u/UnlikelyWebAgain

How do you build the rigor for question practice?

I've noticed that I'd just been lying to myself for a very long time. Now I wanna change that. Now I wanna work hard, make my concepts clear, and all that. What should I do for that?

reddit.com
u/UnlikelyWebAgain — 1 day ago

What's this "haircut" called (if you can even call it that)?

"Cut them to half length and keep them uniform" (so no fade and such) because I go to school and stuff. Is this what u call a bowl cut?

u/UnlikelyWebAgain — 3 days ago
▲ 4 r/Hair

Would these be considered "long" hair or "medium" length hair?

Some teachers in my school point out my hair length. While I do agree that they're longer than those of my peers, I genuinely don't see that these are "long". Am I right or just arrogant?

u/UnlikelyWebAgain — 4 days ago

An advice to every 11thie, do NOT mess this up. THIS IS THE ONLY ADVICE NEEDED.

It doesn't matter which teacher you're studying from. It doesn't matter which coaching you study in. There's only 2 things that truly matter :-

  1. Your ability to solve PYQs and questions

  2. Your ability to give tests

Literally nothing else matters. "Kya yeh sir advanced padhate hain" ki bakchodi mat karna, study from Competition, Vibrance, PW, Allen Online, whatever the fuck (except mission JEET. The ones I have mentioned are the best one in the online industry). Bas PYQ karo, baaki sab gaand maraye.

reddit.com
u/UnlikelyWebAgain — 4 days ago
▲ 119 r/Buddhism

How is a "Diety" different from a "God" in Buddhism?

I've heard that Buddhism has a tendency to assimilate with local traditions and "gods", but is this true? I mean Brahma and Indra definitively exist in Buddhism, however, does a "God" exist in Buddhism in the Abrahamic, or even the Hindu sense? Hindus don't have 1 "true" creation myth but they more or less believe that Mahavishnu is the progenitor of the multiverse, and each universe has its own Brahma and Shiva and Vishnu, so does Buddhism believe in that?

And if god(s) don't exist in the Buddhist Philosophy, then are they more like supernatural divine beings?

u/UnlikelyWebAgain — 5 days ago
▲ 128 r/Buddhism

If I want to learn more about Shakyamuni and Buddhism, where should I start?

I just want to clarify that I'm a student who spends a lot of time studying (because it's necessary), so I can't dedicate entire hours to it. But I'd appreciate a good 1 hour, I guess.

Also, Om Namo Buddhay.

u/UnlikelyWebAgain — 5 days ago

As in, when it went to China, it absorbed Chinese Taoist/Daoist deities, and even had newz unique dieties like Guang Yin, and if you go to Japan, this goes even further. Why's that? Is it because Buddhism isn't as strict as Islam or Christianity?

Also, do you personally believe in the concept of a Boddhisatva? And if so, do you think that a modern human can become a Boddhisatva?

reddit.com
u/UnlikelyWebAgain — 12 days ago