SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  1
The Buddha also said…
By Katie Coleman
I started learning and experiencing Buddha’s teachings around four years ago through a
small meditation class I went to every Sunday; we’d spend two hours every week in
stillness, emptying out our clutter and connecting with a feeling and understanding that
went much deeper than ourselves.
I strayed away from meditation until my friend recently handed me his copy of Osho’s
The Diamond Sutra: The Buddha also said…, an interpretation of The Diamond Sutra,
the first surviving and recorded text of the Buddha’s discourse to a monk, Subhuti.
Printed in Chinese in 868 from carved wooden blocks on seven strips of paper, it was
pasted together to form a scroll. When China was threatened by a Northern kingdom
around the year 1000, this scroll was hidden in a cave near the city of Dunhuang and was
perfectly preserved from the dry, desert air until a monk found the sealed cave in 1900.
Born in 1931 as Chandra Mohan Jain in India and later known as Osho, he was a spiritual
teacher until his death in 1990. The Diamond Sutra: The Buddha also said… is a
transcription of different teachings he gave that were audio and video recorded
throughout his lifetime. Osho gives further understanding and insight into one of
Buddha’s most powerful teachings that can feel pretty mysterious and hard to understand.
Osho really struck me when he said that once you learn how to let go, you must then let
go of letting go- you cannot even hang on to that. I feel like I’ve learned and practiced
letting go for a while now, but I never really went further to release what I was doing.
What can be left after that but utter stillness? Osho’s book makes me feel ready to dig
deeper, and Buddha’s teachings have honestly lifted me out of a lot of suffering I
couldn’t get out of through other approaches. Osho makes it much easier to digest the
Buddha’s ancient wisdom.
Our world really values the ego, but I think that’s also why a lot of people struggle so
much with violence, anxiety, addiction, and other ways we ultimately suffer. The
Diamond Sutra is one of many medicines out there that can heal some of the destructive
effects of the human mind; it teaches us how to simplify and strengthen our existence,
allowing space to really embrace but not be absorbed by everything that comes our way.

Contenu connexe

Similaire à The Buddha also said…

Buddhism and indianism
Buddhism and indianismBuddhism and indianism
Buddhism and indianismshoeb156
 
Zen basics ibpz english
Zen basics ibpz englishZen basics ibpz english
Zen basics ibpz englishrotorvator
 
BuddhismWhat is BuddhismBuddhism is the religion of o.docx
BuddhismWhat is BuddhismBuddhism is the religion of o.docxBuddhismWhat is BuddhismBuddhism is the religion of o.docx
BuddhismWhat is BuddhismBuddhism is the religion of o.docxAASTHA76
 
Buddhism PowerPoint
Buddhism PowerPointBuddhism PowerPoint
Buddhism PowerPointwendlingk
 
LESSON_6-BUDDHISM2.pptx
LESSON_6-BUDDHISM2.pptxLESSON_6-BUDDHISM2.pptx
LESSON_6-BUDDHISM2.pptxJaneCuna
 
Buddhism: A Major World Religion
Buddhism: A Major World ReligionBuddhism: A Major World Religion
Buddhism: A Major World ReligionSam Wais
 
Hz50 11-01 the art of living
Hz50 11-01 the art of livingHz50 11-01 the art of living
Hz50 11-01 the art of livingAnndy Tanca
 

Similaire à The Buddha also said… (16)

MEDITATION: EAST MEETS WEST
MEDITATION: EAST MEETS WESTMEDITATION: EAST MEETS WEST
MEDITATION: EAST MEETS WEST
 
Buddhism and indianism
Buddhism and indianismBuddhism and indianism
Buddhism and indianism
 
Buddhism & Sexuality
Buddhism & SexualityBuddhism & Sexuality
Buddhism & Sexuality
 
00 buddha
00 buddha00 buddha
00 buddha
 
Zen basics ibpz english
Zen basics ibpz englishZen basics ibpz english
Zen basics ibpz english
 
Object Fact Sheet - Buddha
Object Fact Sheet - BuddhaObject Fact Sheet - Buddha
Object Fact Sheet - Buddha
 
BuddhismWhat is BuddhismBuddhism is the religion of o.docx
BuddhismWhat is BuddhismBuddhism is the religion of o.docxBuddhismWhat is BuddhismBuddhism is the religion of o.docx
BuddhismWhat is BuddhismBuddhism is the religion of o.docx
 
Buddhism week 3
Buddhism   week 3Buddhism   week 3
Buddhism week 3
 
Buddhism the basics
Buddhism the basicsBuddhism the basics
Buddhism the basics
 
Buddhism PowerPoint
Buddhism PowerPointBuddhism PowerPoint
Buddhism PowerPoint
 
Art of living 1 and 2
Art of living 1 and 2Art of living 1 and 2
Art of living 1 and 2
 
LESSON_6-BUDDHISM2.pptx
LESSON_6-BUDDHISM2.pptxLESSON_6-BUDDHISM2.pptx
LESSON_6-BUDDHISM2.pptx
 
Buddhism: A Major World Religion
Buddhism: A Major World ReligionBuddhism: A Major World Religion
Buddhism: A Major World Religion
 
KRIYA YOGA-2022.pdf
KRIYA YOGA-2022.pdfKRIYA YOGA-2022.pdf
KRIYA YOGA-2022.pdf
 
Hz50 11-01 the art of living
Hz50 11-01 the art of livingHz50 11-01 the art of living
Hz50 11-01 the art of living
 
Zen Buddhism Essay
Zen Buddhism EssayZen Buddhism Essay
Zen Buddhism Essay
 

The Buddha also said…

  • 1. The Buddha also said… By Katie Coleman I started learning and experiencing Buddha’s teachings around four years ago through a small meditation class I went to every Sunday; we’d spend two hours every week in stillness, emptying out our clutter and connecting with a feeling and understanding that went much deeper than ourselves. I strayed away from meditation until my friend recently handed me his copy of Osho’s The Diamond Sutra: The Buddha also said…, an interpretation of The Diamond Sutra, the first surviving and recorded text of the Buddha’s discourse to a monk, Subhuti. Printed in Chinese in 868 from carved wooden blocks on seven strips of paper, it was pasted together to form a scroll. When China was threatened by a Northern kingdom around the year 1000, this scroll was hidden in a cave near the city of Dunhuang and was perfectly preserved from the dry, desert air until a monk found the sealed cave in 1900. Born in 1931 as Chandra Mohan Jain in India and later known as Osho, he was a spiritual teacher until his death in 1990. The Diamond Sutra: The Buddha also said… is a transcription of different teachings he gave that were audio and video recorded throughout his lifetime. Osho gives further understanding and insight into one of Buddha’s most powerful teachings that can feel pretty mysterious and hard to understand. Osho really struck me when he said that once you learn how to let go, you must then let go of letting go- you cannot even hang on to that. I feel like I’ve learned and practiced letting go for a while now, but I never really went further to release what I was doing. What can be left after that but utter stillness? Osho’s book makes me feel ready to dig deeper, and Buddha’s teachings have honestly lifted me out of a lot of suffering I couldn’t get out of through other approaches. Osho makes it much easier to digest the Buddha’s ancient wisdom. Our world really values the ego, but I think that’s also why a lot of people struggle so much with violence, anxiety, addiction, and other ways we ultimately suffer. The Diamond Sutra is one of many medicines out there that can heal some of the destructive effects of the human mind; it teaches us how to simplify and strengthen our existence, allowing space to really embrace but not be absorbed by everything that comes our way.