A Little More on Siddhartha’s Life

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Ascetic Bodhisattva Siddhartha Gautama with the Group of Five

Ascetic Bodhisattva Siddhartha Gautama with the Group of Five

I have published a new page call Siddhartha’s Early Life with a few more details that seem to be generally accepted. I could stray in to all the myth and legend but that would fill an entire website quite easily, so I have opted instead to introduce a new Sutta from the Anguttara Nikaya called Delicate.

Hopefully this and the accompanying Suttas will be enough to give you a reasonable picture of what Siddhartha went through to attain his final enlightenment. This also shows that, since Buddha was human, just like you and me, it is perfectly possible for any of us to achieve that goal too; may be not in this life time, but certainly in a future one.

A Buddha in the Making

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Buddha by Otgonbayar Ershuu

Buddha by Otgonbayar Ershuu

It would seem prudent to start the dissemination of the Dhamma with how it all began. At least that idea makes sense to me, and I feel any newly budding Buddhist could do with an overview of where Buddhism came from and who is responsible for it.

The Buddha was not born the Buddha, or to put it more correctly, the Buddha was not born a Buddha. He was born a baby boy, between 563BCE and 480BCE (current studies cannot pin the date of his birth any more accurately than this), just like any other male of our species. He was born into royalty in a province in what is now part of southern Nepal, and brought up with the attendant luxuries that such a lifestyle entailed. There was no immaculate conception, there were no miracles, he was not born with any supernatural powers. If he were to be reborn today, he would be just like you and me and you could well be spending the evening down the pub deliberating on the current state of the European Union and Brexit!

His father, being somewhat overprotective, made sure that the boy, named Siddhārtha Gautama, never roamed outside the confines of their palace and thus never experienced the daily life of the villagers and travellers through their domain. However, one evening, he convinced one of his servants to take him out of the palace and on a tour of his lands. It was this secretive trip that changed the path of Siddhartha’s life forever.

Rather than repeating what has already been written, I shall let the following Suttas tell the tale of how young Siddhārtha became a man who would be remembered and revered for almost 2500 years.

This is the story of how ‘The Buddha’ came to be.

In the Majjhimika Nikaya, Sutta 26, the Buddha details his own search for enlightenment. He also points out the real source of happiness.

MN 26: Ariyapariyesana Sutta: The Noble Search

And in the Majjhimika Nikaya, Sutta 36, the Buddha recounts the austerities he endured during his journey toward enlightenment and the true pleasures once he attained it.

MN 36: Maha-Saccaka Sutta — The Longer Discourse to Saccaka

Both Suttas give an idea of the events leading to Siddhartha’s enlightenment and will help you understand the man, as well as the Guru.

May all beings attain Nibbana.

Aside

By the way…

If you spot me slipping into my Thelemic ways by opening a post with 93 and closing a post with 93 93/93 then that is a Thelemic form of greeting by acknowledging the Law of Thelema as promulgated in the Book of the Law. A text received by Aleister Crowley in the early part of the 1900’s. For more info on that, please see one of my other blogs here, 93.

Small Beginnings

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93 Everybody

I have been cogitating about the structure of this site and how to go about implementing it with little luck so far. The big picture I have for it seems to get larger and larger each day, which is pretty scary. So I have decided on the age-old principle of Keep It Simple, Stupid!

To start a beginners site about Buddhism, it would make sense to start out with how Buddhism started, wouldn’t it? I am now searching through the copious documents I have for the Suttas regarding the Buddha’s early life and his first announcement of the Four Noble Truths. Obviously I will provide copies of the actual Suttas that contain those words of wisdom but I also hope to find documents and articles by others which give easy explanations of those Suttas.

So please be patient a little longer. I am working on it, I promise. Maybe, someday, this site will evolve into one of the go to places for people in search of peace and enlightenment.

May all beings live in peace.

Welcome

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Buddha by Otgonbayar Ershuu

Buddha by Otgonbayar Ershuu

Welcome to Dhamma. This will hopefully be a site of peaceful reflection on the teachings of the Buddha. I am not sure yet how this site is going to develop but I will take it one day at a time. I do intend to provide public domain documents written about the Buddha’s teachings and they will be primarily from the Theravada tradition.

I have a particular interest in the Thai Forest Tradition. I can’t explain why but it seems true and honest in its methods and practices. There have been several renowned Ajahns, especially the late Ajahn Chah who greatly influenced the West by being the first Ajahn to ordain western Bhikkus into his monastery. Those Bhikkus have spread his teachings throughout the Americas and Europe.

For the moment I am starting to collate documents that I feel would benefit those who may be just starting out in their investigations of what Buddhism is and what it could do for them. This may take a while so please be patient. In the mean time, perhaps you could take a look at some of the links I am putting up on the links page. They are all sources of information and teachings that I have found useful in my own path.

May all beings be free from fear.