul »
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930  
06/09/22
LESSON 4459 Fri 10 Jun 2022 Daily Wisdom DO GOOD PURIFY MIND EACH MORNING WE ARE BORN AGAIN. WHAT WE DO TODAY IS WHAT MATTERS MOST.
Filed under: General, Theravada Tipitaka , Plant raw Vegan Broccoli, peppers, cucumbers, carrots
Posted by: site admin @ 6:18 pm
LESSON 4459 Fri 10 Jun  2022

Daily Wisdom

DO GOOD PURIFY MIND


EACH MORNING WE ARE BORN AGAIN. WHAT WE
DO TODAY IS WHAT
MATTERS MOST.

“NO MATTER HOW HARD
THE PAST , YOU CAN
ALWAYS BEGIN AGAIN.”
To avoid all evil,
to cultivate good 👍,
and to cleanse one’s mind
- this is the teaching
of the Buddha.


Purity or impurity depends on oneself,
No one can purify another.

Tipitaka. Suttapitaka. Khuddakanikaya. Dhammapada. English & Pali
Tags: buddha, buddhism, tipitaka

How
blissful it is, for one who has nothing. Attainers-of-wisdom are people
with nothing. See him suffering, one who has something, a person bound
in mind with people.
Gautama Buddha
Tags: buddhism, poverty, religion, suffering, tipitaka, wealth



The
Buddha also refers to Nibbana as a ’state’ (’pada’) as ‘amatapada’ -
the deathless state - or accutapada, the imperishable state.

Another
word used by the Buddha to refer to Nibbana is ‘Sacca’, which means
‘truth’, an existing reality. This refers to Nibbana as the truth, a
reality that the Noble ones have known through direct experience.

So
all these terms, considered as a whole, clearly establish that Nibbana
is an actual reality and not the mere destruction of defilements or the
cessation of existence. Nibbana is unconditioned, without any
origination and is timeless.

Viññanam Anidassanam
Viññanam
Anidassanam translates as consciousness without surface, without
feature. Some have suggested that this implies there is a sort of
consciousness in Nibbana that is not conditioned and beyond the 5
aggregates. This term is found in the Digha Nikaya, Majjhima Nikaya, and
Samyutta Nikaya. “Good sir, if that is not partaken of by the allness
of all, may it not turn out to be vacuous and empty for you!”

25. “Consciousness non-manifesting, Boundless, luminous all-round.” (Majjhima Nikaya 49)
“Consciousness without feature, without end, luminous all around” (Digha Nikaya 11)
Based
on this some have suggested that there is another consciousness, which
is not part of the standard 5 aggregates and is beyond time and space.
The polytheistic, existence view
Others
still take it even further, for example the famous Ajahn Mun, who
stated that the Buddha even talked to him during his deep meditation
experiences, suggesting that the Buddha is at some place in a
Buddha-land or Buddha-field. A sizable number of Thai Theravada
Buddhists believe that Ajahn Mun and his Dhamma successor, Ajahn Boowa,
were fully enlightened arahants. This view is also similar to notions
found in other Dharmic paths and also in Mahayana Buddhism.

In the discourse on the 62 kinds of wrong view (Digha Nikaya 1), the Buddha called the following one of the wrong views:
Herein,
bhikkhus, a certain recluse or a brahmin asserts the following doctrine
and view: ‘The self, good sir, has material form; it is composed of the
four primary elements and originates from father and mother. Since this
self, good sir, is annihilated and destroyed with the breakup of the
body and does not exist after death, at this point the self is
completely annihilated.’ In this way some proclaim the annihilation,
destruction, and extermination of an existent being.

The
above passage provides support for the view that Nibbana is not
annihilation, that there may be some sort of existence or realm.

Tipitaka. Suttapitaka. Khuddakanikaya. Dhammapada. English & Pali
Tags: buddha, buddhism, tipitaka
How
blissful it is, for one who has nothing. Attainers-of-wisdom are people
with nothing. See him suffering, one who has something, a person bound
in mind with people.
Gautama Buddha

Tags: buddhism, poverty, religion, suffering, tipitaka, wealth

Meditate … do not delay, lest you later regret it.”

“A disciplined mind brings happiness.”

“If you light a lamp for somebody, it will also brighten your path.”

“One moment can change a day, one day can change a life and one life can change the world.”

“Every morning we are born again. What we do today is what matters most.”

“Radiate boundless love towards the entire world.”

. “A disciplined mind brings happiness.”

Drop by drop is the water pot filled. Likewise, the wise man, gathering it little by little, fills himself with good.”
“May all beings have happy minds.”

“Delight in heedfulness! Guard well your thoughts!”

“Live with no sense of ‘mine,’ not forming attachment to experiences.”

“Resolutely train yourself to attain peace.”

“To
support mother and father, to cherish wife and children, and to be
engaged in peaceful occupation — this is the greatest blessing.”

“Just
as the great ocean has one taste, the taste of salt, so also this
teaching and discipline has one taste, the taste of liberation.”

“If with a pure mind a person speaks or acts, happiness follows them like a never-departing shadow.”
“Whatever precious jewel there is in the heavenly worlds, there is nothing comparable to one who is Awakened.”
“As
a water bead on a leaf, as water on a red lily, does not adhere, so the
sage does not adhere to the seen, the heard, or the sensed.”

“It is in the nature of things that joy arises in a person”
“All experiences are preceded by mind, having mind as their master, created by ஒழுக்கமான மனம் மகிழ்ச்சியைத் தருகிறது.”
“The
one in whom no longer exist the craving and thirst that perpetuate
becoming; how could you track that Awakened one, trackless, and of
limitless range?”
“Whatever has the nature of arising has the nature of ceasing.”
“Resolutely train yourself to attain peace.”
“Know
from the rivers in clefts and in crevices: those in small channels flow
noisily, the great flow silent. Whatever’s not full makes noise.
Whatever is full is quiet.”
“Whatever
living beings there may be — feeble or strong, long, stout, or of
medium size, short, small, large, those seen or those unseen, those
dwelling far or near, those who are born as well as those yet to be born
— may all beings have happy minds.”
“If you knew what I know about the power of giving, you would not let a single meal pass without sharing it in some way.”
“If
you meditate earnestly, pure in mind and kind in deeds, leading a
disciplined life in harmony with the dhamma, you will grow in glory. If
you meditate earnestly, through spiritual disciplines you can make an
island for yourself that no flood can overwhelm.”

“Good people keep on walking whatever happens. They do not speak vain
words and are the same in good fortune and bad. If one desires neither
children nor wealth nor power nor success by unfair means, know such a
one to be good, wise, and virtuous.”
“One
who conquers himself is greater than another who conquers a thousand
times a thousand men on the battlefield. Be victorious over yourself and
not over others.”

“Your own self is your master; who else could be? With yourself well controlled, you gain a master very hard to find.”
“Not
by rituals and resolutions, nor by much learning, nor by celibacy, nor
even by meditation can you find the supreme, immortal joy of NIBBĀNA
until you extinguish your self-will.”

“It seems that although we thought ourselves permanent, we are not.
Although we thought ourselves settled, we are not. Although we thought
we would last forever, we will not.”

“Don’t run after pleasure and neglect the practice of meditation. If
you forget the goal of life and get caught in the pleasures of the
world, you will come to envy those who put meditation first.”
“Train
your eyes and ears; train your nose and tongue. The senses are good
friends when they are trained. Train your body in deeds, train your
tongue in words, train your mind in thoughts. This training will take
you beyond sorrow.”

May be an image of one or more people and text that says

comments (0)