Everything is suffering. Human beings define their existence through suffering and suffering. All four noble truths are about pain. Suffering, the origin of suffering, Nieana and that way. The word suffering is used in all texts and teachings of Buddhism. Suffering is defined as feeling pain, suffering, loss, injury, injury, or punishment. Buddhism uses the deeper meaning of pain. It is a change or ultimate frustration. Even if people are happy, they will never be happy forever.
The following Zen Buddhist disclosure is not Zen Buddhism disclosure. Indeed, all the content that I wrote about Zen Buddhism in this article only makes its meaning ambiguous. If "meaning" refers to the important attribute / quality of things and events that are intentionally conveyed through the media. Grammar component From the beginning, we do not apply at all to the temporary definition and the consistency of various definitions in other parts of the world, nothing we think is neither an item nor an object, I understand immediately that it is not. Even if you recognize things, that is attributes, you just believe that people only exist in illusions ... ....
Zen Buddhism is a fusion of Mahayana Buddhism and Taoism, which is mainly performed in China and Japan. It places great emphasis on "the deep understanding of the essence of things" through the experience of the moment and through direct experience. The name is derived from Sanskrit dhyana and represents a specific state of meditation. Zoroastrian religion and philosophy based on the teachings of the prophet Zoroaster (Zarathustra, Zartosht)
A very important part of Buddhism is meditation. In modern world, meditation is the most important thing in Buddhism. Buddhism emphasizes training and meditation (Eliade 371). Today, Buddhism's greatest denomination is Mahayana Buddhism, Buddhism is "the first emotion to other existence, express a strong desire to save all beings, share strength with them, Analysis involving fostering the presence reached the apex of the emptiness, but eventually they worked on these efforts to save others (Eliade 371).