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فسيلة - transplant
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات

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Learning
Transcript
00:04What am I doing?
00:07Why did you start like that?
00:10Uncle, you scared me!
00:12You're telling me this is enough for me, and I'm still waiting for you?
00:14My brother, I was so bored I killed a fly.
00:17You mean you killed an innocent creature?
00:19It has a fly as a landmark
00:22But if it was a beautiful butterfly
00:24Your time was like a living day.
00:25Just because it's beautiful
00:27Yes, that's right.
00:29Look
00:30The two insects are not related to their creation.
00:33This reflects the classist and racist nature of humanity during that period.
00:37What's wrong, Mr. Shakespeare?
00:39Give me the first one on your behalf
00:40Tell me, how are you doing?
00:42happy worker
00:44busy inquirer
00:46With hypocrisy, lies, and a lack of mercy
00:49A world where hatred is widespread
00:51A world where lies abound
00:53What's up, boss? What do you want?
00:55I want to know the truth
00:56What truth?
00:59The truth about the universe
01:01no
01:03We're just playing this game
01:05And I want us to go and heal your life together
01:07cat
01:07Okay
01:14any?
01:14any?
01:15any?
01:15What do you mean, do you have a recorded pain score?
01:17pain?
01:17Just one pain?
01:19Yes?
01:19Look around you like this
01:21Where are you, boss?
01:22No pain?
01:23Look around you and you'll find that the whole world is full of pain.
01:25Not just one pain
01:27Poverty, ignorance, disease, exhaustion, and injustice
01:31What are you doing?
01:32Horek the Pains
01:33Huh?
01:34Didn't I tell you, Ajaj, it's all pain?
01:36Didn't I tell you?
01:44Dear viewers, peace and blessings be upon you. Welcome to a new episode of Al-Daheeh program.
01:48In a small town overlooking the Himalayas
01:51In the fastest King Sududana
01:52Queen Maya was fast asleep.
01:54On a night like any other, I returned to the families, the king, and the city.
01:58Tonight, is the queen's dream just like any other dream?
02:00small white elephant nipple
02:02The little elephant kept getting closer to her, closer to her, closer to her.
02:05Until it entered her body through her side
02:07And then she woke up
02:08If anyone else had this dream, they might have simply ignored it.
02:11But the queen was the one who dreamed of it
02:13I needed to look for an explanation
02:14Keep in mind that this was in the fifth century BC.
02:16People were free at that time
02:17The dream of Queen De Materia Al-Yamla means at least two weeks.
02:19When the queen made it easy to interpret this dream
02:21It means she'll be pregnant soon.
02:23The child you will give birth to will be a boy.
02:25That's not the important thing.
02:26Important need
02:27Either this man will be a great emperor
02:29Either a metaphorical religious teacher
02:31The king and queen heard this and it was a disaster.
02:33With the great little emperor who will carry the family name
02:36And God willing, they will continue their royal legacy.
02:38Then, nine months later, the day will come when the little emperor is born.
02:41But here a supernatural need arises
02:43The newborn baby
02:45He gets up and walks seven steps
02:47Then he speaks and says that this is the last time he will be born
02:50He told him, "Just a second."
02:51Have you been pregnant before?
02:52The baby wasn't responding to anyone.
02:54And that was the reason he was called Siddhartha Gautama
02:56Siddhartha lived his life within the walls of his father's palace.
02:59An easy life; everything he wanted came to him.
03:01He had everything he needed before he even thought about it.
03:04But that wasn't his choice at first.
03:05His father watching his son grow up before his eyes
03:07He always saw only one thing in front of him.
03:09The dream I longed for, I dreamt it
03:10And his son will either be emperor
03:11He will either be a religious teacher
03:13If a father were himself, his son would become emperor.
03:15He tried as much as possible to reduce the number of times he left the prison.
03:19Even Siddhartha
03:19When he went out into the street in the royal carriage
03:21His father used to order that the streets he would walk in
03:23It remains full
03:24Smiling and happy people
03:25And anyone who is tired, let them hide.
03:27We don't want to stress about the time.
03:28So that Siddhartha doesn't feel the need to think or worry about anything.
03:31We don't want the boy to occupy his mind with meaning, life, and death.
03:34And this nonsense
03:35We want him to focus on his future, on becoming emperor, according to his father.
03:39But one day, the boy was riding in the royal carriage
03:42He is about 29 years old, by chance.
03:44Or it can be by the measures of fate
03:45Siddhartha sees an old man in the street
03:47He walks slowly, adjusting himself, and his body is weak.
03:50And for the first time in his life, Siddhartha sees a Balaami man.
03:53In a dream of astonishment, he returns to his senses, trying to comprehend what is happening.
03:56And whatever his kingdom and image,
03:58One day he'll be an old man like that
04:00The young man lived for twenty-nine years
04:02He won't pay attention to this issue his whole life and he's living in an era
04:04This experience did not frighten Siddhartha
04:06He preferred to go down to the street, and another time he saw a sick person.
04:09And a third time he saw a corpse
04:10Siddhartha began to realize that his past life had not been real
04:13And the walls of Abu Di Kart's palace are a trick
04:16A trick about the reality of life
04:17These walls won't prevent disability, illness, or death.
04:20They deliver it
04:21Siddhartha began to realize that he was living in a great library
04:24One night, Siddhartha sneaks away from his cat.
04:27And he casts one last look at the walls
04:29And all the other things that Abu Jabhala
04:31So that he doesn't need to see the street
04:32So that he doesn't wonder what's happening behind those walls of the prison.
04:35So that he can have an alternative life
04:36It contains no kind of pain, fear, or tension.
04:39And here Siddhartha decides to run away to live on the street
04:42And he won't see any other pictures in his life.
04:44Siddhartha didn't escape from the prison because he felt guilty.
04:46Or is it because of the easy life?
04:48Siddhartha ran away because he wanted to understand human suffering and life.
04:51The most important oversight was that he wanted to know how to reduce this suffering.
04:54At first, Siddhartha believed that if he was far from luxury
04:57He will begin to understand life
04:58So he would sit for days on end without being present at all.
05:00And that's it.
05:01His body couldn't bear it anymore, and he couldn't sit down.
05:04His hair started falling out due to lack of food.
05:05At that moment he realized that in this situation it was impossible for him to achieve anything.
05:08Extreme hunger is just like luxury.
05:10It's impossible for him to reach anything.
05:11Two things prevent him from thinking
05:14What did Siddhartha begin with? The science of meditation.
05:15At the hands of the religious teachers he encountered in the street
05:18He was the first one to take yoga classes
05:20His teachers changed his life
05:21Without knowing who he is or his story
05:23Be aware of how quickly he learns.
05:25One of them offered him a job.
05:27One more teacher remained who had requested to be a student
05:30Siddhartha was there, but Siddhartha was rejecting all of this.
05:32Because his goal was not meditation
05:34His goal in itself was to learn
05:36Something deeper than that about life
05:37Meditation is the means, not the end.
05:40And indeed, after six years of living on the street
05:42And nature on a night that is no less important
05:43About the night of his escape from the original or the night
05:45The one whose mother dreamt of her as a small elephant
05:47Siddhartha meditating under a fig tree
05:50He began to understand the meaning of life
05:51He began to understand the role of suffering in it
05:53He began to discover how not only to reduce suffering
05:55No, how can we end it completely tonight?
05:57Siddhartha attained enlightenment
05:59And Ben, the first of this night, is known as the Enlightened One.
06:02Or poza
06:02Booza, my dear, after he reached enlightenment
06:05Asking the same very important question
06:06And what comes next is understanding how life works.
06:09And how can humans overcome disability, illness, and death?
06:12What should I do now that I've learned this?
06:14At first, Boza stayed under the tree for seven weeks.
06:16Let him work on everything he understands and try to understand it even more.
06:18Then he decides that he needs to stop being selfish.
06:20By custom, and he needs to convey his enlightenment
06:22For other people, indeed
06:23Boza returns to the city and shares his wisdom.
06:25To five of his friends whom he met during his experience
06:28They're in the street too, my dear.
06:30They too have reached enlightenment, Abu Hamid, and now their name is Bouza.
06:32No, my dear, the name Boza was exclusive.
06:34For those who have attained enlightenment on their own
06:35One of them said to me, "Oh Abu Hamid, you have enlightened us."
06:37We asked what made them enlightened
06:38I'm waiting for you, my dear.
06:40I'll tell you, my dear, what he said.
06:41You're probably wondering what it was that Boza conveyed to them that made them enlightened.
06:45Is there anyone who truly understands life?
06:47Is there anyone who can end human suffering in life?
06:49Dear life, all of Boza's teachings can be summarized in four facts.
06:52Four facts that summarize human life from his point of view
06:55Just so we can understand these four facts
06:57First, I need to tell you about Boza's worldview.
06:59And how does it work?
07:00According to Bouza's words and his worldview
07:03A person who doesn't die is never satisfied and doesn't go to another world.
07:05And this is Aziz's vision.
07:06Or what we have received about her seeing him
07:08According to Bouza, a person who doesn't die is reborn.
07:10It's the same thing, just in another body.
07:12In a process he calls reincarnation
07:14People often forget their memories of their past lives.
07:17But he might remember small details of it.
07:19If he tried enough
07:20This idea wasn't first thought of by Boza.
07:23This idea existed long before the Buddhists.
07:25Hinduism was widespread in the region where Boza was born.
07:27What's new with Boza is that he says
07:29When a person dies
07:30He doesn't randomly select any other person.
07:32His past life does not affect his future life.
07:35How does that affect her, Abu Hamid? Through the vine.
07:37Oh Abu Hamid, I heard about this vineyard thing.
07:39Karma, according to Boza, is what defines your morality.
07:42When you do something good
07:43It's like you're feeding someone who's really in need.
07:45Your karma is good, and when you do something bad
07:47It's like you're stealing, and the karma is still recording.
07:49Your karma will be bad when you die
07:51Your karma determines many things in your future life.
07:53Will you be sick or not?
07:55Will you have money or not?
07:56Will you look good or not?
07:58Are you extremely nervous, calm, or lazy?
08:00This also determines whether you will be born a human being at all?
08:03According to Boza, if you are a person with bad karma
08:05And I also prefer to do morally acceptable actions.
08:07Not exactly, your generosity
08:08Is it possible for you to be born in an animal's body?
08:10You too could be born into hell.
08:13The difference is that hell here can remain a joke.
08:15And it might stay cold
08:15But the important difference is that you don't stay in this place.
08:17Never, prefer it to bad karma.
08:20The reason you entered is not over
08:21The most important difference between the different worlds in which you can be born, according to Boza
08:24It's how easy it is for you to get rid of the bad karma you have.
08:27And replace it with good vines
08:28For example, the human world is considered a good place to be born.
08:31So that humans can understand their place in the world
08:33And they can distinguish between right and wrong
08:35Thus, they improve their karma.
08:37Even if they are born into harsh conditions, they are able to overcome them.
08:40While animals are difficult to understand, they remain and are kind, according to Bouza.
08:44If a person has good karma and does good deeds
08:47Will he still be a human being?
08:48Let me tell you, if he understands Bossey, then you'll go to a place higher than the human world.
08:52You will live in it as a celestial being
08:54But still, as a heavenly being, your life there will remain intertwined with vineyards.
09:05Bouza says that the vine is a natural law, just like the vine itself, and it applies to everyone from the king to the most insignificant person.
09:12And here the question that Boza asked himself a long time ago came up: What next? Will we keep being born and dying in this vicious cycle?
09:17The first truth that Bouza cherishes is that life is full of suffering.
09:22No matter how much money you have and no matter how much you hide it
09:24Things like disability, illness, and death will come to you, they will come to you.
09:27Suffering here also takes on a different meaning
09:29Boza believes that anxiety, fear, or any disappointment a person feels in their daily life is a type of suffering.
09:35The suffering stems from the fact that it's impossible for our lives to go exactly the way we want.
09:39Even when things go the way we want and we're happy with them, that happiness is temporary and doesn't last.
09:44Then, the truth, according to Bouza, continues on this point and says that the primary source of suffering is desire.
09:49This is consistent with the first point.
09:51What are you, my dear? If you didn't cut something, it's impossible to feel disappointed when it doesn't happen.
09:55Boza didn't believe that, but Boza says there are three types of desires that can cause suffering.
09:59The first, but not the most dangerous, are physical or material desires.
10:03Yes, Abu Hamoud, I know her, she's got me into trouble.
10:05The point is that these desires remain desires, like wanting a new car or a bigger house.
10:10The idea is that if you have a strong desire for something, it doesn't happen, so you get frustrated.
10:13The second desire is the desire for existence, the desire to dissolve the self.
10:16This happens after a person has satisfied their basic needs.
10:19He wants to become something, to try new things, to explore the world and find his place.
10:23The third desire, and I choose them, is the desire for non-existence.
10:26The desire to destroy oneself, not the world.
10:28Self-destruction means depriving yourself of your basic needs and denying the importance of your existence.
10:33This usually indicates a lack of self-confidence and can, in severe cases, lead to suicide.
10:36These three forms of desire are all the same kind of desire.
10:39Because any desire of nations, like material desires, is never satisfied.
10:43The desire to exist will never be satisfied as long as a person is preoccupied with themselves.
10:46The desire for non-existence will not be satisfied as long as humanity exists.
10:49Be aware, my dear, that the talk is not about lust in the commonly understood sense.
10:53The man doesn't talk about any human desire that puts him in conflict with himself and with the world.
10:58Boza likens human suffering to fire.
11:00It's like the desire for wood that can fuel this fire.
11:03He says that all the suffering a person experiences
11:05The reason is the desire within us.
11:07It didn't happen
11:08Even if this desire only appears from the outside
11:09It will be far removed from pleasures
11:11The problem of desire in this way
11:12She's never satisfied
11:13But then he gets annoyed again
11:15And he has that desire again
11:16And more
11:17But, Abu Hamid
11:18Even the desire for non-existence
11:19You never get enough
11:20How?
11:20And he, my dear
11:21Boza told you
11:22Suicide is your death
11:23And when you die at Bouza's
11:24You'll come back to life again
11:25Whether I am present or not
11:27It will remain
11:29The desire will remain.
11:30The vicious cycle of desire
11:31And failed attempts
11:33To satisfy this desire
11:34Boza sees it as a circle of life and death
11:36As for the third life according to Bouza
11:37So, these two circles are connected together.
11:39The circle of desire and the circle of suffering
11:41He says, "Hey everyone!"
11:42There is a way to end human suffering.
11:44In a way that liberates humans from the cycle of desire
11:46The one that never ends
11:47He says we're not just going to free people from desire
11:49no
11:49Other countries might also be liberated
11:51From the circle of life and death
11:52The one that never ends
11:53And they reach a place known as Nirvana
11:55The word Nirvana means accord
11:57It's like you had a candle that lit a fire and you blew on it.
11:59And according to Boza
12:00Nirvana isn't a place you'll reach when you die.
12:02Rather, it is a state that you, as a human being, can reach in your life.
12:05This is the situation that Bouza says he has reached.
12:07When he sat contemplating under the tree
12:08He became enlightened
12:09It's the place he'll go to after he dies.
12:11Boza doesn't give many details about Nirvana
12:13When he found someone nagging him
12:15He is asked to describe the feeling of nirvana.
12:17He likened her to someone
12:18Someone struck him in the chest with an arrow
12:19Instead of trying to remove the arrow
12:21The wound is treated
12:22He's asking about the hair color of the person who shot the arrow.
12:32It reduces the suffering of life
12:33Breaking the cycle of life and death
12:35Breaking the cycle of desire
12:36They are the real targets
12:37Boza refused to let anyone follow his teachings.
12:39Just because he wants to reach Nirvana
12:41As for the fourth and final life of Bouza
12:43According to what he said, that's possible
12:44Through it, a person can reach Nirvana
12:46It can be summarized in three parts
12:48First, improve the vine.
12:49By adhering to ethics
12:50Commitment to ethics at Bouza
12:52It doesn't mean you should follow what he says.
12:53Nor are you following society?
12:55But Boza says that man has freedom
12:57In making ethical decisions
12:59Because he is rational and can understand the consequences of his actions
13:02And decide
13:02By God, this is Zainy
13:03No
13:04Boza also says that there are three roots of goodness
13:06And three roots of evil
13:07The roots of evil are hatred, greed, and deceit.
13:10The root of goodness is not clinging to life.
13:11Love of goodness and trying to understand the world
13:13It also contains some instructions at Boza's.
13:15It prevents murder and theft.
13:16But the method of implementation
13:17It causes problems for everyone
13:18This comes from the idea that karma is a natural law.
13:21If you did something because you thought it was good
13:23It's really good
13:24So, Bouza's words were...
13:25You will be rewarded for it
13:26Even if society sees it as wrong
13:27Even if it contradicts Boza's own words
13:30Many times, Bouza used to say that his teachings
13:32Its purpose is not to be taken literally and implemented.
13:35But every person needs to think about it
13:36It depends on the situation he is in.
13:38He does what he sees fit.
13:40But in order for a person to have a good vision
13:41To assess situations and health work
13:43He needs to have wisdom.
13:44This is the second of the three things.
13:46The one that takes you to nirvana
13:47Wisdom at Bouza
13:48It's if you understand the four facts
13:50And if you always want to improve your understanding of the world
13:53The last thing you need to reach nirvana
13:55It is meditation
13:55Buddhist meditation
13:56It's not treated like prayer in the Abrahamic religions.
13:58The goal is not obedience or submission
14:00Meditation at Boza
14:01A way to make you think about the world
14:03And in your life better
14:04Therefore, it can lead you to the morals and wisdom you desire.
14:07All these things, my dear
14:08According to Bouza
14:09It's supposed to take you to nirvana
14:11The next part of Boza's life
14:13After enlightenment
14:14He doesn't have many details about him.
14:15All we know
14:16He is a complementary virtue in his journey
14:17His message originates
14:18He moves from village to village
14:19And from the city of Medina on foot
14:21Until he was eighty years old
14:22He began to feel that death was approaching him.
14:24And that's when those around him started asking him questions.
14:25What will become of his message after he dies?
14:27Will anyone take his place?
14:29And who could possibly take his place?
14:30But Boza didn't say he would leave anyone in his place.
14:32Because he was not a leader, messenger, or god from the beginning.
14:35He is a teacher
14:36He arrived at a specific message through meditation.
14:38And he conveyed it to people as much as he could.
14:39He just tells people
14:41They are the ones who maintain his education.
14:42They also maintain each person's body temperature.
14:44He thinks about it and criticizes it.
14:46And he implements it in the way that suits him
14:47And in the end, Boza dies in his sleep.
14:49On his side between two trees
14:50In a small village in India
14:51And according to his words
14:52He achieved Enrvana and reached his goal.
14:54And the second one won't be terrified
14:55The life story of Boza
14:56Especially before enlightenment
14:57Full of strange details
14:58Like the story of the little white elephant
15:00Or he spoke after he was born
15:01And his father
15:01The street is filled with happy people
15:03You might say all these things are strange
15:04But it's an important story.
15:06Because if we were to get it from a second wife
15:07It reflects the lives of many people.
15:09A human being is born as a child
15:10I see everything as beautiful
15:11A child protected from the outside world
15:13Through his family
15:13Living in his comfort zone
15:15And he thinks that's the whole world
15:16To some extent, this little child understands
15:18When he grows up
15:18The world isn't that simple.
15:20And he will need many things
15:21And he doesn't know how to reach her.
15:22At that point, he will have a choice between two things.
15:23Jaime is trying to stick to his comfort zone.
15:25With his hand and teeth
15:26Jaima is looking around and his face
15:27When he finds something that doesn't fit
15:28With his vision of the world
15:29He gets angry when someone says something to him
15:31The opposite of comfort zone
15:32He becomes even more stubborn when he can no longer protect her.
15:45But because of this
15:46Because Boza Sab himself to the world
15:47He was able to find what he was looking for
15:49Even if it's not the same thing that all humans are looking for
15:52In this episode, my dear
15:53I hope you have benefited from this human and philosophical experience.
15:56To be followed by approximately half a billion people worldwide
15:59The poop, my dear
16:00It is not a divine religion
16:01Islamic, Christian, or Jewish attire
16:03But it's a philosophy
16:04Like many philosophies
16:05Just an attempt to understand the world
16:07human understanding
16:08Understanding the interaction between them
16:09And that's it, last but not least, please.
16:11Look at the life that passed
16:12Look at the life that's coming
16:13Go down and look at the sources
16:14And we're talking about YouTube
16:14Subscribe to the channel
16:15I have some advice for you at the end.
16:16Desires diminish
16:17The suffering lessens
16:18Protein boost
16:19Come back in two months and I'll get the muscle
16:20Let's go

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