Dharma quote

topic posted Tue, June 26, 2007 - 1:03 AM by  Tashi
Dharma Quote of the Week

Life would be unbearable if everything stayed the same because human beings find situations that are fixed and predictable very hard to tolerate. Even in small matters, we become uneasy if we feel there is no end in sight. I know of couples who live harmoniously together for ten years then marry and are divorced within a year. As soon as they feel bound to each other for the rest of their lives, they begin to fight. Impermanence removes our reasons for quarrelling with each other. Arguments only break out if we imagine that our relationships are endless. When we appreciate that our time with our families, partners, and friends may be shorter than we think, we get on better with each other. Awareness of impermanence gives us extraordinary inner strength and resilience.

--from Mind Training by Ringu Tulku, edited by B.M. Shaughnessy, published by Snow Lion Publications
posted by:
Tashi
Australia
  • Re: Dharma quote

    Thu, August 2, 2007 - 6:48 AM
    Thanks for sharing..
    • Re: Dharma quote

      Thu, August 2, 2007 - 1:24 PM
      You are most welcome,
      with much kindness,
      Tashi
      • Re: Dharma quote

        Sun, August 5, 2007 - 2:59 PM
        Your up and down emotions are like clouds in the sky; beyond them, the real, basic human nature is clear and pure.
        –Lama Zopa Rinpoche
        • Re: Dharma quote

          Mon, August 6, 2007 - 3:41 PM
          “They are not following dharma who resort to violence to achieve their purpose. But those who lead others through nonviolent means, knowing right and wrong, may be called guardians of the dharma.”
          Buddha quotes (Hindu Prince Gautama Siddharta, 563-483 BCE)
          • Re: Dharma quote

            Mon, August 6, 2007 - 3:46 PM
            "Once you have the View, although the delusory perceptions
            of samsara may arise in your mind, you will be like the sky; when
            a rainbow appears in front of it, it's not particularly flattered, and when the
            clouds appear, it's not particularly dissapointed either. There is a deep sense
            of contentment. You chuckle from the inside as you see the facade
            of samsara and nirvana; the View will keep you constantly amused, with a little
            inner smile bubbling away all the time."

            Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche
            ~
            • Re: Dharma quote

              Mon, August 6, 2007 - 3:48 PM
              The essential nature of mind

              No words can describe it

              No example can point to it

              Samsara does not make it worse

              Nirvana does not make it better

              It has never been born

              It has never ceased

              It has never been liberated

              It has never been deluded

              It has never existed

              It has never been nonexistent

              It has no limits at all

              It does not fall into any kind of category


              Dudjom Rinpoche
              • Re: Dharma quote

                Mon, August 6, 2007 - 3:50 PM
                A Christian Missionary once scolded a Zen Master, saying "Do you not realize that if you do not receive Jesus as your Savior, you will be condemned to an eternity of suffering in Hell?" The Zen Master calmly replied, in the spirit of the "Vow of the Bodhisattva", "Most gladly will I enter into numberless hells, for countless eternities, until I have helped all the suffering beings in those Hells to achieve their own liberation."
                • Re: Dharma quote

                  Sun, August 12, 2007 - 1:10 AM

                  Dharma Quote of the Week


                  Benefiting living beings is my main practice, and I would like to give a brief introduction to the three qualities that are its basis: pure love, compassion, and bodhichitta, the awakened mind. Pure love is the desire that all living beings have happiness and its causes. Compassion is the desire that living beings be free of suffering and its causes, such as unwholesome actions. Bodhichitta is the desire that all living beings be free of suffering and that we will be able to place them on the unsurpassed level of awakening, or buddhahood.

                  --from Music in the Sky: The Life, Art, and Teachings of the 17th Gyalwa Karmapa, Ogyen Trinley Dorje, by Michele Martin, published by Snow Lion Publications



                  • This is the maximum depth. Additional responses will not be threaded.

                    Re: Dharma quote

                    Sun, August 19, 2007 - 1:06 AM
                    It is important to realize that there is nobody else who can wake us up and save us from samsara. There is no such thing in Buddhism. That may be Buddhism's biggest drawback, and at the same time its greatest advantage. This view shows us that there is nobody else in control of our lives, our experiences, our freedom or our bondage. Who is responsible? Who is in control? It is us. We are in control. We can bind ourselves further in samsara or we can free ourselves from it right now. It is all up to us. We are the ones who have to keep looking at our thoughts, looking for the nature of our mind. There is no guru, deity, buddha or bodhisattva out there to look for it for us. Although they would happily do this, it would not help us; it would only help them. We have to do it for ourselves. That is the key point.

                    --from Mind Beyond Death, by Dzogchen Ponlop, published by Snow Lion Publications
                    • Re: Dharma quote

                      Sun, August 19, 2007 - 2:21 PM
                      In Buddhism, we are not particularly interested in the quest for intellectual knowledge alone. We are much more interested in understanding what's happening here and now, in comprehending our present experience, what we are at this very moment, our fundamental nature.
                      –Lama Zopa Rinpoche
                      • Re: Dharma quote

                        Tue, August 21, 2007 - 12:47 AM
                        People often have no idea why they cannot bring about their good
                        intentions, and conclude with a negative statement about their own
                        defects and weaknesses. Or they feel they are a victim of others or
                        of circumstances. The bottom line is that if the inner work is not
                        done, the manifestation will not be there. Thinking alone does not
                        work. You have to open, feel, connect, cultivate, and then allow
                        something to manifest. If deep inside you are not open, if you
                        really don't feel those positive qualities, or don't even realize
                        those qualities exist in you, then how can you expect that positive
                        qualities will manifest? If you are having a difficult relationship
                        with your parents, and you are not opening and connecting with any
                        positive qualities within yourself, how can you expect something
                        positive to come out at the holiday dinner table? It doesn't work.
                        Inner work needs to be done before you arrive at the table.

                        ***

                        "Tibetan Sound Healing," by Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche and edited by
                        Marcy Vaughn, is available online at Ligmincha's Tibet Shop. The cost
                        is $19.95. For order information, please go to:
                        www.ligminchastore.org/detail.asp
                        • Re: Dharma quote

                          Sun, August 26, 2007 - 3:39 PM
                          Heart-Spoon: Encouragement through Recollecting Impermanence

                          Composed by Pabongka Rinpoche

                          Ah, the hurt!
                          Kind Lama, look to this pitiful one—
                          How I behave and how I’ve cheated myself my entire life.
                          Please, look upon this mindless one with compassion.

                          The essential advice to give yourself—Heart-Spoon—
                          Keep it deep within your heart.
                          Don’t be distracted; don’t be distracted!
                          Reflect upon the state of your life from the essential drop at your heart.

                          Since beginningless cyclic existence, which hasn’t ended up to now,
                          Though you’ve experienced countless cycles of rebirths—
                          Just so many variations on happiness and pain—
                          You’ve achieved not the slightest of benefit from them.

                          And though at present you’ve attained leisure and fortune so difficult to find,
                          Always till now, they’ve finished and been lost, have been empty and without meaning.
                          Now, if you care about yourself,
                          The time has come to practice the essence of future happiness— virtuous actions.

                          You appear so capable, smart, and clever, but you’re a fool
                          As long as you cling to the child’s play of the appearances of this life.
                          Suddenly you’re overwhelmed by the fearful Lord of Death
                          And, without hope or means to endure, there’s nothing you can do.
                          — This is going to happen to you!

                          Because you think, “I’m not going to die for some time, I’m not going to die for some time,”
                          While you’re distracted by the never-ending activities of this life,
                          Suddenly the fearful Lord of Death arrives,
                          Announcing, “Now it’s time to die.”
                          — This is going to happen to you!

                          Though you make arrangements, saying “tomorrow” and “tomorrow,”
                          Just then, suddenly, you have to go.
                          — This is going to happen to you!
                          And without choice, leaving behind in disarray
                          Your left-off work, left food and drink, you have to depart.
                          — This is going to happen to you!

                          There’s no time other than today to spread [your bedding] and go off to sleep;
                          Upon your last bed you fall like an old tree,
                          And others, unable to turn you with their [lily]-soft hands,
                          Tug at your clothes and blanket.
                          — This is going to happen to you!

                          Even if you completely wrap [your body] in last under and outer clothes,
                          Still you have no freedom to wear them other than just today,
                          And when [that body] becomes as rigid as earth and stone,
                          You behold for the first time your own corpse.
                          — This is going to happen to you!

                          Though you struggle to speak your last words,
                          Your will and expressions of sorrow,
                          Pitifully your tongue dries up, and you can’t make yourself clear—
                          An intense sadness overwhelms you.
                          — This is going to happen to you!

                          Though others put your final food, holy substances, and relics
                          With a trickle of water into your mouth,
                          You’re unable to swallow even a single drop,
                          And it overflows from the corpse’s mouth.
                          — This is going to happen to you!

                          Though surrounded by a circle of close relatives, heart-friends, and those near to your heart,
                          And even though they’re loving and distressed at the ending of your being together,
                          While crying and clinging,
                          Just then, you have to separate forever.
                          — This is going to happen to you!

                          Though you [experience] horrific hallucinations like a turbulence of waves
                          And are overcome by unbearable, excruciating pain,
                          Pitiful though you may be, there’s nothing to be done;
                          The appearances of this life are setting [like the sun].
                          — This is going to happen to you!

                          Though with unbearable compassion your lama and vajra-friends
                          Plead in your ear for a critical virtuous thought to arise,
                          And even though they do so with loving minds,
                          There’s no hope; it’s unthinkable.
                          — This is going to happen to you!

                          With an [expelled rasping] sound, “sor…sor…,” [at the time of death]
                          The movement of your breath builds faster and faster,
                          Then breaks like the string of a violin
                          And the end of your life has come to its close.
                          —This is going to happen to you!

                          There’ll come a time when your cherished and sadly lost lovely body
                          Is called “corpse”—disgusting and rotten,
                          And a time when your body, which can’t bear even rough bedding and mattress,
                          Is laid out on bare ground.
                          — This is going to happen to you!

                          There’ll come a time when your body, which can’t bear even a thorn,
                          Is chopped to pieces and [from the bone] its flesh is torn,
                          And a time when your body, which can’t stand even fleas and lice,
                          Is devoured by birds and dogs till nothing’s left.
                          — This is going to happen to you!

                          Though you [go to so much trouble blowing] “pur…pur…,” in dressing your body in the finest of clothes,
                          There’ll come a time when that body is placed within a burning house,
                          And your body, which can’t tolerate even the fire of [a glowing stick of] incense,
                          Must be burned in the midst of a fiery conflagration.
                          — This is going to happen to you!

                          There’ll come a time when, entering into roaring flames, all your flesh and bones are burned
                          And [reduced to] a pile of ash;
                          Or a time when your body, which can’t bear even heavy cloth,
                          Is wedged tight in a hole in the ground.
                          — This is going to happen to you!

                          There’ll come a time of the announcing, “the deceased, _______, him- or herself,”
                          At the beginning and end of your sweet name.
                          — This is going to happen to you!
                          And a time when the area is filled with the sobbing sounds
                          Of your affectionate, close companions and circle of servants.
                          — This is going to happen to you!

                          There’ll come a time when your clothes, hats, possessions, and livestock will be divided up
                          With nothing left in the four directions and corners,
                          And there’ll come a time when, in total despair, alone,
                          You reach the passage to the intermediate state.
                          — This is going to happen to you!

                          The terrors of the four fearful enemies descending upon you are going to come:
                          The appearance of being trapped under a mountain of packed rock and rubble,
                          And buried beneath a furious avalanche of earth— what to do?
                          The appearance of being set adrift on the surface of a vast sea
                          And carried away by violent, swirling waves—what to do?
                          The experience of your heart and ears being split open
                          By the sizzling and crackling sounds of a fiery conflagration— what to do?
                          The fearful experience of being enveloped and swept away
                          By the swirling dark winds of the end of an eon— what to do?

                          When you’re driven by the powerful red winds of karma
                          And swallowed up by a terrifying darkness—what to do?

                          When you’re bound with a lasso by the messengers of Yama
                          And, in total despair, are led away—what to do?

                          When you’re tortured in so many detestable ways
                          By ox- and scorpion-headed karmic agents—what to do?

                          When you’re before the Yama king, the Lord of Death,
                          As he weighs up the whites and blacks—your virtuous and non-virtuous actions—what to do?

                          When Yama exposes your lie of having spent
                          Your human life in attachment, hatred, and deceit— what to do?

                          When at Yama’s court the punishment that is the ripening effect
                          Of your negative actions [is meted out]—what to do?

                          When your naked body is stretched out on the glowing red-hot iron
                          ground in the fires of hell—what to do?

                          Though your body is cut to pieces by a rain of weapons,
                          Still you must experience it without dying—what to do?

                          Though you’re cooked in molten iron until your flesh falls away and your bones disintegrate,
                          Still you must experience it without dying—what to do?

                          Though your body and fire burn inseparably,
                          Still you must experience it without dying—what to do?

                          When your body is pierced by a freezing cold wind
                          And cracks into a hundred thousand pieces—what to do?

                          Having fallen into the miserable state of a hungry ghost with its hunger and thirst,
                          You have to starve for many years—what to do?

                          When you’ve become one of those stupid, dumb, unfortunate animals
                          That eat each other alive—what to do?

                          When the unbearable sufferings of the evil-gone realms
                          Have actually befallen you—what to do?

                          Now! Don’t be distracted! [With the sounds of hurrying] “la…ur…la…ur…,”
                          Right this moment is the time to steel your will.

                          It’s not only time—it’s almost too late.
                          Right now! Right now! “La…ur…la…ur…,” [apply yourself with] great force!

                          Holy precept of the lama, kind father;
                          Heart of the authoritative scriptures of the Victorious Losang;
                          Practice of the pure path of complete sutra and tantra;
                          It’s time to place real experience upon your mindstream.

                          Who’s the faster:
                          Yama, the Lord of Death,
                          Or you in your practice of realizing the essence of your eternal dream—
                          The welfare of both yourself and others—as much as you can each day?
                          Unifying the three doors [of your body, speech, and mind],
                          Put the whole of your effort into your practice.

                          COLOPHON
                          In response to a request in the past from Ngawang Nyandrag, who singlepointedly dedicated his life to practice, and a recent request from the manager of the Potala, Pelshi Kunngo Sönam Kunga, I was persuaded [to compose] for myself and all others "Heart-Spoon: Encouragement through Recollecting Impermanence". I, with the incarnation name of Pabongka, wrote this text at Tashi Dechen Monastery at Drula in the district of Kong.

                          [It was translated into English from Tibetan by Lama Zopa Rinpoche and Gelong Jampa Gendun at Chenrezig Institute on the auspicious occasion of its twentieth anniversary, September 1994.

                          Whatever merit may have been accumulated through the translation of these profound holy vajra-words of Pabongka Dechen Nyingpo—Heruka in human form—may they immediately and completely fulfill all his vast and profound wishes. And may anyone who touches this text, sees, hears, recalls, or practices it receive the blessings of holy Pabongka upon their mindstream and may they and all other sentient beings have the realization of impermanence in terms of death—the basis of the Lesser, Perfection, and Vajra Vehicles—and, quickly actualizing bodhichitta, may they all swiftly reach buddhahood.]

                          MAY GOODNESS AND VIRTUE FLOURISH
                          • Re: Dharma quotes, Teachings and advice

                            Mon, August 27, 2007 - 2:48 PM
                            Written by Lord Lama Je Tsongkhapa
                            (Lozang Dragpa Sumati Kirti)

                            Written by Lord Lama Je Tsongkhapa


                            I bow to the high and holy lamas.

                            As far as I am able I shall explain the essence of all high teachings of the Victors, the path that their holy sons commend, the entry point for the fortunate seeking freedom.

                            Listen with a pure mind, fortunate ones who have no craving for the pleasures of life, and who to make leisure and fortune meaningful strive to their minds to the path which pleases the Victors.

                            There is no way to end, without the pure reunciation, this striving for pleasent results in the ocean of life. It is because of their hankering life as well that beings are fettered, so seek reunciation first.

                            Leisure and fortune are hard to find, life is not long; think it constantly, stop desire for this life. Think over and over how deeds and their fruits never fail, and the cycle's suffering: stop desire for the future.

                            When you have meditated thus and fell not even a moment's wish for the good things of cyclic life, and when you begin to think both night and day of achieving freedom, you have found reunciation.

                            Reunciation though can never bring the total bliss of matchless Buddhahood unless it is bound by the purest wish; and so, the wise seek the high wish for enlightenment.

                            They are swept along the four fierce river currents, chained up tight in past deeds, hard to undo, stuffed in a steel cage of grasping "self," smothered in the pitch-black ignorance.

                            In a limitless round they are born, and in their births are tortured by three sufferings without a break; think how your mothers feel, think of what is happening to them, try to develop this highest wish.

                            You may master reunciation and the wish, but unless you have the wisdom perceiving reality you cannot cut the root of cyclic life. Make efforts in ways then to perceive interdependence.

                            A person is entered the path that pleases the Buddhas when for all objects, in the cycle or beyond, he sees that cause and effect can never fail, and when for him they lose all solid appearance.

                            You have yet to realize the thought of the Able as long as two ideas seem to you disparate: the appearance of things- infallible interdependence; and emptiness- beyond taking any position.

                            At some point they have no longer alternate, come together; just seeing that interdependence never fails brings realization that destroys how you hold objects, and then your analysis with view complete.

                            In addition, the appearance prevents the existence extreme; emptiness that of non-existence, and if you see how emptiness shows cause and effect. You will never be stolen off by extreme views.

                            When you have grasped as well as essential points of each of the three principal paths explained, then go into isolation, my son, make efforts, and quickly win your ultimate wish.

                            • Re: Dharma quotes, Teachings and advice

                              Wed, September 5, 2007 - 1:09 AM
                              Benefits of reciting Om Mani Peme Hung

                              From a teaching by Kyabje Zopa Rinpoche.

                              In all lifetimes, one will meet with virtuous kings - religious kings like His Holiness the Dalai Lama and other virtuous leaders - and by being in such a place where there is a virtuous king one will have much opportunity to practise Dharma.
                              One will always be reborn in virtuous places where there is a lot of Dharma practice, where there are lots of temples, where one can make lots of offerings, where there a lot of holy objects, statues, stupas and so forth. Being in a place where there are all these holy objects gives one the opportunity to practise Dharma, to create the cause of happiness, to accumulate merit. And being in a place where there are many in the city doing practice inspires oneself to practise Dharma, the cause of happiness.
                              One will always meet with fortunate times and good conditions, which will help your Dharma practice. Having many good things happen it inspires you to practise Dharma, to receive teachings and to meditate.
                              One will always be able to meet with virtuous friends.
                              One will always receive a perfect human body.
                              One's mind will become familiar with the path, with virtue.
                              One will not allow one's vows, one's morality to degenerate.
                              People around you - family, Dharma students, people in the office, and so one - will be kind and harmonious with you.
                              You will always have wealth, the means of living.
                              You will always be protected and served by others.
                              Your wealth will not be stolen or taken away by others.
                              Whatever you wish will succeed.
                              You will always be protected by virtuous nagas and devas.
                              In all lifetimes, you will see Buddha and be able to hear the Dharma.
                              By listening to the pure Dharma, you will be able to actualise the profound meaning, emptiness.
          • Re: Dharma quote-Siddhartha

            Wed, September 5, 2007 - 8:55 AM
            “They are not following dharma who resort to violence to achieve their purpose. But those who lead others through nonviolent means, knowing right and wrong, may be called guardians of the dharma.”
            Buddha quotes (Hindu Prince Gautama Siddharta, 563-483 BCE)
            reply to this post

            Hi Tashi,

            This is a conviction I've felt deep inside since I was a little girl. In life I sometimes come across people (mostly men) who are in the middle between peaceful living, and violent reactions. And I'm learning to listen to them with an empty mind but full heart. If they want to know my perspective I talk to them about peaceful ways to deal with conflict. A common thing I hear is "I could only handle this situation with this person with violence...that's the only thing they understand." I smile and say...this is a low moment for you if you have to deal with life this way....

            What would you say? What would others say? And I'm speaking to situations where the other person is open to another perspective and wants to hear it.
            • Re: Dharma quote-Siddhartha

              Wed, September 5, 2007 - 10:12 AM
              There are four Enlightened Activities:
              Pacifying, Enriching, Magnetizing and Destroying.

              Overcoming obstacles is not so easy and in
              Buddhism there are no pat answers. If peaceful
              methods don't work, wrathful actions are appropriate.
              Of course, any action is done with Compassion and
              Bodhicitta realization.
            • Re: Dharma quote-Siddhartha

              Wed, September 5, 2007 - 1:00 PM
              What I'm seeking here is real world use of dharma principles...

              we can not end suffering by adding to it...

              we create love by adding more love
              • Re: Dharma quote-Siddhartha

                Wed, September 5, 2007 - 1:12 PM
                That's what I'm talking about.
                Sometimes peaceful means don't work.
                That is realistic. Buddhism isn't about pious
                plattitudes, it's about what's real and what works.
                In the real world no position can solve suffering,
                only skillful means, based on wisdom can.
                • Re: Dharma quote-Siddhartha

                  Wed, September 5, 2007 - 3:04 PM
                  I think in terms of the four modes of enlightened activity - peaceful, increasing, power and wrath (Pabongka Rinpoche, 1997) as Mark point's out, however, unless one understands how the mind works with clarity and can discern between anger, attachment and ignorance and the manner in which they play out in ones mind. Then on that basis it would be better not to attempt wrath at that point, because, there is a danger that on may confuse what is benficial with that which increases the affliction and suffering of others.

                  I once heard that the Buddha said "You can't use non-violence as an excuse to do nothing when ones mother is in danger". Sometimes one needs to act to stop another from accumalating vast amounts of negative karma and to end the suffering of those who themselves are being oppressed.

                  On the one hand there is no short answer, and it is never black and white. On the other hand, I feel that the more communities and individuals embrace generosity, loving kindness, compassion, joy and gratitude the better. Nevertheless non-violence does not mean non-conflict and people will continue to have differerences of perspective and propensity, what is needed is understanding and diplomacy in dealing with such diversity as arises between people.
                  • This is the maximum depth. Additional responses will not be threaded.

                    Re: Dharma quote-Siddhartha

                    Wed, September 5, 2007 - 3:53 PM
                    exchanging self and other in situations may be a helpful guide for knowing what to do, or perhaps taking a further step back and trying to see the situation from a non-dual point of view.

                    what would be best from a non-dual point of view right now? if i were inseparable for this environment, from these people, if all of us in this situation were intertwined forever, what would be the best thing to do for all of us together?

                    that's how i see the four karmas, from a more non-dual reference point as much as i can:
                    peaceful - realizing that the non-dual situation is already completely peaceful
                    increasing - realizing that the situation is already completely rich and interesting, we can be curious about it
                    power - allowing that richness of the situation to seduce us completely into the sacredness of the moment
                    wrath - allowing the situation to pass just as it is, not feeding it with further confusion, allowing it to pop on it's own. that is the most wrathful action: allowing someone to see their own confusion in the space of one's openness and calm.
                    • Re: Dharma quote-Siddhartha

                      Wed, September 5, 2007 - 4:13 PM
                      I can see how that may be useful, however, sometimes one needs to actually engage such as when the Lama makes it known that you are being a fool. Such actions can cut right through ego and put us on correct paths. However ordinary people as us don't have that level of skillful means.

                      Take the point of view of a parent however, one may not be angry at the child for it knows no better in some situations, nevertheless the parent is firm with child in order to protect him or her from pain or danger.

                      Likewise a parent will on occasion allow a child to do something knowing the outcome may be negative so that the child may learn from the experience, the parent may then comfort the child and help them to understand for themselves the experience they had. This of course does not mean to put a child in direct danger or in the face of harm, that would be very foolish in the least not to mention abusive.
                      • Re: Dharma quote-Siddhartha

                        Wed, September 5, 2007 - 6:04 PM
                        This last bit is very much along my line of thinking.
                        We, in general, have a very superficial notion of what
                        is good and helpful. But there's one thing I do know
                        palative care is quite different from healing. If somebody
                        is dealing with for example cancer, we don't patt them on
                        the head and say there, there-- we give do surgery if necessary,
                        we poison it if necessary, we burn it with radiotherapy if necessary.
                        • Re: Dharma quote-Siddhartha

                          Wed, September 5, 2007 - 7:55 PM
                          i think it's helpful though to notice our own sense of poverty and frustration whenever we think we should 'change' something, or act, or excise a cancer for example. because our point of view is inherent in it and that view includes a sense of things needing to change. and there's both some wisdom in that (there's suffering and it's pointless) and there's some confusion in that (to wit: in order to alleviate suffering "I" need to do something about it).

                          similarly, the guru points something out, but really only if we ask for that pointing out in some way directly or indirectly. guru's aren't in my experience going around cutting down people's egos, they're incredibly spacious and accommodating. you have to request that kind of cutting kindness by being interested in it, I think. But this is because from their point of view the situation is already perfect, and any action is just an expression of their interaction with it. Not a view that it is degraded and needs propping up.

                          Similarly, the buddha I hear spent seven weeks after enlightenment just being, just sitting by the river, before going to try to teach anyone. I think there's a serious lesson in that. He wasn't immediately jumping up to "fix" things, but instead slowly relating to the confusion in the world as a natural reaction to it. There was no longer a reference point of "me" needing to "fix" what's broken out there. More that the experience of pointless suffering naturally causes a non-dual being to react in a way that pacifies, enriches, magnetizes, and destroys or rather allows it to destroy itself. but it's a natural reaction, not an "i" centered agenda and not one of poverty in any way.
                          • Re: Dharma quote-Siddhartha

                            Thu, September 6, 2007 - 12:04 AM
                            i don't know some of my teachers are quite wrathful and i love it, likewise other have a skill i like to affectionately call 'the look'
                            • Re: Dharma quote-Siddhartha

                              Thu, September 6, 2007 - 12:37 AM
                              I was probably over generalizing. in my experience, even the look is less dualistic though than my ego-based interpretation of it. that was roughly my point.
                              • Re: Dharma quote-Siddhartha

                                Thu, September 6, 2007 - 4:15 PM
                                The teachers who have sustained my heart and spirit the most were patient, compassionate, and took the time to communicate words that were inspirational and empathetic...without blurring or diminishing the truth.

                                One of my teachers here in the city spends hours and hours in meditation every day before he speaks to anyone. He is not a monk...he is a natural teacher who is Tibetan. He told me about many years ago when only he and one other Tibetan man were here to see the Dalai Lama in San Francisco. Now we rent the Bill Graham auditorium.

                                When I feel scattered, I think of him, and if I can, I'll talk to him in person. He is so intact and harmonious that just being close to his energy is healing. Yes, I've had many teachers formal and informal who I've learned from that were strict to brutal...but I still feel that that motherly/fatherly approach can be inspirational and strong if the time is taken to use your skills in that way.

                                In many spiritual practices fear is a way of weidling power....

                                inspiration is supreme to fear...and this I believe is what the dharma quote is speaking of.
                                • Re: Dharma quote-Siddhartha

                                  Thu, September 6, 2007 - 11:56 PM
                                  Having these shining examples gives us courage to hold our own space for inspitational and non violent communication and actions/compassion in action.

                                  Buddhist laws are guideposts...We are the living beings who can if we choose embody the meanings of these guides passed with great care through the ages.
                                  • Dharma quote

                                    Fri, September 7, 2007 - 2:55 AM
                                    Prayer of Truth Dispelling the Dangers of Disharmony

                                    Composed by the Great Yogi Tang Tong Gyalpo.
                                    Translated by H.E. Kyabje Zopa Rinpoche at the time of the terrorist attack in New York and Washington d.c., 11 September, 2001, and edited by H.E. Lama Thubten Namdrol in Nov 2002.


                                    The Origin of this Prayer
                                    When there was unceasing war in Kham (Me Nyak), Tibet. And nobody was able to create harmony, the Great Lord Yogi (Tang Tong Gyalpo) came to Kham, generated bodhicitta and just by merely saying these true words and sprinkling flowers all the vicious minds (jealousy and anger) were completely pacified and the war that had been continuous, ceased. There were prosperous harvests and so forth. The country became auspicious and peaceful.
                                    This is blessed vajra speech.

                                    This is one of the prayers of the Great Tantric Yogi Tang Tong Gyalpo. The other prayers that he composed were to stop famine and epidemics.
                                    OM MANI PADME HUNG
                                    Great Loving Victorious One (Maitreya Buddha),
                                    Transcendentally Sublime, Compassionate Eyed Looking One (Chenresig),
                                    Wrathful Victorious Hayagriva,
                                    Fully Accomplished Totally Pure (Jetsun) Tara and so forth,
                                    Merely hearing your Holy names eliminates all dangers,
                                    Objects of Refuge in the nature of compassion, Please pay attention!

                                    When the sentient beings of this time (of quarrelling and five degenerations),
                                    Through the explosion of the great ocean of evil karma and jealousy,
                                    Are tormented by the intensive suffering of fighting and quarrelling.
                                    Please dry this up by the power of transcendental wisdom and compassion.

                                    By letting a great rainfall of nectar of loving-kindness on us migratory beings,
                                    Who are engulfed in the conflagration of hatred-fire,
                                    Please grant blessings for us to recognize each other as our father and mother,
                                    And increase happiness and auspiciousness.

                                    May the multitudes of the vicious evil spirits
                                    Who enter the mental continuum and
                                    Change it instantly to the mind of asura,
                                    From now on, never run into this area, this country and this world!

                                    I now pray for all the sentient beings that died in wars,
                                    To abandon from that time immediately, all evil karmas with its cause and effect,
                                    And be reborn in the Blissful Field of Sukhavati (Amitabha? Pure Land),
                                    And then lead all others to that Pure Land.

                                    Please bless all Samsaric beings,
                                    Who are suffering from the cycle of birth and death,
                                    To have long life, good health and to pacify all quarrelling and fighting.
                                    May all beings possess the ten virtues, have rainfall at the right times,
                                    Always enjoy good harvest, and for all dwellings and its dwellers,
                                    Always to have auspiciousness and May such blessings increase!

                                    Through the ultimate reality whose nature is pure,
                                    And by all phenomena whose nature is ultimate reality,
                                    By which cause and effect are undeniable,
                                    By the Compassion of my Guru, Mind-seal Deity and Rare Sublime Ones,
                                    May these pure extensive prayers be completed.

                                    Dedication
                                    Through the merits from reciting this prayer,
                                    May it cause all the people? hearts to be filled with loving-kindness, bodhicitta and the thought to only benefit and not harm.
                                    May the sun of peace and happiness arise and may any wars that are happening stop immediately.
                                    May there be harmony, peace and may there never be violence again.
                                    • Re: Dharma quote

                                      Fri, September 7, 2007 - 8:58 AM
                                      Thank you for posting this prayer and vision for peace Tashi.

                                      I've been thinking about what has been posted on the subject and my own studies and feelings on peace and what I realize is that peacefull actions require heart, knowledge, courage, vision (that might be very different from your surrounding environment) and patience.

                                      It is jumping out of the I'm right and you're wrong paradigm.

                                      The point becomes, how do we find our way back to peace.

                                      It's not non action....or living in a bubble idealism.

                                      How can we use Tibetan wisdom to break out of violent cycles? How can we use this long stream of consciousness?

                                      We take in the full spectrum of reality and decide how we want to participate in it. Do we add to the cycle of war or do we add to peace...? The Dalai Lama, in his last visit to SF asked everyone to take the vow of the Boddhisattva. I repeated this vow 3 or 4 times with everyone present. We are here to help alleviate suffering.
                                      • Dalai Lama's favorite prayer:

                                        Fri, September 7, 2007 - 9:03 AM
                                        Here is the prayer.

                                        With the wish to free all beings
                                        I will always go for refuge
                                        To the Buddha, Dharma and Sangha
                                        Until the attainment of full Enlightenment

                                        Enthused by Compassion and Wisdom
                                        Today in the Buddha's presence
                                        I generate the Mind of Enlightenment
                                        For the benefit of all sentient beings

                                        For as long as space endures
                                        And as long as sentient beings remain
                                        May I too abide
                                        To dispell the miseries of the world
                                        • Another Siddhartha quote.. ;-)

                                          Fri, September 7, 2007 - 11:21 AM
                                          Siddhartha Gautama (the Buddha) (563-483 BC)

                                          "Look within. Thou art the Buddha. Believe nothing just because you have been told it, or it is commonly believed, or because it is traditional or because you yourselves have imagined it. Do not believe what your teacher tells you merely out of respect for the teacher. But whatsoever, after due examination and analysis, you find to be conducive to the good, the benefit, the welfare of all beings - that doctrine believe and cling to, and take as your guide.
                                          • Re: Another Siddhartha quote.. ;-)

                                            Sat, September 8, 2007 - 6:18 PM
                                            Thank you Jeannie, you are most wecome,
                                            With much kindness and gratitude,
                                            Tashi

                                            A practitioner needs faith, or trust.... Guru Rinpoche said that we should meditate in the same way that a sparrow enters a nest. A sparrow spends some time investigating whether or not it is safe to enter. Once his examination is over, he then enters unhesitati