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🌿 Theravāda Buddhism 101
Focus: 
Your own direct practice to reach enlightenment with emphasize of mindfulness, impermanence, and direct insight.

Main figure:
Gautama Buddha (the historical Buddha)
Theravāda does not rely on Amitābha Buddha for rebirth or salvation. Instead you will hear:
 “Buddho”
 Metta phrases
 Pali chanting

Gautama Buddha was not a god. Buddha was a human being. This is very important in Theravāda. He was a human who: struggled, practiced, awakened. This means others can too.

Theravāda uses the Pali Canon, the oldest preserved teachings of the Buddha. They are in the Pali language — which is why chanting sounds the way it does. 

Pali is how venerable monks who walked for peace communicated. They spoke different languages.

Core practices:
 Mindfulness meditation
 Loving-kindness (Metta)
 Moral living
 Wisdom through insight

Goal:
Become enlightened through your own realization. I walk step by step myself.

Three core practices:
Theravāda is often summarized in three trainings:
- Morality (Sīla) – being harmless, honest, kind
- Meditation (Samādhi) – calming and focusing the mind
- Wisdom (Paññā) – seeing reality clearly

In the Buddha’s teaching, loving-kindness — Metta — is not just something we give to others. It is something that grows inside and protects the mind. 

As taught when Metta is cultivated sincerely, it brings: inner calm, freedom from fear, gentle strength, and a natural compassion for all beings.

The Four Noble Truths
These are the core realization of Gautama Buddha:
1. Life includes suffering (dukkha)
2. Suffering has a cause (craving)
3. Suffering can end
4. There is a path that leads to its end

The Noble Eightfold Path
Everything the monks do fits into these:
- right understanding
- right intention
- right speech
- right action
- right livelihood
- right effort
- right mindfulness
- right concentration

Sangha -  Buddhist practitioners/monks. There are monastic Sangha - refers to ordained monks and nuns who follow the…

🌿 Theravāda Buddhism 101 Focus: Your own direct practice to reach enlightenment with emphasize of mindfulness, impermanence, and direct insight. Main figure: Gautama Buddha (the historical Buddha) Theravāda does not rely on Amitābha Buddha for rebirth or salvation. Instead you will hear: “Buddho” Metta phrases Pali chanting Gautama Buddha was not a god. Buddha was a human being. This is very important in Theravāda. He was a human who: struggled, practiced, awakened. This means others can too. Theravāda uses the Pali Canon, the oldest preserved teachings of the Buddha. They are in the Pali language — which is why chanting sounds the way it does. Pali is how venerable monks who walked for peace communicated. They spoke different languages. Core practices: Mindfulness meditation Loving-kindness (Metta) Moral living Wisdom through insight Goal: Become enlightened through your own realization. I walk step by step myself. Three core practices: Theravāda is often summarized in three trainings: - Morality (Sīla) – being harmless, honest, kind - Meditation (Samādhi) – calming and focusing the mind - Wisdom (Paññā) – seeing reality clearly In the Buddha’s teaching, loving-kindness — Metta — is not just something we give to others. It is something that grows inside and protects the mind. As taught when Metta is cultivated sincerely, it brings: inner calm, freedom from fear, gentle strength, and a natural compassion for all beings. The Four Noble Truths These are the core realization of Gautama Buddha: 1. Life includes suffering (dukkha) 2. Suffering has a cause (craving) 3. Suffering can end 4. There is a path that leads to its end The Noble Eightfold Path Everything the monks do fits into these: - right understanding - right intention - right speech - right action - right livelihood - right effort - right mindfulness - right concentration Sangha - Buddhist practitioners/monks. There are monastic Sangha - refers to ordained monks and nuns who follow the…

🌿 Theravāda Buddhism 101
Focus: 
Your own direct practice to reach enlightenment with emphasize of mindfulness, impermanence, and direct insight.

Main figure:
Gautama Buddha (the historical Buddha)
Theravāda does not rely on Amitābha Buddha for rebirth or salvation. Instead you will hear:
 “Buddho”
 Metta phrases
 Pali chanting

Gautama Buddha was not a god. Buddha was a human being. This is very important in Theravāda. He was a human who: struggled, practiced, awakened. This means others can too.

Theravāda uses the Pali Canon, the oldest preserved teachings of the Buddha. They are in the Pali language — which is why chanting sounds the way it does. 

Pali is how venerable monks who walked for peace communicated. They spoke different languages.

Core practices:
 Mindfulness meditation
 Loving-kindness (Metta)
 Moral living
 Wisdom through insight

Goal:
Become enlightened through your own realization. I walk step by step myself.

Three core practices:
Theravāda is often summarized in three trainings:
- Morality (Sīla) – being harmless, honest, kind
- Meditation (Samādhi) – calming and focusing the mind
- Wisdom (Paññā) – seeing reality clearly

In the Buddha’s teaching, loving-kindness — Metta — is not just something we give to others. It is something that grows inside and protects the mind. 

As taught when Metta is cultivated sincerely, it brings: inner calm, freedom from fear, gentle strength, and a natural compassion for all beings.

The Four Noble Truths
These are the core realization of Gautama Buddha:
1. Life includes suffering (dukkha)
2. Suffering has a cause (craving)
3. Suffering can end
4. There is a path that leads to its end

The Noble Eightfold Path
Everything the monks do fits into these:
- right understanding
- right intention
- right speech
- right action
- right livelihood
- right effort
- right mindfulness
- right concentration

Sangha -  Buddhist practitioners/monks. There are monastic Sangha - refers to ordained monks and nuns who follow the…

🌿 Theravāda Buddhism 101 Focus: Your own direct practice to reach enlightenment with emphasize of mindfulness, impermanence, and direct insight. Main figure: Gautama Buddha (the historical Buddha) Theravāda does not rely on Amitābha Buddha for rebirth or salvation. Instead you will hear: “Buddho” Metta phrases Pali chanting Gautama Buddha was not a god. Buddha was a human being. This is very important in Theravāda. He was a human who: struggled, practiced, awakened. This means others can too. Theravāda uses the Pali Canon, the oldest preserved teachings of the Buddha. They are in the Pali language — which is why chanting sounds the way it does. Pali is how venerable monks who walked for peace communicated. They spoke different languages. Core practices: Mindfulness meditation Loving-kindness (Metta) Moral living Wisdom through insight Goal: Become enlightened through your own realization. I walk step by step myself. Three core practices: Theravāda is often summarized in three trainings: - Morality (Sīla) – being harmless, honest, kind - Meditation (Samādhi) – calming and focusing the mind - Wisdom (Paññā) – seeing reality clearly In the Buddha’s teaching, loving-kindness — Metta — is not just something we give to others. It is something that grows inside and protects the mind. As taught when Metta is cultivated sincerely, it brings: inner calm, freedom from fear, gentle strength, and a natural compassion for all beings. The Four Noble Truths These are the core realization of Gautama Buddha: 1. Life includes suffering (dukkha) 2. Suffering has a cause (craving) 3. Suffering can end 4. There is a path that leads to its end The Noble Eightfold Path Everything the monks do fits into these: - right understanding - right intention - right speech - right action - right livelihood - right effort - right mindfulness - right concentration Sangha - Buddhist practitioners/monks. There are monastic Sangha - refers to ordained monks and nuns who follow the…

🌿 #Theravāda #Buddhism101
#Cultivate #enlightenment w emphasize of #mindfulness, #impermanence, & #DirectInsight.

#Buddha was not a god- #human. #important in #Theravāda, a-man who: #struggled, #practiced, #awakened the Noble pathway.

#PaliCanon, #teachings of the Buddha. #PaliLanguage#chanting

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if i didn’t want to matter

i’d probably be better off

#Buddhism101

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Buddhists endeavor to observe the "Five Precepts," which are not mandated rules by the Buddha but rather voluntary guidelines that serve to keep practitioners on the proper path towards enlightenment in Buddhism.

#Buddhism #Buddhism101 #BuddhisPractice

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