Awakening (bodhi)
The moment of waking up: seeing reality so clearly and completely that suffering loses its grip.
Awakening (Sanskrit and Pali bodhi, from a root meaning "to wake up") is the direct, life-changing realization that defines a buddha. The word "Buddha" itself simply means "the awakened one," and bodhi is the awakening he underwent. It is often translated as "enlightenment," but the waking-up image is more accurate: it is described not as gaining a supernatural power but as finally seeing reality clearly, as if waking from a dream of confusion.
What does one wake up to? On the traditional account, to the deep truths the tradition keeps returning to: that all conditioned things are impermanent and can't fully satisfy our grasping, that there is no fixed self to be found, and how suffering arises and how it ends. Crucially, awakening is not just understanding these ideas intellectually, the way one might learn them from a book, but knowing them directly and fully, so that the habits of craving, hatred, and delusion are uprooted at their source. With those gone, suffering loses its grip and the mind comes to deep, unshakable peace.
The Buddha's own awakening, traditionally said to have occurred as he sat in meditation beneath a tree (later called the Bodhi tree, the "tree of awakening"), is the founding event of Buddhism, and the entire path of ethics, meditation, and wisdom is laid out as the way others can move toward the same realization. Different Buddhist traditions describe the texture and stages of awakening somewhat differently, but all treat bodhi as the heart of what the whole religion is pointing toward.
How it traveled
- 維摩經評註Beijing · 1500redefines
- 維摩經略疏—redefines
Key passages(20)
The Way of Zen · Alan Watts
Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism · Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche
An Introduction to Zen Buddhism · D. T. Suzuki
Essays in Zen Buddhism (First Series) · D. T. Suzuki
After the Ecstasy, the Laundry · Jack Kornfield
Buddhism and Zen · Nyogen Senzaki
The Three Pillars of Zen: Teaching, Practice, and Enlightenment · Philip Kapleau
Original Mind: The Practice of Zen in the West · Richard Baker
Dropping Ashes on the Buddha: The Teaching of Zen Master Seung Sahn · Seung Sahn
Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind · Shunryū Suzuki
The Zen Eye: A Collection of Zen Talks · Sokei-an (Shigetsu Sasaki)
Appreciate Your Life: The Essence of Zen Practice · Taizan Maezumi
太虛大師全書.第四編 大乘通學(第1卷-第5卷) · The Chinese Buddhist Canon (大藏經)
Modern teachers who discuss this idea
Modern and living teachers whose books take up Awakening (bodhi). These works are still in copyright, so we can’t show the text here — each links out to the book.
- D. T. SuzukiEssays in Zen Buddhism (First Series)(1927)View on Amazon→
- D. T. SuzukiAn Introduction to Zen Buddhism(1934)View on Amazon→
- Nyogen SenzakiBuddhism and Zen(1953)View on Amazon→
- Alan WattsThe Way of Zen(1957)View on Amazon→
- Philip KapleauThe Three Pillars of Zen: Teaching, Practice, and Enlightenment(1965)View on Amazon→
- Shunryū SuzukiZen Mind, Beginner's Mind(1970)View on Amazon→
- Chögyam Trungpa RinpocheCutting Through Spiritual Materialism(1973)View on Amazon→
- Seung SahnDropping Ashes on the Buddha: The Teaching of Zen Master Seung Sahn(1976)View on Amazon→
- Sokei-an (Shigetsu Sasaki)The Zen Eye: A Collection of Zen Talks(1993)View on Amazon→
- Richard BakerOriginal Mind: The Practice of Zen in the West(1997)View on Amazon→
- Jack KornfieldAfter the Ecstasy, the Laundry(2000)View on Amazon→
- Taizan MaezumiAppreciate Your Life: The Essence of Zen Practice(2001)View on Amazon→