Zen Buddhism : 5O Spiritual Teachings From Buddhist To Enlightenment And True Happiness by Kellie Sullivan

Posted March 6, 2018 by Curly Carla in CC's Goodreads Challenge 2018, Reviews / 0 Comments

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Zen Buddhism : 5O Spiritual Teachings From Buddhist To Enlightenment And True Happiness by Kellie SullivanTitle: Zen Buddhism : 5O Spiritual Teachings From Buddhist To Enlightenment And True Happiness
Author: Kellie Sullivan
Published by: Indie
Release Date: August 19, 2016
Format: Kindle Book
Pages: 50
Genres: Self Help, Religious
Reading Challenges: CC's Goodreads Reading Challenge
Find it: GoodreadsAmazon
My rating: three-stars

Blurb:

For Buddha, the path to a true happiness starts from the understanding of suffering’s root causes. Those people who are considering Buddha a pessimist due to his concern with the suffering have missed the right point. As a matter of fact, Buddha is a very skillful doctor and he can immediately break the bad news of suffering, but still prescribes proactive treatment course.

In this representation, the medicine is Buddha’s teachings of companies and wisdom known as the Dharma, as well as the nurses that show and encourage us to take our medicine are the Sangha or Buddhist community. However, the illness can only be treated if the patient is willing to follow the advice and the course of treatment laid by the doctor (Buddha) – the Eightfold Path as the core that involves the control of mind.

This book contains proven steps and strategies on how to know the spiritual teachings from the Buddhist to Enlightenment and true happiness

Read, learn and be enlightened by the spiritual teachings from the Buddhist in order to experience and acquire your true happiness!

My Review:

I think this book is for people who already know the teachings of Buddha.  It kept referencing concepts that I didn’t know and then it would try to explain them in layman’s terms but I am a layman and had no idea what it meant.  Guess I’m not Buddhist material. And while I did finish it, I learned nothing from it. Poorly explained IMO.

 

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