Siddhartha Gautama (Buddha) — "The only way to ease our pain is to experience it fully."
The only way to ease our pain is to experience it fully.
The only way to ease our pain is to experience it fully.
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"An insincere and evil friend is more to be feared than a wild beast; a wild beast may wound your body, but an evil friend will wound your mind."
"If you knew what I know about the power of giving, you would not let a single meal pass without sharing it in some way."
"One who drinks deeply of the Dharma with a clear and open mind, rests well."
"It is better to conquer yourself than to win a thousand battles."
"The wise ones who are intent on meditation, who delight in the peace of renunciation, such mindful ones, perfect in wisdom, collect like bees the nectar of flowers."
A modern interpretation, not a direct quote from the Pali Canon.
Date: c. 5th century BCE
GeneralFound in 1 providers: grok
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Trying to avoid, suppress, or distract from emotional pain only prolongs it. True relief comes from turning toward suffering, acknowledging it honestly, and letting yourself feel it without resistance. When you stop fighting the hurt and meet it directly, it loses its grip and begins to dissolve. Healing requires presence with discomfort, not escape from it. The shortcut around pain is actually the longest route.
Buddha built his entire teaching around suffering (dukkha) as the first of the Four Noble Truths. After abandoning palace luxury and extreme asceticism, he discovered that neither indulgence nor denial ended suffering. His path of mindfulness trained practitioners to observe pain directly through meditation, seeing its impermanent nature. He taught that clinging and aversion fuel suffering, so facing sensations fully, without grasping or pushing away, was central to liberation and awakening.
In 5th-century BCE northern India, dominant Vedic traditions emphasized ritual sacrifice and caste duty to manage life's hardships, while competing shramana movements promoted severe bodily mortification to transcend suffering. Both approaches tried to bypass pain through external means or self-punishment. Buddha's middle-way insight emerged as a radical psychological alternative, proposing that direct inner examination of experience, rather than ritual appeasement or ascetic escape, was the actual route to freedom from mental anguish.
AI-generated insights based on extensive research and information for context. Factual errors? Email [email protected].
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