Act on what nature entails relatively than what you desire.
When you do more, you attain less so mastering the art of doing less you achieve more, one of the major ways to learn how to achieve more is to stop worrying, learning to accept the way things are rather than entombing yourself in trepidation and anxiety
When you look at Lao-Tzu’s view of the do-nothing concept, it can make sense if you think in the same way that he viewed, when we become impatient, stressed, and …show more content…
If you do nothing, then nothing gets done, however, in essence you must practice, practice, practice until you've mastered to some degree. Then you let go of it and free yourself into unproblematic competence. When you learn to be content with bare minimal then anything, extra will be a blessing.
Buddha’s four noble truths are the most rudimentary of his teaching and can be best understood not as beliefs rather than categories of experience. Buddhism is a major global religion with an intricate history and structure of beliefs. The four noble truths of Buddha are basically a contingency plan for dealing with the anguish humanity faces, these basic teaching are:
1. First Noble Truth- The Truth of Suffering
Suffering is the condition of all existence, birth is a suffering, age is a suffering, sickness is a suffering, suffering when things doesn’t go our way, suffering is a common bond we all share. We need to understand that Buddha doesn’t essentially say that everything in the world is suffering rather it cannot be denied that many things in life can indeed bring a life of displeasure and fretfulness. If we want that suffering to end we need to know and understand what causes it and that’s where the second truth comes