Siddhartha Gautama 'Buddha'

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Siddhartha Gautama “Buddha”
Born in Nepal in the 6th century B.C., Buddha was a spiritual leader and teacher whose life serves as the foundation of the Buddhist religion. According to the most widely known story of his life, after experimenting with different teachings for years, and finding none of them to be what he seeked, Gautama spent a fateful night in deep meditation. During his meditation, all of the answers he had been seeking became clear, and achieved full awareness, thereby becoming who we know as “Buddha”.
Buddha or “enlightened one”, was born Siddhartha (which means “he who achieves his aim”) Gautama to the Shakyas in Lumbini, which is now modern Nepal, in the 6th century B.C. His father was king who ruled the tribe. His mother …show more content…

One day, full of curiosity, he travelled outside the palace walls and was quickly confronted with how weak and precious human life really was. He asked his charioteer to take him on a few rides through the country side. Questions about everything he’d never experienced before made him want to take more journeys, and on these journeys he came across an aged man, a diseased man and a decaying corpse. The realities of old age, disease, and death sickened the Prince. Finally, he saw a wandering ascetic. The charioteer explained that the ascetic had wandered the world to seek freedom from human fear of death and suffering. Siddhartha was shocked by all he’d seen, and the next day, at age 29, left his kingdom, wife and son to lead an ascetic life, and determine a way to get rid of the universal suffering that he now found to be one of the defining traits of human existence.
For the next six years, Siddhartha lived an ascetic life and took part in its practices, studying and meditating using the words of different religious teachers to guide him. He practiced his new way of life with a group of five ascetics. The five ascetics became Siddhartha's followers because his dedication was so stunning. When answers to his questions didn’t appear, he reinforced his efforts, enduring pain, fasting nearly to starvation, and refusing …show more content…

As he accepted it, he suddenly realized that seizing physical well-being was not the way to achieve inner peace, and that living under harsh physical conditions was not helping him achieve spiritual release. So he ate his rice, drank water and bathed in the river. The five ascetics decided that Siddhartha had given up the ascetic life, and left him. From then on, Siddhartha encouraged people to follow a path of balance instead of extremism, which he decided to call the Middle

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