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Four Friendly Facts

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Jun 22, 2026

Four Friendly Facts

–Robert Thurman

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6a39ea022b783-2804.jpgA friendly person is someone who can empathize with you. They can put themselves in your shoes and see things from your point of view. That is what the Buddha meant by “noble.” So I like to call the Four Noble Truths the Four Friendly Facts.

And I say “facts” rather than “truths,” because truth can become a proposition you are supposed to believe whether it makes sense to you or not. But the Buddha was not giving us a dogma. He was offering a kind of medical diagnosis. He looked at human beings and saw that we carry a certain uneasiness. We are wired to think that our own drive for existence is absolute. We imagine ourselves as the fixed center of things, and then we suffer when the world does not confirm it.

The first friendly fact is simply noticing the symptom: we suffer. And, strangely, this can be good news. One of the things that attracts people to the path is discovering, “I am not the only one suffering here.” It is normal. It is part of the human condition. And because it is understood, it can be worked with.

But for the self-centered person, this does not feel like a friendly fact. Such a person keeps thinking, “I did not enjoy this enough, because it ended. And even while I had it, it was not as good as what I imagined I might have under different circumstances.” If only I were famous. If only I were wealthy. If only I had a different partner, a different body, a different life. A person wrapped tightly around the sense of “me” can never really enjoy anything, because whatever comes is immediately compared to what could have been.

The second friendly fact is the diagnosis: we suffer because we mis-know. It is not merely that we do not know; it is that we know wrongly. We think, “I am the one. I am the absolute.” And then nobody agrees — not even our own body.

The third is the prognosis: if we substitute wisdom for mis-knowing, suffering can cease. And the great misunderstanding is that we must leave life in order for this to happen. But the deeper possibility is that we can be free in the midst of life, fully engaged with others.

The fourth friendly fact is the therapy: a path of education — ethics, meditation, and wisdom. It is fun to know what is causing our problem. It is fun to discover that the problem is normal. It is fun to realize that understanding can free us. And it is most joyful of all to discover that our freedom can deepen our love for others.

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How do you relate to the notion that suffering is a “friendly fact” – not a punishment or a flaw in you, but something more like a medical diagnosis that, once understood, can actually be “worked with”? Can you share a personal story of a time when you realized you were not the only one suffering, and how that recognition – however small or quiet – shifted something in you? What helps you loosen the grip of “if only” thinking, that habit of measuring what is against what could have been, and return to what is actually here?

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