Siddhartha Gautama (Buddha) — "Just as a mother would protect her only child with her life, even so let one cul…"
Just as a mother would protect her only child with her life, even so let one cultivate a boundless love towards all beings.
Just as a mother would protect her only child with her life, even so let one cultivate a boundless love towards all beings.
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"If a man foolishly does me wrong, I will return to him the protection of my boundless love. The more evil that comes from him, the more good will go from me."
"A jug fills drop by drop."
"Happiness does not depend on what you have or who you are. It solely relies on how you think."
"The body, monks, is not self. If the body were the self, this body would not lend itself to dis-ease."
"Do not pursue the past. Do not lose yourself in the future. The past no longer is. The future has not yet come. Looking deeply at life as it is in the very here and now, the practitioner dwells in sta…"
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Love every living being with the same fierce, unconditional devotion a mother feels for her only child. Protecting that child is instinctive and absolute, without calculation or limit. The quote asks us to extend that same intensity of care outward, past family and tribe, to strangers, enemies, animals, and every creature capable of suffering. It is not a gentle suggestion but a demanding practice of radical, universal compassion.
Siddhartha abandoned his wife and newborn son to seek enlightenment, a choice that haunted the tradition he founded. This teaching, from the Metta Sutta, reframes that renunciation: he did not abandon love but universalized it, expanding parental devotion into boundless loving-kindness for all beings. As the Buddha, he made metta one of four sublime attitudes, central to his ethical teaching and the foundation of the compassion-focused practice his monastic sangha cultivated daily.
In the 5th century BCE northern India, Vedic society was rigidly stratified by caste, and spiritual worth was tied to Brahmin birth, ritual purity, and sacrificial offerings, often animal. The Buddha preached during a ferment of rival shramana movements challenging this order. Declaring that boundless love should extend to all beings, regardless of caste, species, or status, was quietly revolutionary, undercutting both caste hierarchy and the legitimacy of blood sacrifice by relocating holiness from ritual to universal ethical compassion.
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