Siddhartha Gautama (Buddha) — "One who drinks deeply of the Dharma with a clear and open mind, rests well."
One who drinks deeply of the Dharma with a clear and open mind, rests well.
One who drinks deeply of the Dharma with a clear and open mind, rests well.
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"All wrong-doing arises because of mind. If mind is transformed can wrong-doing remain?"
"Conquer the angry one by love. Conquer the evil one by good. Conquer the stingy one by generosity. Conquer the liar by truth."
"The only real failure in life is not to be true to the best one knows."
"All that we are is the result of what we have thought: it is founded on our thoughts, it is made up of our thoughts. If a man speaks or acts with an evil thought, pain follows him, as the wheel follow…"
"When the mind is pure, joy follows like a shadow that never leaves."
From the Dhammapada, a teaching on understanding the Dharma
Date: c. 5th-6th Century BCE
PhilosophicalFound in 1 providers: gemini
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Taking in spiritual teaching with full attention and an unguarded mind brings genuine peace. When you absorb wisdom deeply instead of skimming it, and approach it without defensiveness or preconception, your mind settles. The result is real rest, not just sleep, but a calm that pervades your whole existence. Surface engagement with truth leaves you restless, while deep, honest reception of it produces ease.
Siddhartha abandoned palace comforts to seek an end to suffering, and after his awakening under the Bodhi tree he taught the Dharma for forty-five years across northern India. Restful ease through clear understanding mirrors his core doctrine: craving and ignorance breed agitation, while insight brings nibbana's peace. The Buddha repeatedly praised listeners who grasped his teaching with attentive, unclouded minds, calling them heirs of the Dharma rather than mere followers.
The Buddha lived around the 5th century BCE during India's sramana movement, when wandering ascetics challenged Vedic ritual orthodoxy with new questions about suffering, rebirth, and liberation. Kingdoms like Magadha and Kosala were urbanizing, and a merchant class hungered for teachings beyond brahmin sacrifice. Against this ferment of competing philosophies, Jains, Ajivikas, and skeptics, the Buddha offered a practical path. Clear-minded reception of doctrine distinguished genuine seekers from ritualists or debaters chasing reputation.
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