Right livelihood
How you earn your living is part of the spiritual path—choose work that harms no one.
Right livelihood (sammā-ājīva) is the teaching that how a person earns a living is itself part of the spiritual path. It is one of the eight elements of the Noble Eightfold Path—the Buddha's practical roadmap out of suffering—and it sits in the path's ethical-conduct section, alongside speaking honestly and acting without harm. The basic principle is simple: support yourself in ways that do not cause harm to other beings.
The early texts spell this out by naming kinds of trade for a lay follower to avoid: trade in weapons; in living beings (such as the slave trade, or, on some readings, raising animals for slaughter); in meat; in intoxicants; and in poisons. More broadly, right livelihood rules out earning by deceit, fraud, violence, or exploitation. The reasoning is the same that runs through all the precepts: work built on harming others both wounds those others and entangles the worker's own mind in greed, cruelty, and dishonesty, making inner peace harder to reach.
What makes this teaching striking is its reach. Many spiritual paths treat one's job as a worldly matter separate from the religious life; Buddhism insists the two cannot be cleanly divided. Your daily labor, repeated thousands of times over a lifetime, shapes your character and either feeds or starves your unwholesome impulses. For lay people especially, right livelihood is where ethics meets the ordinary economy—a quiet but demanding call to make a living without making others suffer.
Key passages(18)
Buddhist Economics in Practice in the Sarvodaya Shramadana Movement of Sri Lanka · A. T. Ariyaratne
Instructions to the Cook: A Zen Master's Lessons in Living a Life That Matters · Bernie Glassman
The Mind of Clover: Essays in Zen Buddhist Ethics · Robert Aitken
So I have heard. At one time the Buddha was staying near Rājagaha, in the Bamboo Grove, the squirrels’ feeding ground. Now at that time the householder’s son Sigālaka rose early and left Rājagaha. Wit
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Modern teachers who discuss this idea
Modern and living teachers whose books take up Right livelihood. These works are still in copyright, so we can’t show the text here — each links out to the book.
- Robert AitkenThe Mind of Clover: Essays in Zen Buddhist Ethics(1984)View on Amazon→
- Bernie GlassmanInstructions to the Cook: A Zen Master's Lessons in Living a Life That Matters(1996)View on Amazon→
- A. T. AriyaratneBuddhist Economics in Practice in the Sarvodaya Shramadana Movement of Sri Lanka(1999)View on Amazon→