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Note 2 - Jewels at the Bottom of Sorrow

People often gather to offer comfort when someone dies, but most are not truly present. Their solace is polite and distant, more a social duty than a genuine meeting of hearts. True change comes only when sorrow is allowed to be felt in its entirety—when it cuts through every layer of the heart. Only then can the course of life shift, only then can peace take birth.


Gautami’s grief was real. She went to Buddha carrying the lifeless body of her child, asking for a cure no one could give. Buddha did not remove her sorrow; instead, he led her through it. In facing it completely, her path changed, and so did her destination.


The deepest sadness can be the doorway to the greatest joy. Seeing sorrow clearly can open the gate to truth. When people say, “Stay away from sorrow,” they speak from fear. The wiser way is to avoid the incomplete experience of sorrow—not the full one. You do not have to run from it, nor drown in it; you must enter it fully.


One cannot escape the sea, and one cannot drink it dry. But one can dive into it, and at its deepest point, treasures lie that can never be found at the shore. Sorrow is the same—descend into its depths, and you may rise carrying the rare jewels of ultimate joy.

 
 
 

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