Page 7 - Understanding Buddhism
P. 7

and elsewhere. The servant told him that indeed, sickness was
               widespread in everyday life across the known world. He also told
               his master that death was the inevitable end for all living things,
               including people.


               Enduring Physical Punishment
               Siddhartha for the fi rst time realized one of life’s main truths—that
               the world is full of suffering. But, he asked himself, why does suf-
               fering exist? Also, was there perhaps a way to avoid it? Mere sec-
               onds after he had considered these queries, a holy man strode
               by. The servant explained to Siddhartha that such monks often
               sought out deserted, quiet places and meditated for long periods
               in hopes of discovering life’s deeper meanings. The prince con-
               sidered this idea. Maybe if he, too, devoted himself to solitude
               and meditation, he could understand some of the many realities
               of life he had missed while trapped in his father’s palace.
                   It also struck the young man that his becoming a solitary monk
               would require leaving behind his relatives, among them his wife
               and son, whom he dearly loved. He felt he could not leave them
               without saying good-bye. So that night, he sneaked back into the
               palace. He stood over them and bade them farewell in silence as
               they slept.
                   Away from the palace again, Siddhartha abandoned all his
               luxuries and even got rid of most of his clothes. Eager to be-
               gin meditating and gaining wisdom,
               he did what many monks did—began
               practicing  extreme  self-discipline  and        “The bones
               self-denial. Week after strenuous week,          of my spine
               he endured extremes of heat and cold             were like
               in hopes of better learning to focus his         a row of
               mind and think deep thoughts. He no                           8
               longer washed. Also, at times he lay             spindles.”
               for hours on tangles of thorns and slept         —The Buddha
               beside rotting human corpses that had
               been tossed into a mass grave. Worst of
               all, he ate less and less and fi nally tried to live on a single grain of
               rice each day. After a while, he got so thin that when he pressed
               a hand to his stomach he could feel his spine. “The bones of my
               spine,” he later remembered, “were like a row of spindles.” 8



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