Deep Commentary
The Buddha teaches us to be vigilant and not to underestimate small matters. People often focus on grand outcomes but ignore the tiny components that build them. A massive pile of sand consists of countless tiny grains. A well fills with water from tiny, unseen underground seeps. Similarly, an immense evil does not appear overnight; it starts with small, seemingly insignificant acts of cruelty or malice. For instance, a child harming small insects might gradually develop a habit of cruelty that eventually leads to severe violence. The Buddha uses the analogy of a water pot filling drop by drop to illustrate how a fool becomes saturated with evil by accumulating small wrongdoings. We must not think, 'This small sin won't affect me.' A harsh word, a minor harmful habit—if left unchecked—can grow into a destructive addiction or a ruined life. While a fool ignores the roots and only tries to fix the resulting suffering, a wise person understands the law of cause and effect. The wise eradicate negative thoughts in their infancy, destroying the cause before it bears a painful result.
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