Latest News - Buddha
Buddhism and Hinduism left an indelible mark on Southeast Asia—shaping not only religions but also languages, governance, artistic achievements, and daily customs.
The region stands as a testament to the power of cultural exchange, adaptation, and the enduring legacy of ideas that traveled across oceans and centuries.
Buddhism does not seek to convert because it trusts the wisdom of each soul to find its own way.
With compassion at its core, it offers teachings, practices, and symbols to those who seek them—never as a demand, but as a gift freely given.
Though Zen teaches the formless, it honors form as a doorway. A Buddha statue, when approached with mindfulness, becomes far more than decoration.
It becomes a silent teacher, a mirror of inner truth, and a reminder of your original stillness.
In Zen Buddhism, awakening is not something to attain—it is something to remember. Sitting with a Buddha statue helps us remember that the calm, clear awareness we seek is already here.
By offering your presence before a symbol of stillness, you gradually become still yourself. Over time, the boundary between statue and sitter dissolves—and what remains is the quiet joy of simply being.
The intersection of Buddhism and machine intelligence is not a theoretical curiosity—it is a real and urgent dialogue.
As machines grow more capable and autonomous, we must ask not only what they can do, but what we should do with them.
Stress is an unavoidable part of modern life, but suffering doesn’t have to be.
Through mindfulness, meditation, ethical living, and letting go, the Buddhist path offers not only relief from stress but a profound transformation of how we relate to ourselves and the world.
The Chiang Saen period represents a pivotal era in Thai history, where political consolidation, religious reform, and artistic innovation converged to create a cultural legacy that still resonates today.