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One day, a man arrived at the park where the Buddha was teaching, his face flushed with rage. He belonged to a different group and felt threatened by the Buddha’s growing influence. Before the gathered crowd, the man began shouting insults, calling the Buddha a fraud, a hypocrite, and a fool.
The Buddha did not interrupt. He sat calmly, listening with deep patience and absolute serenity. When the man finally ran out of breath and stopped his tirade, the Buddha smiled gently and asked him a question.
"My friend, if you buy a gift for someone, and that person chooses not to accept it, to whom does the gift belong?"
The man, surprised by the calm response, replied, "Well, it belongs to me, of course. I bought it."
The Buddha nodded. "That is correct. In the same way, I do not accept your anger, your insults, or your verbal abuse. They remain yours to keep. You can carry them home with you."
He then explained further: "If a person became angry with you, and you insulted them back, you would be accepting their gift. But if you remain calm, the anger returns to the person who brought it. Anger only hurts the one who holds onto it, like grasping a hot coal with the intent of throwing it at someone else; you are the one who gets burned."
The man stood in stunned silence. The weight of his own hostility collapsed under the Buddha's peaceful clarity. Realizing the truth of the words, his anger dissolved into shame and admiration. He bowed deeply before the Buddha, asking for forgiveness and to become one of his followers.
The Takeaway: This teaching illustrates the concept of Kshanti (patience or forbearance). It reminds us that we cannot control how others treat us, but we have absolute control over whether we accept their negativity or let it go.
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