Gautama Buddha
Gautama Buddha
We tend to use the term “Buddha” as a metaphor for spiritual
enlightenment or wisdom, but there was a real flesh-and-blood person
behind the mythology. Siddhartha Gautama (“Buddha” being a later
acquired title) was a prince who spent the first 29 years of his life in
opulent luxury before giving it all up and embarking on a quest for
understanding.
Becoming a hard-core ascetic who survived on a handful of
nuts a day, after several years of living in complete destitution, he
realized that too was futile as a means of coming into “awareness.” One
day, while sitting beneath a bodhi tree
considering his dilemma, he suddenly realized the key to enlightenment
was the elimination of all desire, which is what made it possible for
him to achieve enlightenment or, more precisely, a state of Nirvana.
Quickly attracting a legion of disciples, his teachings laid the
foundation for one of the world’s great eastern faith structures,
Buddhism, which as of this writing claims nearly 400 million adherents
worldwide.
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