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When you understand the true cause of your suffering and remove it, you’ll realize, “So this is what my life was for,” and attain genuine happiness.
Buddha was the one who thoroughly investigated the root of suffering, and Buddhism is the teaching that cuts off that very root.
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A Tibetan woman paying homage to the lord Mañjusri, the Buddha of Wisdom. The photo was taken at the Potala Palace in Lhasa, Tibet
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"Peace in the world can only come through peace of mind, and peace of mind only through the realization that all human beings are like members of the same family, despite differences in faith, ideology, political and economic systems. If we want to build peace in the world, let us first build it within each of us. Peace cannot be achieved externally if anger or hatred is cultivated in one's soul." Tenzin Gyatso
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Milarepa said, “When I get sick, if no one asks after me, and when I die, if no one cries for me, and if I manage to die alone in an isolated retreat place, then I, as a yogi, will be satisfied.” He was not interested in how deeply someone bowed to him or how big his tombstone would be. Such is the attitude of great practitioners. They don’t care about outer displays; they have no need for social etiquette.
— Dzongsar Jamyang Khyentse, The Guru Drinks Bourbon
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(via Flo on Instagram: “Forth day of #thebutterflyjourney 💚heart openers. ‘Be vulnerable. I have tried forever to stop being vulnerable. It’s not going to happen…” || Curated with love by yogadaily)
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