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In a nut-shell, if we understand the causes of sufferings (envy, hate, covetousness, etc,) we can rectify it.. Unconditional Love. They understand the person has made choices that are causing them pain and they really want to be restored to love & happiness. By loving them & focusing on their happy inner spirit one can be a catalyst to help that person release their suffering and become well & happy again. "What is the Buddhist Response to suffering?" Personally, I find Buddhism to be a beautiful religion full of peace and tranqulity especially after visiting Asia and witnessing the people living within the realms of applied belief and not just lip professing. In researching for specific answers to your question I quote from the research by Creation Apologetics. As Follows: The Buddha taught that speculation about spiritual beings hinders one from achieving spiritual enlightenment, however, many Buddhist groups are very concerned with appeasing evil spirits and are very much enslaved by spiritual bondage. Some of the major concepts and teachings of Buddhism are: The Eight-fold Path -1) right understanding, 2) right speech, 3) right intentions, 4) right conduct, 5) right livelihood, 6) right effort, 7) right mindfulness, and 8) right meditation. These are believed to lead to singleness of mind, wisdom, and nirvana (a state of enlightenment). The Four Noble Truths -1) Life is suffering. 2) Suffering is due to attachment. 3) Attachment can be overcome by certain spiritual techniques and knowledge. 4) The eight-fold path can accomplish this and achieve nirvana. Karma -Man accumulates certain types of energy forces, which form his future existences on the path to nirvana. And of course nirvana means: The ineffable ultimate in which one has attained disinterested wisdom and compassion. An ideal condition of rest, harmony, stability, or joy. Suffering is caused by one's own actions. He would say that it is either bad karma from previous actions or directly self-imposed by klesha (bad/incorrect thinking.) Klesha is usually caused by desire for worldly things. This causes suffering because you cannot have everything you want AND because those things are all illusion anyway, so they can never make you truly happy. Either way, you use this as motivation to work harder at reaching nirvana and to help you grow greater empathy for others who are also suffering. The etiology of suffering (duhkha), according to the Buddha, is conditioned by thirst for the Five Aggregates which are constitutive of the psycho-physical being we wrongly mistake to be who we really are (Samyutta-Nikaya, v.425).

If we are to liberate ourselves from such suffering we do so by taking a path which leads to nirvana. In this regard--to put it simply--in nirvana we see that which is free of suffering; which is undying. With that knowing and seeing (a kind of gnosis), we subsequently give up thirsting for the Five Aggregates and progressively decouple our mind from the psycho-physical being. The mind, at this point, is said to be invisible, infinite, and luminous. The Buddha said: "I teach one thing and one only: suffering and the end of suffering." The correct Buddhist response to suffering is to free oneself from it by following the Noble Eightfold Path. Once this has been achieved one should help others to be free from suffering too. A person follows the Noble Eightfold Path in order to develop wisdom. It is wisdom that will enable us to be free from suffering. Before we look at how wisdom brings freedom from suffering we'll examine what suffering is and how it is caused. Because it is only when we understand suffering and its cause that freedom from suffering can be realised. Suffering: The Buddha taught that existence involves suffering. The word he used was 'dukkha'. This means: 'suffering', 'unsatisfactoriness'. He taught that nothing in this world - material (such as delicious food, music, beautiful bodies, etc.), and mental (such as emotions, feelings, etc.) - is able to fully satisfy us: none can bring us real peace. Things are unable to fully satisfy us because they are impermanent: they are constantly changing. Anything that is constantly changing cannot be said to be able to bring lasting happiness. The cause of suffering is craving: But we don't suffer because things are impermanent: we suffer because we want things to be other than they are; we suffer because of our craving and desire. Think of British weather (if you know what it's like): it is always changing. When we want it to remain sunny we suffer. When we want the clouds to go we suffer. When we want it to stop raining we suffer. The reason why we suffer isn't because of the weather being so changeable; it's because of our desire for it to be other than it is. And so it is craving that causes suffering. Craving, by its very nature, cannot be satisfied. Think of when you have a really bad itch: you want to scratch it so you do and it feels great. Then a few minutes later it itches even more, and so you want to scratch it even more, and so you do, and it feels great. But then it itches even more than that, and so you really, really want to scratch it, and so you do, and it feels great. This process goes on and on and on: our craving is never satisfied. Often we only stop scratching when we are about to start bleeding. So the Buddha taught that if we want to be truly happy then we must free our minds from craving: when we no longer crave for things we will always be happy. Wisdom: How do we remove craving from our minds then? By following the Noble Eightfold Path in order to develop wisdom. When we have real wisdom we see the truth of life: we see that all things of this world, physical and mental, are like British weather: impermanent, unreliable, and unable to fully satisfy us. When we deeply understand that all things are impermanent then our craving disappears, for we know that nothing is really worth wanting, for nothing can really satisfy us. When craving goes so too does suffering and consequently we are left with complete peace and happiness. Summary So, the Buddhist response to suffering is to free oneself from it by following the Noble Eightfold Path. Once this has been achieved one should help others to be free from suffering too. Note: only when a Buddhist has helped himself can he help others. It is impossible for someone who is stuck in the mud to pull out someone else who is stuck. A Buddhist must free himself first, then he will be more able to successfully help others to be free.
There isn't one universal Buddhist response to suffering, each Buddhist may have their own individual way of dealing with this issue according to their understanding of the teachings they have received.

All Buddhists share a common appreciation of the four noble truths and as such are likely to see suffering as a natural part of the law of cause and effect. This doesn't mean that Buddhists find suffering inevitable or irrelevant, quite the opposite. Many Buddhists are committed to work for conditions whereby the suffering experienced by all beings may diminish.

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10y ago
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16y ago

Suffering is a disturbance or irritation of the mindstream. It is an obscuration of the mind, or essence of a person, or, if you will, the soul. The opposite of suffering in Buddhist epistemology is not really happiness or even the cessation of suffering, but freedom from the polarizing concept that causes us to be attracted to some things and averse to others. Suffering is thought to be the result of confused thinking. People think that to be happy, they need to grasp at those things that they think will bring them pleasure. We are very attached to this idea; that having what we want will bring us happiness. It is actually that grasping, that attachment that causes suffering.

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16y ago

Suffering is a disturbance or irritation of the mindstream. It is an obscuration of the mind, or essence of a person, or, if you will, the soul. The opposite of suffering in Buddhist epistemology is not really happiness or even the cessation of suffering, but freedom from the polarizing concept that causes us to be attracted to some things and averse to others. Suffering is thought to be the result of confused thinking. People think that to be happy, they need to grasp at those things that they think will bring them pleasure. We are very attached to this idea; that having what we want will bring us happiness. It is actually that grasping, that attachment that causes suffering.

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15y ago

The Buddha taught that there is suffering, that everything has the potential to cause suffering and that attachment is the origin of suffering. he also taught that suffering can be ended, and about the Buddhist path to end the suffering of yourself and others by achieving nirvana.

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11y ago

All of Buddhism is centered around the overcoming of suffering. Its the reason why a young prince named Siddhartha Gautama gave us his kingdom and left his wife and child to find an answer to why people suffer. The answer he came up with is our desires and aversions cause suffering. The Buddha then taught to us a way to reach a mental state which is free of suffering, which is called enlightenment. He gave to us teachings and guides on how we can overcome the desires and aversions that he had overcome so we could obtain the same blissful state he had achieved. Some of these are called The Four Noble Truths, The Noble Eightfold Path, the Four Marks of Existence.

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11y ago

Suffering, (Duhkka in Pali) is really closer to the meaning of discontentment and is the central premise of Buddhism that we are never really satisfied and always seeking more; and this seeking is what drives us to be Unhappy. Suffering is at the core of Buddhism and is a major part of the Four Noble Truths, which are:

1. Life is full of suffering. The word the Buddha used was probably closer to Discontentment. That we are never really satisfied and if we are, it doesn't last.

2. This Suffering (discontentment) has a cause. This cause is our attachment to desires. Now, this doesn't mean that having desires is bad. It means that we must be smart about our desires. We shouldn't have these aching desires to get things like new clothes or the latest cell phone because once we get it, we are only happy for a short while. Then we are discontent again. We should desire for things that are helpful to others, or that we can make a positive impact on someone's life.

3. There is a state in which suffering (discontentment) stops and that state is attainable. If we apply ourselves correctly to the 4th truth, we can become happy with life just as it is. We can break the chains that tie us to wide mood swings and over-reactions. We can treat people kindly and be generous and

be content.

4. There is a path to end suffering. The Buddha laid out a path that anyone can follow. It takes practice to override the view of things and how we have thought throughout our lives but you can get there from here if you practice hard enough and with real intention.

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11y ago

The first of the four noble truths is that all life is suffering. The second is that the source of suffering is attachment. The third is it is possible to escape suffering. The fourth is path to escape suffering lies in following the noble eightfold path.

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7y ago


In the first two Noble Truths, He has diagnosed the sufferings and identified their causes. Buddha says that the world is a house of pain and the reasons for pain are desires. Definitely people's desires are always increasing and when the desires are not fulfilled people feel stressful. But Buddha also teaches us how we can remove the suffering by reducing and ultimately finishing our desires. By following the Buddha eight fold path we can easily remove all sufferings.

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Q: What did Buddha teach about suffering?
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Related questions

What did buddha teach about 3 causes of suffering?

Actually, he only gave one (root) cause of suffering, craving.


Why do Buddha teach that the cessation of suffering is the extinction of craving?

Because he was enlightened. (At least this is the Buddhist view).


What was Buddha seeking when he left his home?

Buddha was seeking what was out there and the meaning to suffering because people were suffering.


What does Mahayana Buddhism teach about teach about the Buddha himself?

He was a very important god after he was dead.


What was buddha goal?

Buddha's intent was to end suffering. This was to be done by understanding at suffering is caused by desire and that it can be eliminated by controlling desire.


Why Buddhism important to the Buddha?

Buddhism is unimportant to the Buddha, the Buddha only cared about reality and ending suffering.


Where did Gautama Buddha teach?

Gautama Buddha primarily taught in India, traveling and giving discourses in various locations such as Bodh Gaya, Sarnath, and Kushinagar. His teachings, known as the Dharma or the Middle Way, aimed to help individuals overcome suffering and attain enlightenment through practices such as meditation and mindfulness.


What was Buddha trying to explain or escape form?

The Buddha was trying to find the answer to suffering.


What is the buddha believe causes suffering?

Desire.


What is Buddha message?

Compassion and the relief of suffering


What is the main thing Buddha did not want?

Buddha taught the path leading to the end of suffering.


How did Buddha react when he saw suffering?

personally buddha is fake so not a very good question!