Grasping for and clinging to things that we cannot possess.a desire for money and happinesscraving.
Theravada is the oldest school of Buddhism.
Buddhism teaches that everyone experiences suffering and misery caused by a desire for money and happiness.
The principal teachings of Gautama Buddha can be summarised in what the Buddhists call the 'Four Noble Truths':First - There is suffering and misery in life.Second- The cause of this suffering and misery is desire.Third - Suffering and misery can be removed by removing desire.Fourth - Desire can be removed by following the Eight Fold Path.
Buddhism is a religion that is based on the practices, beliefs and traditions of Siddhartha Gautama. Siddhartha Gautama is who is also known as the Buddha basically means the awakened one.
I can give you several sentences.I was in misery with the itchy poison ivy.Her misery was heart-breaking.He caused misery wherever he went.
Do you mean misery?"The earthquake in Haiti caused tremendous misery to thousands of families."
suffering, pain, distress, misery, torture, discomfort, torment, hardship
Buddhism speaks to suffering in its widest sense, not just the extreme forms such as misery. Suffering can be a vague sense of insufficiency caused dissatisfaction with a luxurious lifestyle or even the transient lust for a donut as you pass a bakery and smell them cooking. Our attachments and desires are the causes of this discomfort. It is not bad that we have desires. The desire to become a Buddha is good. But having unwise desires is not. For example, desiring a particular car because you think it might make you "cool" is not wise. Things don't make you cool. Or working yourself to death to buy a new large TV is not wise, because while the TV will make you happy for a while, it will get old and break or an even better TV will come along. Now you are not so happy with your TV. The biggest issue with attachment is our belief that things will always be as they are. Well, all thing change, and our desire to have them stay as it they are is one of the biggest reasons we suffer.
The aristocrat who was affected by the misery of poor people was Gautama Buddha. Buddhism was founded on the teachings of this man. Buddha means 'the enlightened one. '
Buddhism speaks to suffering in its widest sense, not just the extreme forms such as misery. Suffering can be a vague sense of insufficiency caused dissatisfaction with a luxurious lifestyle or even the transient lust for a donut as you pass a bakery and smell them cooking. Our attachments and desires are the causes of this discomfort. It is not bad that we have desires. The desire to become a Buddha is good. But having unwise desires is not. For example, desiring a particular car because you think it might make you "cool" is not wise. Things don't make you cool. Or working yourself to death to buy a new large TV is not wise, because while the TV will make you happy for a while, it will get old and break or an even better TV will come along. Now you are not so happy with your TV. The biggest issue with attachment is our belief that things will always be as they are. Well, all thing change, and our desire to have them stay as it they are is one of the biggest reasons we suffer.
Macbeth illustrates that the theme of greed when we violate the rights of others to achieve our goals which usually leads to pain misery and suffering on ourselves.