Siddhartha Gautama (Buddha) — "Long is the night to him who is awake; long is a mile to him who is tired; long …"
Long is the night to him who is awake; long is a mile to him who is tired; long is life to the foolish who do not know the true law.
Long is the night to him who is awake; long is a mile to him who is tired; long is life to the foolish who do not know the true law.
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"If you meet the Buddha on the road, kill him."
"You are what you think. All that you are arises from your thoughts. With your thoughts, you make your world."
"The wise ones who are intent on meditation, who delight in the peace of renunciation, such mindful ones, perfect in right understanding, cast off the net of Māra."
"If anything is worth doing, do it with all your heart."
"Irrigators channel waters, fletchers straighten arrows, carpenters bend wood, the wise master themselves."
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Time drags when you're suffering. A sleepless night feels endless, a short walk feels brutal when you're exhausted, and life itself stretches out painfully for someone who doesn't understand how reality actually works. The quote links physical discomfort to mental ignorance, arguing that people without wisdom experience their whole existence as a slow, heavy burden rather than something meaningful or manageable.
The Buddha abandoned a royal palace at 29 after seeing sickness, aging, and death, then spent six years as a wandering ascetic before his awakening under the Bodhi tree. He personally knew sleepless nights in meditation and exhausted miles on foot between villages. His core teaching, the Dharma or 'true law,' centers on the Four Noble Truths: ignorance of reality is what makes life feel like endless suffering, and understanding ends that drag.
Around the 5th-6th century BCE in the Ganges plain of northern India, a restless spiritual culture was questioning Vedic ritual and the Brahmin priesthood. Wandering shramanas, Jains, and early Upanishadic thinkers debated karma, rebirth, and liberation. Most people walked everywhere through monsoon heat and slept on hard ground, so images of long nights and tiring miles were literal daily experience, making the Buddha's teaching immediately felt, not abstract.
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