Saturday, February 2, 2013

DEC 19


Be sure that all of our motives in all kinds of activities we engaged in are beneficial to all beings with compassion, loving-kindness and wisdom. Then your life will be like sailing in the ocean of calmness with peacefulness all the times.




If you can't let go all, do it day by day, you will feel the weight on you become much lesser and lesser. By doing so you are like peeling an onion one at a time day by day. And one day you will finally see the pure white one, only one left behind. You have actually see your true color of yourself, your serene true nature. — withLizzie Aryani and Sovathana Sokhom.


Our karmic link has brought us together to share our knowing and happiness. 
Our own karmic force always leads us to correct ourselves in many ways by providing us so much problems, troubles and sicknesses. Our life pattern is like a sea waves moving up and down without our awareness. We are caught most of the time in a situation which gives us sadness and pains. Sometimes we 
can manage it but sometimes we feel like giving up our life like those who have cancers or living in a hopeless situation. One of friends who was too poor, many years ago, to pay the water bill had the house tap cut off by the the authority. He had to bring his children to the swimming pool to bathe. Some of my friends during recession time, had their electricity cut off by the authority. So they had to use candles in the night. I advised them to stay cool. At the end of the dark tunnel, the light is always there waiting for them. There is no mistake made by our own karma. Do good, act good and speak good. Your negative karma will shy away. Tomorrow is always better than yesterday.




Our Buddha nature is not a created, impermanent, corruptible thing. It is perfect, luminous, free and complete from the beginningless beginning. It is not something in this world that we shop for and obtain. Practicing meditation is a path to rediscovering that, to awakening the Buddha within to recognizing that which is ultimately fulfilling, satisfying, meaningful, joyous and even deathless.
The Buddha






The Buddha reviewed to us that the fact of life is suffering. The worldly is chock-full of difficulties, confusion, anxiety, maladjustment, and suffering.
He explained that over-weaning attachment, craving, self-clinging and greed are the cause of suffering. Everything is uncertain, unreliable, impermanent, flowing and passing, how can holding on to what is slipping through our fingers.
To end suffering, he told us to cultivate contentment through non-attachment, peacefulness to relief from confusion, dissatisfaction, and weariness.
He introduced the noble eight-fold path to help us to solve all our problems and suffering.
The Buddha is like a doctor giving us the correct prescription to cure the sickness of suffering. His teaching is meant everyone not just the Buddhists.






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