Inner Peace Essays

  • Siddhartha: The Journey for Inner Peace and Happiness

    2432 Words  | 5 Pages

    Siddhartha by Hermann Hesse is about a man's journey to find inner peace and happiness.  He first decides to try to seek peace by following the Samanas, holy men.  Then he seeks happiness through material things and pleasures of the body.  After this path fails to provide him with the peace for which he searches, he follows Buddha but soon realizes that Buddha's teaching will not lead him to his goal.  Siddhartha finally finds peace when Vasudeva, the ferryman, teaches him to listen to the river

  • Finding Inner Peace

    781 Words  | 2 Pages

    Finding Inner Peace "Nothing can bring you peace but yourself."  I am thinking about the time when my best friend died, and when I stopped being myself and my life started going to hell. It happened maybe two or three years ago.  The day is very clear in my memory.  The weather was cold and nasty.  The monotonous rain made everything outside look gray.  I was at home, waiting for my girlfriend to arrive.  I was sitting on the couch drinking hot tea and feeling warm and cozy.  My dog

  • Inner Peace And World Peace

    1171 Words  | 3 Pages

    either inner peace and/or world peace by linking their relevant sacred texts to their principal teachings. World peace is an ideal of freedom, peace, and happiness among and within all nations. It is the professed ambition of many past and present world leaders. It is the utopian ideal of planetary non-violence by which nations willingly cooperate, either voluntarily or by virtue of a system of governance, which prevents warfare. Both Christianity and Islam explore the possibility of world peace in

  • Fighting for Inner-peace

    662 Words  | 2 Pages

    Fighting for Inner-peace I am fighting for inner-peace. I know this is a paradox, and I'm rather proud because it is true. Passivity has been a lifelong threat, laziness a constant lure in my search for identity. This world begs me to succumb to existing in the image of someone else, it asks only that I slip silently and blindly into the niche it provides instead of carving my own. I required a long time to work up courage to fight for the serenity I had glimpsed in the woods in summer and in

  • Hamlet: Emotions of Despair, Sadness, Anger, and Inner Peace

    1070 Words  | 3 Pages

    Hamlet: Emotions of Despair, Sadness, Anger, and Inner Peace The character of Prince Hamlet, in Shakespeare's "Hamlet," displays many strong yet justified emotions. For instance, in Hamlet's "To be Or Not To Be" soliloquy, perhaps one of the most well known quotes in the English language, Hamlet actually debates suicide. His despair, sorrow, anger and inner peace are all justifiable emotions for this troubled character. Hamlet's feeling of despair towards his life and to the world develops

  • Knowles' Separate Peace Essays: Self-Knowledge and Inner-Peace

    761 Words  | 2 Pages

    A Separate Peace:  Self-Knowledge and Inner-Peace The theme suggested in the closing paragraph of the novel A Separate Peace is that people create their own enemy and then they defend themselves laboriously and obsessively against their imaginary enemy. They develop a particular frame of mind to allay the fear that arises while facing their nonexistent enemy. In the novel, the protagonist, Gene, tries to fight a war with his best friend, Finny, not realizing that the enemy he sees is not Finny but

  • Gene Finny: The Struggle For Inner Peace

    769 Words  | 2 Pages

    three main events in the novel that were significant stages of development of Gene that transform him from an unconfident, fearful, angry teenager to an adult who has managed to successfully deal with these negative feelings and to live a life of inner peace and harmony were accidentally breaking Finny’s leg, in Brinker's informal Butt Room trial which later went into the more formal Assembly Room to investigate more into Finny's accident, and essentially being the reason why Finny died. These experiences

  • Inner Conflict In John Knowles A Separate Peace

    920 Words  | 2 Pages

    An Analysis of Inner Conflict in A Separate Peace In 1942, a group of prep school boys take courses to allow them extra time to prepare for the armed forces. Gene, a conservative intellectual, befriends Finny, a free-spirited adventurer. The two form a club where they must dive from a high tree limb into the Devon River. He becomes anxious that his friend is taking time away from his studies. One evening, as Finny is about to jump from the tree limb, Gene bounces the branch and causes Finny to

  • Inner Peace

    637 Words  | 2 Pages

    “What is inner peace?” will usually respond by saying, “Happiness.” Is this true? Is the only way to establish inner peace through happiness? Many philosophers and monks have contemplated what inner peace means, and from their efforts we have developed a ‘dictionary’ definition. Inner peace is a considered noun. But the question remains, is inner peace a thing or is it an idea? The connotation of inner peace is–just like beauty—in the eye of the beholder. Personally, I believe inner peace means stepping

  • The Importance Of Inner Peace

    803 Words  | 2 Pages

    Peace is a noun and could be defined as freedom from disturbance; quiet and tranquility. Although it is much more than just that; peace is what we all yearn for however most of us can never find. It is what we fight for. It is what we live for. Peace is a state of harmony characterized by the lack of violent conflict and the freedom from fear of violence. Commonly understood as the absence of hostility, peace also suggests the existence of healthy or newly healed interpersonal or international, prosperity

  • Essay On Inner Peace

    713 Words  | 2 Pages

    explore the notion of inner peace. These texts provide different directions and perspectives on guiding their respective followers to achieving inner peace. To understand a Muslim and Christian view of peace one must acknowledge what the meaning of inner peace is. Inner peace is a state of calmness and tranquility experienced by an individual. It can also be understood to be associated with the spiritual peace with God for Christians and spiritual peace with Allah who desires peace for Muslims. Muslims

  • Moby Dick - Characters of Captain Ahab and Ishmael

    593 Words  | 2 Pages

    characteristics of the “stereotypical seaman”.  But, what the character lacks in physical description, he makes up for with a full personality that his described extensively throughout the book.  Ishmael is a man who seeks what is best described as “inner peace”.  He is very content with himself when on the water, and has a great love for being a seaman.  He joins the crew of the Pequod to satisfy his longing to be back on the ocean, but as it turns out, the particular voyage he is to set out on is not

  • Character Analysis Of Siddhartha

    1103 Words  | 3 Pages

    Siddhartha had one single goal - to become empty, to become empty of thirst, desire, dreams, pleasure and sorrow - to let the Self die. No longer to be Self, to experience the peace of an emptied heart, to experience pure thought - that was his goal. When all the Self was conquered and dead, when all passions and desires were silent, then the last must awaken, the innermost of Being that is no longer Self - the great secret (14) Siddhartha, according to his actions, was constantly in search for knowledge

  • Descriptive Essay - The Meadow

    518 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Meadow On a crisp autumn afternoon, I sat idly under an enormous oak tree watching as a whirlwind whisked across the rolling hills of  the meadow.  As it passed by me, the whirlwind scooped up a dormant pile of leaves lying next to the oak tree.  The leaves appeared to come alive twisting, turning, and dancing about the meadow.  They were sporting their new fall colors of red, orange, brown, and yellow.   The brittle autumn leaves seemed to be having a party.  As the

  • College Essay

    535 Words  | 2 Pages

    caused by the death of a friend, loss of a loved confidant, and abuse from a boyfriend, my performance while attending school was excellent. My grades have improved since entering my senior year. I have learned a lot from the depression, finding inner peace, and achieving personal emotional growth. An event in my life that has left a lasting impression on me would be the lesson that I have learned about life. Last summer, I went to a revival crusade, which was held at the Meadowlands. There was

  • Fraternization

    594 Words  | 2 Pages

    off of the troubles of the day by giving u a moment when your heart no longer beats irregularly, but because of that simple, calm, morally correct act of showing affection for someone else you are now filled with an inner peace. Not a peace where you can't do anything, but a peace were nothing in the world can bother you. Except when a person of supposed "higher authority" comes and says that in a way, a small way, holding hands in the so-called place of learning is incorrect. Today's society

  • Religion

    634 Words  | 2 Pages

    situations. Inventing a God in this situation would allow light to be shed on these situations. God is something that many people live for and center their lives around. When someone believes in God they receive a sense of inner peace from God and allow themselves to use this peace to interact with others. In reality, I see God in everyone and everything, but I also see unnecessary hatred. Looking at the way in which we interact with each other now, with the belief of God present, I notice that our

  • The Quest for Nirvana in Siddhartha

    2693 Words  | 6 Pages

    Some years after, they meet the Buddha, whom Govinda stays with to be a monk while Siddhartha leaves to continue on his own adventures. Toward the end of their lives, they meet again at a river bank and discover if they have truly achieved inner peace. Hesse uses Govinda as a contrast to Siddhartha. As displayed in excursions with the Samanas, with the Buddha, and on other adventures, Siddhartha is a character who is more independent and must learn on his own while Govinda is more dependent

  • Natalie Goldberg’s Long Quiet Highway: Waking Up in America

    2717 Words  | 6 Pages

    holding it close to one’s heart, the reader grasps the essence of Goldberg’s message. It becomes clear that awakening can take on many forms and can be reached by different roads, but it is all centered on one goal: to go within oneself and find inner peace and understanding. Through her exploration of America, teaching, spirituality, impermanence, and writing, and through her writing style and language, Goldberg sends her readers along their own long, quiet highway. The main point one might gather

  • If Time Could Be Saved In A [in a] Bottle

    1493 Words  | 3 Pages

    knows that some elderly people are very content with their lives. Even though their bodies may not possess the same physical capabilities that they did in youth, they are surrounded by an aura of contentment that almost make one envious of the inner peace reaped as compensation for a life lived to its fullest capacity. [SV Agr - 1] Given another chance at youth, they would not change the path their lives have taken. [The first two paragraphs could have been combined into one.] 2 There arc