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Paperback How to Solve Our Human Problems: The Four Noble Truths Book

ISBN: 0978906713

ISBN13: 9780978906719

How to Solve Our Human Problems: The Four Noble Truths

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

In this busy world, our experiences of happiness are fleeting and short-lived, while inner peace eludes us completely. Our negative states of mind, such as uncontrolled desire and anger, create endless problems for ourselves and others, and prevent us from fulfilling our deepest wishes. Geshe Kelsang begins by presenting Buddha's popular teaching on the Four Noble Truths, which offers a clear and simple solution to all our problems, guiding us...

Customer Reviews

6 ratings

This could change you

If you read, contemplate and put the instructions in this into practice, you will change for the better.

Good basic information about Buddhism

My mother who speaks and reads only Spanish, tells me this is an excellently written book with great information on how to live life and changing your outlook on how you perceive life in general using the "Four Noble Truths" as taught by the Buddha.

The answers to life

The title says it all. I've been studying with this author for 6 years. It has changed my life to who I want to be. Life is a better place.

Wisdom that improves your daily life.

I read this book over one of my summer reprieves. I must say in all honesty, this was a much better investment of my time than The Da Vinci Code. This book penetrates and exposes the subtle processes in your mind that lead you to suffering over and over. Geshe Kelsang brings Buddhist teachings into our lives for their very intended purpose: easing our suffering and pointing us to the path of liberation. If you believe Buddhist teachings are simply of an intellectual or mystical nature, this book will show you that they are intended to be applied to your everyday life. This is the only way in which they are of any benefit, and Geshe Kelsang expresses this point perfectly. Awesome.

If you have problems with anger, this is the book for you

The book is really divided into two sections, one which illustrates the central points of Buddha's teachings, highlighting that the source of all human suffering is really all in our minds. That it is our perspective on a person or event or thing, the 'broken car', the 'enemy' at work, that often stops us from being happy. The second part of the book contains advice on anger, and how to cultivate patience. The central argument he puts forward is that anger is a destructive mind, which causes pain to ourselves and to others. And that in the grip of anger, people behave in the most unskillful and even dangerous ways. In the West we feel anger is a good thing, active, 'getting things out in the open' as it were, instead of 'repressing.' what it most often does, however, is makes the whole situation worse, because we are letting our often deluded mind, clouded by anger and disappointment, call the shots. Think of Basil Fawlty in Fawlty Towers-his constant anger drove people away, and only made his daily life more and more complicated! I kept thinking of the scene where he gets so angry at his car he says, "right, i'll show you," and begins to beat it with a huge tree branch while he tells it all the things that he has always hated about it. We may not use the tree branch with our loved ones, but verbal lashing out can be even more damaging-we can easily get a new car, but a new friend, partner, child? As Geshe Kelsang Gyatso says, a patient mind is able to step back from the situation to see how best to deal with it without flying off the handle and causing one to do or say something they will definitely regret. Arguments with loved ones, for example, are supposed to restore harmony and peace, but how often do they really? A whole chapter on reasons not to retaliate is super as well. This is a very basic book for people interested in learning more about Buddhism, but the ideas for managing anger and cultivating patience in order to keep control of even the most difficult situations is one which any reader can benefit from.

Practical Esoteric Advice

This latest book from Geshe Kelsang Gyatso gives practical advice on using Dharma to solve our daily problems. Just reading a few pages gives one much to think about. It contains the essence of many of Buddha's most profound teachings, but in a clear, simple format. For complete details about each of the concepts woven together here, you would want to read Geshe Kelsang's other books such as Joyful Path of Good Fortune. If you are a beginner, its a great "first taste" that will whet your appetite for Dharma. If you are an experienced student, I think you will be delighted by the way the teachings are freshly elucidated. I really enjoy this book, and return to it often.
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