Amitabha Buddha, brothers and sisters, I would like to ask a question about the consequences of wasting food: wasting food is a great loss of good fortune, and if you can't eat everything you can't fi
Amitabha Buddha, brothers and sisters, I would like to ask a question about the consequences of wasting food: wasting food is a great loss of good fortune, and if you can't eat everything you can't finish, it's also a great loss of good fortune.
Every bite of food you eat is a manifestation of blessings. The fact that you are here on earth is the consumption and accumulation of blessings. If you're on Earth, you must eat and drink, and you must consume your blessings. But wasting blessings is wrong, for example, wasting water and food, this is bad karma and should not be done. Eat as much of the food your parents cook as you can. If you can't eat it, eat it the next day. If your parents really want to dump it, you can only advise them not to make so much in the future. Wastefulness is shameful. If your parents cook for you and you don't want to eat, you have to say so in advance. If you don't eat it today, you can eat it the next day, but if you don't throw it away, it's best. If you waste too much, you'll get stomach, mouth and throat problems, and God forbid you should eat in the future. There was a little boy whose family was so rich that he wasted a lot of food every day, and when he was ten years old, he stuttered. Our master took one look at him and said the boy's bad luck in the mouth came from wasting food. That's all. If he wastes more, he'll eat in hell, the hell of the harvest! It's all your own food that you've dumped and eaten, but it's still rancid. So, nowadays, the so-called science tells you that you can't eat overnight food, but you don't know. You don't eat it now. If you don't eat it now, you'll still have to eat it down there, and it'll still be rancid. Bitterness.