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Eightfold Path: Right View

Right View in Buddhism is the ability to see what leads to suffering and what leads away from it. It is not about winning arguments. It is about understanding cause and effect in your own mind and life. This page gathers suttas that build clarity, reduce confusion, and support wiser choices.

Living in Tune in Buddhism: How Couples Grow in the Same Direction (AN 4.55)

Chibi Buddha and woman share a compass with hearts above, while faded figures in the background look lost holding maps; SuttaDay logo.

You can care about each other and still feel slightly out of sync.

Small moments don’t quite land. Conversations miss. Decisions pull in different directions.

AN 4.55 shows why shared direction matters, and what it means to actually live in tune.

No Past. No Future: Working With the Present Moment in Buddhism (MN 131)

MN 131 ‘An Auspicious Day’ illustration: calm chibi Buddha meditating while past and future distractions swirl around.

You’re here.
But your attention often isn’t.

Pulled into the past.
Or pushed into the future.

MN 131 shows why the present is the only place you can actually work.

The Two Arrows in Buddhism: Hurt Once or Suffer Twice? (SN 36.6)

“Chibi Buddha shows the Two Arrows: one crying in pain, one calm with an arrow.”

Pain is part of life.

Suffering often comes from what the mind adds next.

SN 36.6 – The Two Arrows explains the difference, and why learning to stop at one changes everything.