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Reality of Suffering

First Noble Truth: Which Is to Be Understood

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The Lotus Flower

Reality of Suffering Posted on October 7, 2020 by alex.peckJanuary 10, 2021

In Buddhist perception, the lotus flower has special significance.

The efforts towards spirituality may be compared to the idea of applying fertiliser to a lotus flower which grows out of mud in a swamp, so that emerging from the surrounding muck of worldly passions will spring a beautiful flower of spirituality, blossoming to enlightenment.

Here the ‘muck’ or mud can be compared to our physical body; the emerging lotus flower can be compared to the developing (budding) perceptions of our minds.

The ‘fertilising’ relates to the direct application of exercise to the goal in view.

The fully opened lotus would be the full expression of the Buddha-mind, now visible as a beautiful lotus flower in full bloom. 

Source: Davis, John R. The Path to Enlightenment: Introducing Buddhism. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1997.

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The Four Noble Truths

 

The Four Noble Truths or the Four Realities were taught by Buddha Shakyamuni as the central theme of the first turning of the wheel of the Dharma after his attainment of enlightenment. They are:

  • The truth (or reality) of suffering which is to be understood.
  • The truth (or reality) of the origin of suffering which is to be abandoned.
  • The truth (or reality) of cessation which is to be actualized.
  • The truth (or reality) of the path which is to be relied upon.

 

Cause & Effect

The four truths can be divided into two pairs of cause and effect, known as the cause and effect of ‘thorough affliction’ or samsara, and the cause and effect of ‘complete purification’ or nirvana.

 

Sixteen Aspects of the Four Noble Truths

Suffering
1. Suffering
2. Impermanence
3. Emptiness
4. Selflessness

Origination
5. Cause
6. Origination
7. Intense Arising
8. Condition

Cessation
9. Peace
10. Cessation
11. Perfection
12. True Deliverance

Path
13. Path
14. Appropriate
15. Effective
16. Truly Delivering

 

Source: https://www.rigpawiki.org/index.php?title=Four_Noble_Truths

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  • Home
  • About
  • Suffering
    • Meaning of Suffering: “Duhkha” (Skt.)
    • Truth of Suffering: 4 Characteristics
    • Three Types of Suffering
    • Afflictive Emotions
  • The Four Noble Truths
    • First Noble Truth
    • Second Noble Truth
    • Third Noble Truth
    • Fourth Noble Truth
  • The Eightfold Path
    • Right Understanding
    • Right Thought
    • Right Speech
    • Right Action
    • Right Livelihood
    • Right Effort
    • Right Mindfulness
    • Right Concentration
  • The Four Reminders
    • Precious Human Birth
    • Impermanence and Mortality
    • Karma: Consequences
    • Worldly Life (Samsara)
  • Karma: Cause and Effect
    • What Is Karma?
    • Four Laws of Karma
    • Changing Our Karma
    • Purification
    • Book: Insights Into Karma
    • Karma: Harvest Analogy
  • The Four Immeasurables
    • Love
    • Compassion
    • Joy
    • Equanimity
  • The Three Poisons
    • Greed
    • Hatred
    • Delusion
    • Transforming the Three Poisons
    • The Three Antidotes
  • Mind Training
    • Mind Training: 8 Verses
      • Verse One
      • Verse Two
      • Verse Three
      • Verse Four
      • Verse Five
      • Verse Six
      • Verse Seven
      • Verse Eight
    • Mind Training: 27 Verses
      • Verses 1-3
      • Verses 4-6
      • Verses 7-9
      • Verses 10-12
      • Verses 13-15
      • Verses 16-18
      • Verses 19-21
      • Verses 22-24
      • Verses 25-27
  • Bodhisattva Way of Life
    • One Goal
    • Bodhicitta Love
    • Suffering
    • Practice
    • Transformation
    • The Essence of Ourselves
    • True Happiness
    • The Present
    • Life
    • Ego
    • Enlightenment
    • The Path
  • The Six Perfections
    • Generosity
    • Ethics
    • Patience
    • Effort
    • Concentration
    • Wisdom
  • Meditation
    • Loving-Kindness Meditation
      • A Meditation Practice
      • Loving-Kindness Discourse
      • Metta
    • Tonglen: A Heart Practice
      • A New Way to Embrace Life
      • Cries of the World
      • Practicing Tonglen
      • Personal Use of Tonglen
      • Tonglen: A Way of Life
    • Benefits of Meditation
    • Photo Galleries
      • In the Countryside
      • Beside the Lake
      • Down by the Sea
  • Blog
  • Contact
    • Personal Background
    • Biographical Sketch

Ultimately, suffering is not a permanent reality.

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