Archive for the 'Fake Buddha Quotes' Category
Fake Buddha Quote: “When words are both true and kind, they can change our world.”
I’m not really going to post one of these every day. My title is as fake as the following quote.
“When words are both true and kind, they can change our world.”
I came across this on Twitter today, tweeted by Buddha_Bones: “RT @Sharon_Phoenix “When words are both true and kind, they can change our world.” ~Buddha”
This can be found in various books attributed to Jack Kornfield, the Buddha, and Shunryu Suzuki. As far as I can tell, those words first crop up in Saddhatissa’s “Before He Was Buddha: The Life of Siddhartha” (page 92) I don’t have the book and Google only offers a snippet view, so I’m not sure whether Saddhatissa puts those words into the Buddha’s mouth, or whether they are words that Saddhatissa says and someone else has mistaken them as the Buddha’s. If you have a copy of this book, please do let me know.
Like many …
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Mostly good news
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I have to confess I sometimes feel a bit despondent about where we’re going as a society, but then I see a video like this and I feel very hopeful. These kids just seem to love the physical act of singing, and of hearing themselves singing.
- A Fake Buddha Quote courtesy of Jnanagarbha, who received it in his twitter feed:
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"An idea that is developed and put into action is more important than an idea that exists only as an idea. Buddha."
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Filed Under: Apropos of nothing, Fake Buddha Quotes, Religion & Society
Tags: Amber alerts, edward de bono, Fake Buddha Quotes, twitter
More Fake Buddha Quotes, or fake-ish, at least
Soren Gordhamer has a nice little article in The Huffington Post called "If the Buddha Used Twitter." It’s based around five quotations that he uses as guidelines for how to how the Twitter service:
- Never allow yourself to envy others. For you will lose sight of the truth that way.
- Better than a thousand senseless verses is one that brings the hearer peace.
- The one who talks of the path but never walks it is like a cowman counting cattle of others but who has none of his own.
- The conquest of oneself is better than the conquest of all others.
- Your work is to find out what your work should be. Clearly discover your work and attend to it with all your heart.
His interpretations of these are generally very creative and sensible —
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Filed Under: Fake Buddha Quotes, Meditation & practice
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My life in bullet-points (again)

I read Zits every morning. Today’s was particularly funny, I thought.
- Liked this quote: "You cannot live an authentic life without mastering the art of disappointing people." Cheryl Richardson
- And this one: "Thinking without awareness is the main dilemma of human existence." Eckhart Tolle
- But this is another fake Buddha quote doing the rounds on Twitter, quotations sites, etc: ” ‘If we could see the miracle of a single flower clearly, our whole life would change’ – Buddha.” The entire tone of that statement is so far from anything I’ve read in any form of Buddhist scripture that I’m astonished anyone familiar with Buddhism would think for a moment this is genuine. And yet I see Buddhists passing this quote on as if it were.
- It’s good to know I live in the land of
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Filed Under: Apropos of nothing, Fake Buddha Quotes
Tags: Apple, election campaign 2008, Fake Buddha Quotes, NYT, Tolle, twitter
The endless round of fake Buddha quotes
Fairly often I see quotes attributed to the Buddha that bear no little or no resemblance to anything that’s found in Buddhist scriptures. One example is from a Christian minister who hold’s meetings in prison at the same time I’m there leading my Buddhist study group. He informed me that the Buddha had said that a greater teacher than him would arise in 500 years, and that we should follow that guy instead. Guess who that would be. The pastor and I had an interesting conversation about the ethics of making up quotes to denigrate other religions and promote your own (not that I was accusing him of having invented the quote — but someone had).
A less egregious, but as far as I’m aware equally inaccurate one appeared on Twitter yesterday, posted by @tricyclemag. They didn’t invent the quote — I’ve seen it circulating endlessly, and it will no …
Filed Under: Fake Buddha Quotes, Meditation & practice
Tags: ethics, Fake Buddha Quotes, Tricycle Magazine, twitter