Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - A short story about self-cultivation and good deeds

A short story about self-cultivation and good deeds

There was a young man who was very unfortunate. His mother died when he was ten years old, and his father.

Parents drive long-distance buses, children do their own laundry and cook, and seven years later, father

When he died in a car accident, he was helpless and learned to make a living to support himself.

At the age of 20, he lost his left leg in an engineering accident. He is stubborn.

Walking slowly with crutches, he took out all his savings to set up a fish farm and caused a flood.

The water swept away his life savings and hopes.

He went to the temple, knelt in front of the Buddha and cried, "Buddha, what have you done to me?"

Isn't that fair? At night, the Buddha said in a dream, "Why do you think it is unfair?"

He told the Buddha about his misfortune, and the Buddha said, "Poor child, what about you?"

Why do you continue to live on the earth? Hearing this, the young man was very angry and said, "I"

I'm not gonna die. I have experienced too many tragic events. I'm going to resign. There will be in the future.

One day I will have no debt, and I will create better happiness. "

Buddha said, "I opened the door of hell, and you have a look." The Buddha pointed to a ghost and said:

"I used to be lucky in this life, bon voyage and wealth, only at the end.

Like you, I lost all my wealth in a flood. Unlike you,

He committed suicide, became a ghost, and you are still alive. "

This story tells us that different fates make different personalities.

People should know that suffering is karma, and a person who can accept the reality is a person who knows how to change.

Those who become realistic, we practitioners suffer temporarily and don't practice the suffering of pedestrians.

It is forever.

Suffering is karma!