The principal teachings of Gautama Buddha can be summarised in what the Buddhists call the 'Four Noble Truths':
First - There is suffering and misery in life.
Second- The cause of this suffering and misery is desire.
Third - Suffering and misery can be removed by removing desire.
Fourth - Desire can be removed by following the Eight Fold Path.
"I am the owner of my karma .
I inherit my karma.
I am born of my karma.
I am related to my karma.
I live supported by my karma.
Whatever karma I create, whether good or evil, that I shall inherit."
The Buddha, Anguttara Nikaya V.57 - Upajjhatthana Sutta According to the four noble truths, you cause your own suffering by attachment, anger, and ignorance. For further information, see the page link, further down this page, listed under Related Links.
Suffering exists because of our desires (cravings), aversions and ignorance.
Now it should be explained that the Pali word the Buddha used is Dukkha. As in all translations some words can't be translated one-to-one from one language to another. Dukka in Pali suggests a basic unsatisfactoriness with life, due to the fact that our lives are impermanent and constantly changing. So it means unease, disquiet, stress, not really suffering, but suffering sort of captures the overall meaning the Buddha was trying to describe in English.
The Buddha explained that our suffering doesn't come from without, but from within. That our desire to be taller, shorter, richer, cooler, drive a better car, live in a different place, etc. (Desires) drives us to be unhappy. Also the fact that we think life should be pain free, without fear and want (aversions) makes us unhappy. Finally not realizing how the world actually is and how it really works (ignorance) makes us unhappy. All these things are controlled within our mind.
Think of this example, two people are waiting for a late bus, one is fuming, and the other is whistling a happy tune. Why? The bus is late for both, but one is suffering, the other is not. Is the bus the problem or the person who is mad over something they can't control? Is getting mad going to make the bus come any faster?
Finally, there is a mantra I use to help remind me of how our minds control how we react. It is:
All experience is preceded by mind, Led by mind, Made by mind.
Speak or act with a corrupted mind, and suffering follows as the wagon wheel follows the hoof of the ox.
All experience is preceded by mind, Led by mind, Made by mind.
Speak or act with a peaceful mind, and happiness follows like a never-departing shadow.
There is no suffering in Buddhism. Buddhism offers an end to suffering. Other religions see suffering as a purifying thing, Buddhism seesit as a problem which must be overcome.
Attachment.
Buddhism teaches that all life is characterized by suffering, known as Dukkha. This concept is one of the Four Noble Truths in Buddhism, which form the foundation of the religion's teachings on the nature of existence and the path to enlightenment.
Similarities are the four noble truths. -There is suffering. -Suffering is caused by attachment. -There is an end to suffering. -Suffering's end is found in the Path. The differences are of intention and focus. (T: me; M: all)
In ancient buddhism readings people say it is desire that creates suffering'
The aspects of Buddhism are the various qualities which the Buddha taught lead to enlightenment. The four noble truths of Buddhism are that suffering is part of life, that suffering is caused by desires, that happiness is possible by learning to be present in the moment, and that by following the Eight-Fold Path ends suffering.
The focus of Buddhism is to alleviate human suffering by leading sentient beings to enlightenment.
Buddhism concept is to tame our wild minds and make free from any suffering.- Yeshi
Buddhism is unimportant to the Buddha, the Buddha only cared about reality and ending suffering.
Buddhism is a set of practices designed to alleviate dissatisfaction (suffering, trouble). It has no military. .
To save beings from suffering.
By achieving Nirvana, silly.
they are suffering, death and starvation