What is the true state of spiritual enlightenment?

As a human being, it is not difficult to do one good deed or a good deed in one day. What is difficult is to do good deeds all your life. From the perspective of Buddhism, the former is giving to accumulate virtue, and the latter is true enlightenment.

Consider others from the bottom of your heart, turn other people's pain into your own pain, and be willing to sacrifice your own interests in order to save others from suffering. As the saying goes, great love is selfless and perfect goodness is traceless, which are also the qualities possessed by those who have become Buddhas. With great selfless love and the achievement of good deeds and merits, one can naturally become a Buddha.

So how can one become a Buddha? Practicing meditation and traveling around the world? Is it difficult to become a Buddha? Does it require decades or even a lifetime of hard practice? The answer given by the Buddhist master: "There are more than 9,000 volumes of the vast Buddhist scriptures. In fact, if we can strictly adhere to this eight-character mantra - 'Do no evil and practice all good', we can avoid disasters and achieve good health."

Becoming a Buddha requires refraining from doing evil and trying to be as good as possible. This requires the ability to love without boundaries, to regard the suffering of others as important as one's own, to think about what others think, to do good deeds with all one's heart, and to leave no trace of perfection.

It is easy for a person to do a good deed. It is also easy to do a good deed for a day. The most difficult thing is to do a good deed for a lifetime. From the Buddhist perspective, this is the greatest good deed and true enlightenment.

Love is selfless. Doing good deeds is not about attracting attention from others. What life requires us to do is to love others with an open heart, love others sincerely, comfort the frustrated, comfort the injured, and encourage the frustrated and discouraged. people.

The success of a person's life is not necessarily measured by status and wealth, but by whether he can persist in his sincerity and unwavering desire to benefit others.