The first Noble Truth or the Dukkha is to realize suffering is a part of everyone’s life and it can be experienced through our dissatisfaction, unhappiness, or grief. The second truth or the Samudaya is to pinpoint the origin of our suffering, and realize that it comes from our desires, greed and our physical and mental attachments; Buddhist call this tanha. The third truth, called Nirodha, teaches there is a way out of our suffering by eliminating our attachments and desires. The last or fourth truth is the Magga is the path that leads out of suffering called the Noble Eightfold Path. Buddhist believe the Four Noble Truths are a realistic approach to life that closely mimics a medical diagnosis of a disease; first the disease is diagnosed, then the cause of the disease is found, and finally a cure or treatment for healing the disease is prescribed. (Buddhism Overview
The first Noble Truth or the Dukkha is to realize suffering is a part of everyone’s life and it can be experienced through our dissatisfaction, unhappiness, or grief. The second truth or the Samudaya is to pinpoint the origin of our suffering, and realize that it comes from our desires, greed and our physical and mental attachments; Buddhist call this tanha. The third truth, called Nirodha, teaches there is a way out of our suffering by eliminating our attachments and desires. The last or fourth truth is the Magga is the path that leads out of suffering called the Noble Eightfold Path. Buddhist believe the Four Noble Truths are a realistic approach to life that closely mimics a medical diagnosis of a disease; first the disease is diagnosed, then the cause of the disease is found, and finally a cure or treatment for healing the disease is prescribed. (Buddhism Overview