The Buddha taught that suffering is caused. Logically, a caused thing will cease if we cease contributing to its cause. Although easier said than done, we can greatly minimize suffering once we understand and address its source. This article explores the Buddhist perspective on the cause of suffering. Did the Buddha say life is suffering? […] The post How Do Buddhists Explain The Cause Of Suffering? appeared first on Mindworks Meditation & Buddhist Path.| Mindworks Meditation & Buddhist Path
There are six main families of qualities that are to be developed on the bodhisattva path, the path for the ultimate goal of buddhahood.| Mindworks Meditation & Buddhist Path
Fresh ways of looking at a concept that is often misunderstood How can we understand the concept of emptiness in Buddhism? Emptiness is an approximate translation of the Sanskrit term shunyata. The key to understanding what is meant by this translation is in the ness—the ness of emptiness means that emptiness is not empty. This […]| Mindworks Meditation & Buddhist Path
Join us for a comprehensive 9-level journey. Take refuge in spiritual practice, a genuine source of meaning, well-being and connection.| Mindworks Meditation & Buddhist Path
Ignorance, at its most basic level, is a misunderstanding of reality. This mistake fuels the 3 poisons, the causes of suffering in Buddhism.| Mindworks Meditation & Buddhist Path
Starting Your Meditation With The 7-Branch Mahayana Prayer| Mindworks Meditation & Buddhist Path
Starting Your Meditation With The 7-Branch Mahayana Prayer| Mindworks Meditation & Buddhist Path
Starting Your Meditation With The 7-Branch Mahayana Prayer| Mindworks Meditation & Buddhist Path
The Heart Sutra is perhaps the most well-known sutra of Mahayana Buddhism, describing the heart of the teachings of the Perfection of Wisdom.| Mindworks Meditation & Buddhist Path
According to the Buddha’s teachings of the two truths, there is a difference between how we and awakened beings experience the world.| Mindworks Meditation & Buddhist Path
In prajñā or Buddhist wisdom there are two things to know: the nature of the so-called self and the nature of the other, subject and object.| Mindworks Meditation & Buddhist Path