The life of Siddhartha
Gautama, the person we call the Buddha, is shrouded in legend and myth.Although
most historians believe there was such a person, we know very little about
him.The"standard" biography appears to have evolved over time. It was
largely completed by the "BuddhaCarita," an epic poem
written by AΕvaghoαΉ£a in the second century CE.Siddhartha Gautama, who would one
day become known as Buddha ("enlightened one" or "the
awakened"), lived in Nepal during the 6th to 4th century B.C. While
scholars agree that he did in fact live, the events of his life are still
debated. According to the most widely known story of his life, after
experimenting with different teachings for years, and finding none of them
acceptable, Gautama spent a fateful night in deep meditation. During his
meditation, all of the answers he had been seeking became clear, and achieved
full awareness, thereby becoming Buddha.
Our future Buddha,Gautama,
Siddhartha he
was born in Lumbini (in modern day
Nepal). Siddhartha is a Sanskrit name meaning "one who has accomplished a
goal" and Gautama is a family name. His father, King Suddhodana, was
the leader of a large clan called the Shakya It's not clear from the earliest
texts whether he was a hereditary king or more of a tribal chief. It is also
possible that he was elected to this status.Suddhodana married two sisters,
Maya and Pajapati Gotami. They are said to be princesses of another clan, the
Koliya from what is northern India today. Maya was the mother of Siddhartha and
he was her only child, dying shortly after his birth. Pajapati, who
later became the first Buddhist nun, raised Siddhartha as her own.When
Prince Siddhartha was a few days old, a holy man prophesied over the Prince (by
some accounts it was nine Brahmin holy men). Siddhartha he was foretold
that he would be either a great military conqueror or a great spiritual Teacher .King Suddhodana preferred the first outcome and prepared
his son accordingly. He raised the boy in great luxury and shielded him from
knowledge of religion and human suffering. At the age of 16, he was
married to his cousin, Yasodhara, who was also 16. This was no doubt a marriage
arranged by the families. Yasodhara was the daughter of a Koliya chief and her
mother was a sister to King Suddhodana. She was also a sister
of Devadatta, who became a disciple of the Buddha and then, by some
accounts, a dangerous rival. The Buddha's
basic teachings are usually summarized using the device of the Four Noble
Truths:There is suffering, There is the origination of suffering,
There is the cessation of suffering, There is a path to the cessation of
suffering.
The Four Noble Truths of
Gautama Siddhartha is about to express the basic orientation of Buddhism.The First Noble
Truth: is often translated as "life is suffering." This is not
as dire as it sounds, it's actually quite the opposite, which is why can be
confusing.Much confusion is due to the English translation of the Pali/Sanskrit
word Dukkha as "suffering." According to the Ven. Ajahn
Sumedho, a Theravadin monk and scholar, the word actually means "incapable
of satisfying" or "not able to bear or withstand
anything. Dukkha also refers to anything that is temporary,
conditional, or compounded of other things.The skandhas are the components of a
living human being: form, senses, ideas, predilections, and consciousness. The
actual word from the early scriptures is tanha, and this is more
accurately translated as "thirst" or "craving."We
continually search for something outside ourselves to make us happy. But no
matter how successful we are, we never remain satisfied.The Second Truth is
about the cause of suffering is a greed or desire.The Buddha taught that this
thirst grows from ignorance of the self. We go through life grabbing one thing
after another to get a sense of security about ourselves. We attach not only to
physical things but also to ideas and opinions about ourselves and the world
around us. Then we grow frustrated when the world doesn't behave the way we
think it should and our lives don't conform to our expectations. Buddhist
practice brings about a radical change in perspective. Our tendency to divide
the universe into "me" and "everything else" fades away. In
time, the practitioner is better able to enjoy life's experiences without
judgment, bias, manipulation, or any of the other mental barriers we erect
between ourselves and what's real. The Buddha's teachings on karma and rebirth
are closely related to the Second Noble Truth.The Second Noble Truth tells us that
we cling to things we believe will make us happy or keep us safe. Grasping for
one ephemeral thing after another never satisfies us for long because it's all
impermanent. It is only when we see this for ourselves that we can stop
grasping. When we do see it, the letting go is easy. The craving will seem to
disappear of its own accord The Third Noble Truth is about that suffering can
be dispelled by the all abandonment of desires.and the Four Noble Truth is
about to hold that such abandonment of desires can be achieve by following the
Noble Eightfold Path.The Buddha summarised the correct attitude and actions in
the Eight-fold Noble Path: right view, right aspiration, right speech, right
action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, right concentration.
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