You are currently logged-out. You can log-in or create an account to see more talks, save favorites, and more.

Suffering Talks

Duḥkha (; Sanskrit: दुःख, Pali: dukkha) "suffering", "pain", "unease", or "unsatisfactoriness", is an important concept in Buddhism, Jainism and Hinduism. Its meaning depends on the context, and may refer more specifically to the "unsatisfactoriness" or "unease" of craving for and grasping after transient 'things' (sense objects, including thoughts), expecting pleasure from them while ignorant of this transientness. In Buddhism, dukkha is part of the first of the Four Noble Truths and one of the three marks of existence. The term also appears in scriptures of Hinduism, such as the Upanishads, in discussions of moksha (spiritual liberation).

While the term dukkha has often been derived from the prefix du- ("bad" or "difficult") and the root kha ("empty," "hole"), meaning a badly fitting axle-hole of a cart or chariot giving "a very bumpy ride," it may actually be derived from duḥ-stha, a "dis-/ bad- + stand-", that is, "standing badly, unsteady," "unstable."

From Duḥkha on Wikipedia

Showing 329 talks
 

- Reset Search

Title Speaker

Lotus Sutra, Lecture No. II-12

Serial: SR-00004

Lotus Sutra, Lecture No. 12
Shunryu Suzuki Lecture

October 1968

Lotus Sutra, First Principle, Suffering, Observe, Compassion, Intention, heart,...
Oct 1968
Series 2, Talk 12
Tassajara

Morning Service

Serial: SF-00016

Mid-Seventies

Emptiness, Suffering, Consciousness
City Center

Transformation of Consciousness

Anger, Practice, Suffering
Unknown

Way-Seeking Mind Talks

Serial: SF-03089C

Student talks, should not be published

Time, Suffering, Practice Period
Tassajara

Ngondro

Suffering, Work, Time
Unknown

Embodying Compassion in Zen Practice

Serial: SF-04056

"Partly destroyed"

Time, Practice, Suffering
Unknown

Transformation of Consciousness

Serial: SF-02708

Harmonium Mundi

Suffering, Pain, Practice
Unknown

Pages