Dhammapada
“I teach only two things, suffering and end of suffering” - Buddha The first verses of the Dhammapada: Actions based on the three unwholesome roots of greed ( lobha ), ill will ( dosa ), and delusion ( moha ) are unwholesome, resulting in bad consequences, while actions based on the three wholesome roots of non-greed ( alobha ), non-ill will ( adosa ), and non-delusion ( amoha ) result in good consequences. In the first two verses of the Dhammapada, the Buddha described the central role of the mind in performing wholesome or unwholesome actions and how the consequences of one’s bad or good actions will follow the one who performed them. “All mental phenomena have the mind as their forerunner, They have mind as their chief, they are mind-made, If one speaks or acts with an evil mind, Pain follows him just as the wheel follows the hoof of the ox that draws the cart” “All mental phenomena have the mind as their forerunner, ...