The Buddha was a philosopher, a mediator, a spiritual teacher, and a religious leader who was renamed the founder of Buddhism. He was born Siddhartha Gautama in India in 566 BC to a royal family and at the age of twenty-nine, he left the comforts of his home to seek the meaning of the suffering he saw around him.

After six years of strenuous yoga training, he left his self-destructive course and instead sat in a logical meditation under a Bodhi tree. In the full moon of May, when the morning star rose, Siddhartha Gautama became a resurrected Buddha.

Buddha wandered the plains of northeastern India for 45 years, teaching the method or Dharma he had observed at that moment. Next to him was built a human society, drawn from all races and chariots, dedicated to the operation of this method. Nowadays, he is worshiped by many Buddhist schools as an enlightened person who has escaped the cycle of rebirth and rebirth, beyond Karma. Their main teachings focus on their understanding of dukkha, meaning “suffering” and Nirvana, which means the end of suffering.

He exerted great influence not only in Asia but also throughout the world, here are 10 life lessons we can learn from the Buddha: Get acquainted with the Middle Way Buddha says “The origin of suffering is desire.” Siddhartha Gautama spent the rest of his life thinking of the Four Noble Truths:

1. There is suffering.

 2. The cause of suffering is our own desires.

 3. The solution to our suffering is to free ourselves from our desires.

4. A Double Dignity That Leads to Our Freedom from Suffering.