Sunday, February 17, 2019
I am Buddhist :: essays research papers
I am BuddhistAn often forgotten essential in our rook existence we call life is our need for at least a quintessential connection of spirituality for our own subsistence. And as this world we bang in, develops into supposed development and as evolution directs our way of life into a tedious search of happiness derived from money and a person in a modern society barely has a moment for a prayer and time being as impatient as it is, the early days have no seconds to just sit and contemplate the power of a higher being, that a GOD might be the one that governs our fortune and fate and to have a flicker of an instant where one experiences a religious outlook on lifethe air we breathe turns a little fresher and a load gets lifted off shoulders of punctuate mentalities and call it a pre-mature revelation or a pious intro of my character but I have encountered such an emotion when I visited a haven called Bodh Gaya. Situated in the most corrupts of states in India, Biharit is an haven of belief and hope and maybe the only answer and truth to some.Its an uncanny placement for enlightenment, one might suggest but as a Buddhist, imagining all the struggle and suffering that the Buddha had overcome and all the adversities he had surpassed and of course the harsh truth he reveals to us and conveys with such intend in his simple diction is at most overwhelming. At depression sight the Mahabodhi temple standing tall among such meagre neighbours, confused me at once petrifying in some ways and tho it seemed to comfort me all at once. As for the papal tree where Buddha had gained redemption is surrounded with such spirituality that it seemed to bog down upon my shoulders and yet at the same time it uplifted my spirits in the most unexplainable way.The hustling and bustling noises of Indians selling odd trinkets and beggars among the streets are drowned by the Tantric chants of monks praying in union. A pilgrimage that changed the way I thought about the spring chic ken and I was young too, in that locationfore it basically changed the way I thought.As words are my limits so is word my only limits through which I cannot describe and do justice to the communion that one has to go there and experience for oneself. Nothing is as constant as change and the pilgrimage through life does not end until death.
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