Slandering a practitioner who carries the Dharma is rejecting the Dharma itself, predestining one's own spiritual regression.
Only see the supreme merits of sentient beings;...
When faced with difficult people, our instinct is to resist. But what if the key to your own abundance lies in fulfilling their desires? Learn to navigate challenging relationships by shifting from competition to the wisdom of giving.
Can you really trust your view? In Buddhist teachings, “inverted views” reveal a quiet but profound truth: on life’s deepest matters—permanence, pleasure, purity, self—our instinctive view is often the exact opposite of reality.
The song “Buddha Lamp” uses the simplest words to reveal the deepest truths of life. Written, composed, and sung by Chinese singer-songwriter Wang Qi (born in 1986, China), it contains no Buddhist jargon—yet it poetically conveys the cycle of cause and effect across lifetimes, the emptiness of fame and wealth, letting go, and keeping an unshakable hope in the heart.
In daily life, when we chase greed, fuel hatred, indulge chaotic thoughts, feed arrogance, or succumb to endless doubt, these afflictions become a destructive hammer. They smash everything valuable in your life.